WASHINGTON: The CIA’s inspector general will resign this month but US officials said ,late on Monday his departure is not related to his finding last year that the spy agency hacked into computers used by Senate aides.
The agency’s internal watchdog, David Buckley, will be stepping down on January 31, and his move “has been in the works for months,” CIA spokesman Christopher White told AFP.
“After a long and distinguished career in public service, he is pursuing an opportunity in the private sector and there are no reasons for his leaving other than that,” White said.
Buckley found himself in the middle of a tense confrontation last year between the Central Intelligence Agency and the Senate Intelligence Committee over a report by lawmakers into the spy service’s use of torture over the past decade. Buckley’s office, assigned the task of auditing and investigating possible agency wrongdoing, concluded in July that CIA employees had secretly gained access to computers used by Senate intelligence committee staff members.
The findings confirmed suspicions by Democrats on the intelligence committee that the spy agency was trying to prevent staff members from seeing an internal agency review into torture and abuse during ex-president George W Bush’s presidency.