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Mr Brennan denounced the CIA's use of waterboarding and other 'enhanced interrogation' methods

Mr Brennan denounced the CIA's use of waterboarding and other 'enhanced interrogation' methods

Barack Obama adviser rejects 'global war on terror'

President Barack Obama's top counter-terrorism adviser has rejected the notion of a "global war on terror" arguing that it led to an obsessive focus on a tactic and suggested America was at war with the world.

Toby Harnden | Telegraph | Published: 08/08/2009 07:13

John Brennan, a former career CIA officer who worked closely with the Bush administration, lambasted the policies of President George W Bush and made the case for a broader approach to fighting Islamic extremism.

Mr Bush's policies, he said in a speech in Washington, had run counter to American values, undermined the security and resulted in a "global war" mindset that served to "validate al-Qaida's twisted world-view".

All this, he insisted, would change under Mr Obama. "Rather than looking at allies and other nations through the narrow prism of terrorism – whether they are with us or against us – the administration is now engaging other countries and peoples across a broader range of areas."

The term "global war on terror", which became so prevalent under Mr Bush that it earned its own acronym – GWOT – would be a thing of the past.

The notion of a "global" war "plays into the misleading and dangerous notion that the US is somehow in conflict with the rest of the world", he said, while terrorism was a tactic not end.

"And ultimately, confusing ends and means is self-defeating, because you can never fully defeat a tactic like terrorism any more than you can defeat the tactic of war itself."

Source

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