Bush says won't discuss CIA tapes

US President George W Bush insisted today he did not learn until recently that the CIA destroyed videotapes of harsh interrogations…

US President George W Bush insisted today he did not learn until recently that the CIA destroyed videotapes of harsh interrogations, and said he would not speak any more in public about the issue currently under investigation by the administration and Congress.

At a White House news conference, Mr Bush expressed confidence in congressional investigations, which his Justice Department had balked at last week, saying he thought all the various inquiries underway would eventually get to the truth.

"Until these inquiries are complete, until the oversights' finished, I will be rendering no opinion from the podium," Mr Bush said. Defending his administration's aggressive pursuit of terrorism suspects, the president said his critics were ignoring reality.

"There's isolationist tendencies in this world. People would rather stay at home, people would rather not aggressively pursue people overseas, and aggressively pursue freedom," he said.

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The CIA earlier this month disclosed that it had destroyed in 2005 hundreds of hours of tapes from the interrogations of two al-Qaeda suspects, prompting an outcry from Democrats, human rights activists and some legal experts.

The interrogations, which took place in 2002, were believed to have included a form of simulated drowning known as waterboarding, condemned internationally as torture.

A federal judge is to hold a hearing tomorrow into whether the CIA violated a court order by destroying the tapes.

Mr Bush has said he did not recall being told of the tapes until CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden briefed him this month. Asked at the news conference why he could not make a more definitive statement, he said, "It sounds pretty clear to me when I say the first recollection is when Mike came and briefed me. That's pretty clear."

The New York Timesreported this week that senior White House officials knew the tapes existed and took part in discussions on whether they should be destroyed.

In a sign that an impasse with Congress over the pace of lawmakers' investigations of the videotapes had eased, a senior intelligence official said the House of Representatives Intelligence committee on Thursday was to begin reviewing CIA documents it had requested.

The official said the agency also intended to cooperate with the committee's request for witnesses to testify.