CIA heroes not torturers: Cheney

Former US vice president Dick Cheney says he strongly disagrees with claims the CIA's torture of al-Qaeda suspects was ineffective.

Former US vice president Dick Cheney

Former US vice president Dick Cheney is defending America's torture of al-Qaeda suspects. (AAP)

Former US vice president Dick Cheney is defending America's torture of al-Qaeda suspects.

He says the CIA operatives who ran the now-banned program are heroes.

"I'm perfectly comfortable that they should be praised, they should be decorated," former president George W. Bush's right-hand man told NBC television's Meet the Press program on Sunday, adding, "I'd do it again in a minute".

Cheney made his remarks after the release by Senate Democrats last week of a long-awaited investigation into practices at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility.

In excruciating detail, the report described crude torture methods including waterboarding, hanging people for hours from their wrists and locking them in tiny coffin-shaped boxes.

The report questioned the effectiveness of such techniques, which it determined were actually counterproductive for getting actionable intelligence.

Cheney strongly disagreed.

"It worked. It absolutely worked," he said on Sunday about the program which US officials euphemistically have referred to as employing "enhanced interrogation techniques".

The remarks echo comments made last week by the former vice president defending the interrogation program and blasting the 500-page Senate report as "terrible" and "full of crap".

The report released on Tuesday said the CIA's interrogation of al-Qaeda suspects - including beatings, "rectal rehydration" and sleep deprivation - was far more brutal than acknowledged and did not produce useful intelligence.

It also concluded the CIA deliberately misled Congress and the White House about the value of the intelligence its interrogators were gathering.


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