The White House nominee to run the Central Intelligence Agency came under bipartisan fire from politicians on Thursday for keeping members of Congress in the dark about the administration’s controversial warrantless eavesdropping programme.
Senate intelligence committee lawmakers used the nomination hearing of General Michael Hayden, the former National Security Agency director named to replace Porter Goss as CIA director, to ask why the White House waited five years to brief lawmakers fully on the NSA “terrorist surveillance programme”.



