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Brennan's CIA bid a chance to strike back at critics

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After 25 years at the CIA, Brennan moved from his job as deputy executive CIA director in 2003 to become director of the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, and then interim director of its next incarnation, the National Counterterrorism Center. When Bush's second term began, Brennan left government to run The Analysis Corp., which provides counterterror analysis to government agencies, from 2005 to 2008. After Obama's election, he returned to the government payroll, in 2009, as the White House counterterror adviser.

Brennan was nominated to replace CIA director David Petraeus, who resigned late last year, citing an extramarital affair.

Feinstein has signaled she will support Brennan's nomination, but congressional staffers say both she and her Republican counterparts will ask Brennan to explain publicly if he objected to the interrogation program, and whether he believes it produced any useful intelligence.

Feinstein's committee just produced a 6,000-page classified report on the interrogation program that says it did not. Congressional aides said she would seek Brennan's support in future, if the committee votes to declassify portions of it after the White House and CIA finish reviewing the document.

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Associated Press writers Lara Jakes, Donna Cassata and Julie Pace contributed to this report.

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Follow Kimberly Dozier on Twitter: https://twitter.com/KimberlyDozier

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