Hey CIA — don’t worry.

Your girl Carly Fiorina — you know, the former Hewlett-Packard (HP) CEO and one of the leading Republicans in recent polls — has your back. One hundred and fifty percent, too.

It all came rushing, pouring out in a recent interview with Yahoo News published Monday. In it, she defended the controversial interrogation technique (some would call it “torture”, like the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, for example) known as waterboarding.

“I believe that all of the evidence is very clear — that waterboarding was used in a very small handful of cases [and] was supervised by medical personnel in every one of those cases,” she was quoted as saying in the story.

Waterboarding, if you’re not familiar, is when you pour water over someone’s face (usually they’re masked or covered) to make them feel like they’re drowning.

“And I also believe that waterboarding was used when there was no other way to get information that was necessary.”

She also shamed the Senate committee’s findings, calling them “disingenuous” and painting a picture that they cut the legs out from under the very people trying to keep the United States safe during troubling and dangerous times.

More from The Hill:

Fiorina, a former Hewlett-Packard CEO, also said the tech company helped the National Security Agency (NSA) during her tenure.

“I felt it was my duty to help, and so we did,” she said. “They were ramping up a whole set of programs and needed a lot of data crunching capability to try and monitor a whole set of threats.”

Fiorina also said she urged the CIA and the NSA to be more transparent about their surveillance practices.

“One of the things that I advised the NSA and the CIA to do is to be as transparent as possible about as much as possible,” she said.

“Intelligence agencies that engage in covert activity need to be very creative about how they can be transparent while not jeopardizing our personnel and sources and methods.”

She makes a great point: intelligence agencies — ones that would cease to exist should they suddenly become “transparent” — would have to get super duper creative to fulfill these wishes of see-through inner workings.

The greatest trick an intelligence agency ever pulled was convincing …