NPR national security reporter Mary Louise Kelley tweeted on Friday that she would be interviewing CIA Director John Brennan on Saturday. Brennan was just on 60 Minutes last weekend, where Scott Pelley tossed him softballs . This time around, Kelley asked the Twittersphere for suggestions:

Preparing to interview @CIA Director John Brennan tomorrow for @NPR news. Cyber, terrorism, Iran, Syria... What would you ask?

Here are five questions we think she should ask:

1. Is it ever acceptable for the CIA to mistreat prisoners?

As a CIA official during the Bush administration, Brennan strongly endorsed “enhanced interrogation” techniques. But during his 2013 confirmation hearing to become CIA director, Brennan said that the program had “very serious issues,” and that waterboarding is “reprehensible.”

After the release of the summary of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s torture report, Brennan changed his position again, and argued that the techniques provided “useful” intelligence. What does he really think?

2. If we get a President Trump, what will stop the CIA from torturing again?

Brennan has said that the agency is “not contemplating at all getting back into the interrogation program.” But he made no predictions. “As for the future, he said, “I defer to future policymakers.”

Some of the Republican presidential candidates have announced that they would restart the CIA’s torture program. Donald Trump said he would “bring back a helluva lot worse than waterboarding.”

Because there was no accountability for the torture that took place during the Bush administration — no criminal prosecutions, no national reckoning — there’s cause for concern that the next time a perceived emergency comes up, we’ll torture again.

3. Do you still attribute the intelligence failures of Paris to Edward Snowden?

A few days after the terrorist attacks in Paris, Brennan gave a speech suggesting the Paris attackers might have succeeded because “unauthorized disclosures” by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden are making it harder to find terrorists. He implied that in response to Snowden’s revelations, terrorists had begun to use unbreakable encryption to protect their communications.

No evidence has ever emerged that the terrorists took those steps, and a New York Times editorial accused Brennan of “exploiting the tragedy for his own ends.”

4. Why did you deny hacking Senate computers?

After Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., accused the CIA of breaking into computers being used by Senate staffers, Brennan publicly insisted that “we wouldn’t do that. I mean, that’s — that’s just beyond the — you know, the scope of reason in terms of what we would do.”

But that’s exactly what happened. And according to a report by the CIA inspector general, Brennan had told unnamed CIA employees early on to “use whatever means necessary” to find out how the Senate obtained privileged documents, and had been briefed along the way. Brennan’s denial was such a blatant lie that members of Congress called for his resignation: