In the fall of 2006, Nathaniel Raymond, a researcher with the advocacy group Physicians for Human Rights, got a call from a man professing to be a CIA contractor. Scott Gerwehr was a behavioral science researcher who specialized in “deception detection,” or figuring out when someone was lying. Gerwehr told Raymond “practically in the first five minutes” that he had been at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo in the summer of 2006, but had left after his suggestion to install video-recording equipment in detainee interrogation rooms was rejected. “He said, ‘I wouldn’t operate at a facility that didn’t tape. It protects the interrogators and it protects the detainees,’” Raymond recalls.
Gerwehr also told Raymond that that he had read the CIA inspector general’s report on detainee abuse, which at the time had not been made public. But “he didn’t behave like a traditional white knight,” Raymond told The Intercept. Though he had reached out to Raymond and perhaps others, he didn’t seem like a prototypical whistleblower. He didn’t say what he was trying to do or ask for help; he just dropped the information. Raymond put him in touch with a handful of reporters, and their contact ended in 2007.
In 2008, at the age of 40, Gerwehr died in a motorcycle accident on Sunset Boulevard. Years after Gerwehr died, New York Times reporter James Risen obtained a cache of Gerwehr’s files, including emails that identify him as part of a group of psychologists and researchers with close ties to the national security establishment. Risen’s new book, Pay Any Price, uses Gerwehr’s emails to show close collaboration between staffers at the American Psychological Association (APA) and government officials, collaboration that offered a fig leaf of health-professional legitimacy to the CIA and military’s brutal interrogations of terror suspects.
“I believe that Gerwehr encountered something deeply disturbing.”
Risen describes Gerwehr as “living a highly compartmentalized life.” A Santa Monica liberal who “expressed distaste for George Bush,” he was nonetheless tightly connected to people involved in the administration’s interrogation program. He had top secret/sensitive compartmented information clearance, according to Risen, and a psychologist told Risen “he seemed optimistic about the possibilities of testing out psychological theories on interrogation issues.” Indeed, in a 2005 New York Times op-ed that reads as almost naïve in the wake of the Abu Ghraib revelations, he and a co-author wrote that the idea “that harsh treatment of prisoners can be less effective than showing compassion…now deserves a test in Iraq.” Treating prisoners well “would help reverse the terrible propaganda defeat suffered with the revelations of torture at Abu Ghraib,” he wrote, and “prisoners released by our forces would return to their communities with stories of American generosity and tolerance.”
Risen says that Gerwehr’s files don’t contain “explosive bombshells,” or indicate “the extent of his knowledge of the CIA’s detention and interrogation programs.” But they narrate a period in 2004 and 2005 when the APA was being forced to respond to revelations about detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib and the role of psychologists in designing and condoning brutal questioning tactics. (Subsequent government investigations and reporting would show the foundational role of psychology, and in particular, two psychologists and CIA contractors, James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen.)The APA in 2002 famously revised its ethics code to permit a psychologist to follow “governing legal authority” even if it clashed with the APA’s own code of ethics. It was, essentially, the Nuremberg Defense of “just following orders.” (In 2010 the APA definitively disavowed it.) As Risen writes, the 2002 change allowed psychologists to be involved in CIA and military interrogations, and “helped the lawyers in the Justice Department to argue that the enhanced interrogation program was legal because health professionals were monitoring the interrogations to make sure they stayed within the limits established by the Bush administration.”
In 2005, after the revelations of detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib, the APA put together a task force on ethics and national security, which, while affirming the organization’s opposition to torture, determined that psychologists could be involved with interrogations “to assist in ensuring that such processes are safe and ethical for all participants.”
Gerwehr was copied on emails discussing a confidential APA lunch meeting in July 2004, attended by psychologists from the CIA, Department of Defense, and other agencies. (The invited CIA psychologist, Kirk Hubbard, wrote that “all the DOD shrinks will be tied up…I will represent both of us.”) The draft proposal creating the task force was circulated to Gerwehr and others invited to the meeting before it was given to APA members. Other members of the task force later complained it was stacked in favor of the government, with six of the panel’s ten members having ties to the military or intelligence.
After the task force recommendation went public in 2005, the APA’s Mumford wrote an email thanking Hubbard for his “personal contribution…in getting this effort off the ground,” and mentioned that Susan Brandon, a Bush White House official, had “helped craft some language related to research” for the report. (Hubbard says that “I was not directly involved in the task force itself, though I know it was reported that I provided some input.” Brandon is now head of the research unit for the FBI’s high value detainee interrogation group, according to her bio for an upcoming conference. The FBI did not respond to a request for comment from Brandon. In a statement responding to Risen’s book, the APA said those contacts were “not in any manner unusual or inappropriate” and allowed “for frank discussion of the ethical and practice challenges facing psychologists working in national security settings.”)
Gerwehr’s emails about the APA also caught the interest of the FBI. In 2010, after learning of Gerwehr’s death and believing that he might have had critical information, Raymond sought out a meeting with John Durham, the assistant U.S. attorney who was leading the criminal probe related to CIA detention and interrogation. Durham had also been specifically tasked with looking into the CIA’s destruction of interrogation videotapes. (Raymond now directs the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative’s Signal Program on Human Security and Technology, which applies satellite imagery analysis and other technical approaches to humanitarian crises. He is mentioned as a researcher for an unnamed human rights group in Risen’s book, but his conversations with Gerwehr and the FBI are being reported for the first time here.)
Raymond and PHR’s then-Washington director, John Bradshaw, met with Durham at the Justice Department in Washington, D.C., in September 2010. Raymond and Bradshaw noted that they weren’t in the visitor logs, and Durham took them up a back elevator to a briefing room, Raymond recalls. Besides talking about Gerwehr, Durham’s team said that they had read PHR’s recent report “Experiments in Torture,” which concluded that medical personnel’s involvement in the CIA’s interrogation program constituted illegal medical research and experimentation. Durham’s team seemed “interested in the broader architecture of the legal heat shield” on torture, Raymond said. In Bradshaw’s recollection, “Durham was not particularly forthcoming in saying that he accepted our conclusions. But they were interested and had read our work.” (Durham did not respond to a request for comment.)
Two years later, Durham’s overall probe ended with no charges. At that point, Raymond reached out to Durham’s office again, to ask if anyone had looked into the information about the APA from Gerwehr’s emails, which Raymond by then had access to. Durham directed him to an agent from the FBI’s public corruption unit, who asked for a memo gathering what he had—Gerwehr’s correspondence and additional emails and interview notes from other sources, including former APA and CIA officials—which Raymond believed could amount to evidence of criminal racketeering. In an email, the agent said she had discussed the issue with Durham, and they thought that the alleged criminal activity fell outside a five-year statute of limitation, but would forward information to the FBI’s Washington field office.
Neither Raymond nor anyone at PHR heard anything more of it, until a law enforcement official confirmed to The Intercept that the FBI in Washington received material, and “did review it,” but “did not find any criminal violations, and therefore did not open any investigation.”
Raymond told The Intercept that the FBI’s decision not to investigate was unsurprising, given the overall lack of criminal charges related to CIA torture.
“The response of the U.S. government, given the whole raft of revelations about torture in the post-9/11 world, has been to deny, and then to use the language that we’re going to move forward, we’re going to move on,” said Widney Brown, director of programs for Physicians for Human Rights. “But even setting aside the legal concerns, we feel very strongly as a voice for physicians that there’s no compromise on this issue of medical professionals’ involvement in torture. And it’s very clear in Risen’s book that the APA was very involved in discussions with the government on this issue.”
In the book, Risen suggests that the APA’s close relationship with the government was motivated at least in part by financial concerns, saying the profession was “so eager for CIA and Pentagon contracts that they showed few qualms about getting involved” with interrogation programs.
The APA, in its statement, said that any suggestion that “that APA had a financial motivation” to support U.S. detainee policies “is absurd.” The CIA declined to comment on Gerwehr or the allegations raised from his emails.
“I can’t confirm that he was at Gitmo when he says he was. But I believe that Gerwehr encountered something deeply disturbing,” said Raymond. “I think that there needs to be a serious and robust federal investigation into Gerwehr’s past in terms of whistleblowing.”
Update: Added comment from Hubbard. October 17th, 3:30 pm EST.
Photo: Paolo Pellegrin/Magnum Photos


Dr. Colin Ross is another psychiatrist who has documented the collusion of professionals in his field with the military and CIA, and he points out that ‘mind control’ is still no doubt being practiced on unwitting individuals (of which I am one). His book is ‘The CIA Mind Control Doctors: From Harvard to Guantanamo.’ You can read more about it here: http://www.cchrint.org/2009/09/03/cia-mind-control-doctors/.
It’s high time to publicize these crimes against humanity.
While Dr. Colin Ross is indeed a psychiatrist, author and lecturer, his claims regarding what is now referred to as Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) and previously known as Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD) are highly controversial and unfortunately taint all the uncontested, factual information found in his books, including “The CIA Mind Control Doctors: From Harvard to Guantanamo.” It is also important to note that the review to Dr. Ross’s most recent book that EC linked to is written by Dr. Ross himself, though I do believe that the book is mostly based in facts and reality.
But, it was Dr. Ross’s “eyebeam” claim that really got him a lot of attention:
Colin Ross Has An Eyebeam of Energy He’d Like You to Hear
Let’s all act like their weapons work. It appears to be working in their favor. Let’s act like we’re under surveillance, it appears to be true.
Okay, fine. I mean Jesus Christ! Let’s all act like the “CIA” exists, that it’s been around for a while. Let’s act like that happened, and that it’s still serving a purpose. Let’s all ACT like THAT’s happening! Let’s act like they wouldn’t take offense, let’s act like that’s readily understood. Let’s point out obvious facts and act like we’re deceptive. Let’s act like that’s serving a purpose, let’s point that it does. Let’s act like they’re full of shit and act like that’s true. Let’s act like they already knew that and then we move. Let’s act like nothing more needed to be said, and then we move with our lives. Let’s act like that’s happened before, and that it will happen again. Let’s all act like we didn’t already know that, it appears to be working in our favor.
“Q&A with Andy Worthington After Screening of “Doctors of the Dark Side” in Balham, October 26, 2014″ –
http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2014/10/21/qa-with-andy-worthington-after-screening-of-doctors-of-the-dark-side-in-balham-october-26-2014/
“White House Chief Of Staff Negotiating Redaction Of CIA Torture Report”
Posted: 10/21/2014 3:02 pm EDT Updated: 1 hour ago
“It is still not clear when the anxiously awaited report’s executive summary will be released. Robert Grenier, a veteran CIA officer who was the top counterterrorism official from 2004 to 2006, told HuffPost that the Intelligence Community suspects Democrats have been spooked by the advance of the Islamic State, also called ISIS, and are holding the report for political reasons.
“At a time when ISIS is on the march and beheading American journalists, some Democrats apparently think now is not the time to be advocating going soft on terrorists. The speculation I hear is that the Senate Democrats will wait until the elections are safely over,” Grenier said.”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/21/white-house-cia-torture_n_6018488.html
So….about his accident? Any actual legit witnesses? That would be the very first thing that should be investigated
It’s murky, but there are many possible reasons why it was “permitted” to be so quiet. The best candidate being to keep the information which has now been published in Risen’s book from getting out.
What little coverage there was back in May 2008 appears to have been “archived” without any follow-up.
There are a couple of reports about a 40-year old killed after his motorcycle collided with a dump truck on Sunset Blvd (reportedly died trapped beneath it), but I can’t find any articles that later identified the victim by name.
One curious tidbit (from the same day) TOTALLY UNRELATED, of course, was that of a Female SUV driver (sole occupant) was reported fleeing the scene after colliding with the rear of a truck. It was originally reported that she was the one trapped under the truck.
It might seem to some that she had rammed Mr. Gerwehr’s motorcycle into the dump truck and then fled (if it’s really an accident why flee the scene?).
Purely coincidental that some may have felt he was a potential whistleblower at the time. It’s not like any of the players involved in our international terrorism and torture programs have ever resorted to rough-stuff before – right?
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/10/14/new-evidence-links-cia-to-apas-war-on-terror-ethics/
Not even a hat-tip to Counterpunch for beating you to the punch?
Well yes, but Risen published his book first, and even before that psychologists designed the torture programs in the first place – so they should be lauded as the actual pioneers. From the Washington Post (2011):
The APA has solidly protected its members who did the research and created the torture protocols, so it deserves, perhaps, the most credit of all. And all the members of the APA who support their leaders should receive some credit too. In fact, all medical professionals, whose own associations continue to maintain ties to the APA, should not be forgotten either. It is only fair that everyone should receive a proper share of the glory.
From what you say, this APA deserves a world of credit. There’s nothing like fabricating a reality, forcing the individual to consume that reality, and then torturing them to figure out how they became the way they are. Excellent research.
October 18, 2014, 8:00 pm
“The APA Grapples with Its Torture Demons: Six Questions for Nathaniel Raymond”
By Scott Horton
http://harpers.org/blog/2014/10/the-apa-grapples-with-its-torture-demons-six-questions-for-nathaniel-raymond/
“6. Are there any aspects of the dealings between the APA and the intelligence community that suggest the possibility of public corruption? As far as you are aware, were they investigated?
My colleague Isaac Baker and I wrote an analysis of the Gerwehr emails in October 2012 at the request of the Public Corruption Unit of the FBI. In it we presented evidence from the emails and other sources that we believe is consistent with violations of public-corruption laws by CIA and APA officials.
Unfortunately, the evidence we had access to was outside the five-year statute of limitations of the RICO law. The FBI nows says that they did not further investigate the allegations in my memo. I still believe, despite the FBI statement, that a full investigation of the relationship between the CIA and the APA regarding ethics policies governing interrogation is urgently required.
I worry about the preservation of remaining evidence in this case, following the revelations this week in Risen’s book. I hope the APA will follow Penn State’s example from when it hired former FBI director Louis Freeh to independently investigate the Sandusky scandal and appointed an independent probe of itself. APA should also immediately preserve all email, phone records, and other physical evidence from its staff and leadership before any data is destroyed.”
Yes, preserving evidence that could make federal authorities undergo prosecution almost seems like an extinct species at this point. That explains why people with consciences wind up in Russia or in federal prison. Makes sense.
INFILTRATION AND TAKEOVER OF SCIENTIFIC ORGANIZATIONS
“to penetrate, or cause to penetrate (a region or group) gradually or stealthily, so as to attack or to seize control from within”
The APA is no exception. I have seen it over and over again. They come in with “good intentions” and rise up to seize power and redirect the organization into a different direction. A good classic example is PBS in the USA. It does NOT now serve the public good as it did 25 years ago. It now serves the agenda to mind control for American intellectuals. Have you ever wondered why all the English programs. Have you ever wondered why the News Hour now uses the same talking heads as commercial TV news. As if their exists no other opinions, points of view or ideas about current events except from their stable of performers and so called experts.
The “intelligence Community” wants an inside track in specific organizations and has worked to get it by placing infiltrators at the top of many critical organizations. How is it that the CIA can pick the phone up and stop or start a story in any main stream media program. And ….Look at the network TV programs in the USA. They are all propaganda for the purpose of conditioning Americans on specific agenda topics, and the psychopaths have many topics and beliefs they want us to believe in.
So our dear friend Scott Gerwehr found this out about his organization and the ugly stuff going on at GITMO.
He, like so many others who get to close to the scam, was killed.
These infiltrated organization are really lost to the public. They are now too far in the shadows to ever return. New organizations will need to be created with some new security firewalls to keep out the unwanted psychopathic infiltrators.
Notwithstanding the vomit inducing name, the mere fact this report had to be created, says volumes of the depth of USG evil our government has become. Just a brief glance over the index is enough to send waves of nauseous outrage through my brain. This report should shoved in the face of every single citizen in America.
Experiments. In torture. That says it all. In the annuls of real history, these treacherous murderers and torturers will go down as the 21st century benchmark of the boundaries of humanity’s overall psychosis. As ISIL and the USG revel in their common demented orgy and worship of evil at the bottom of the cesspool of hell, I will go to my grave knowing that which I wish I could burn from my brain. I’m ashamed of being of the same life form in the known universe.
From an article by “good” psychologists Dr. Roy Eidelson and Dr. Trudy Bond:
“Several questions will be answered in the days immediately ahead, as the world’s largest organization of psychologists grapples with the damning revelations in Pay Any Price. Will APA [American Psychological Association] members once again dutifully follow the Association’s leaders and drink from a polluted well of tired cliches and obfuscating language? Will they still find feeble justifications and implausible denials palatable? Or will the membership and the governing Council of Representatives finally demand the substantive independent investigation that is so long overdue? With the profession’s ethics and credibility hanging in the balance, we believe it is certainly time to hold the APA accountable for the choices it has made.” [End of excerpt from article “New Evidence Links CIA to American Psychological Association’s “War on Terror” Ethics]
Cora, thanks for helping to expose the APA’s enormously misguided efforts to help “shape” and justify EVIL. The more the APA continues to run from the truth of their involvement, the larger the fallout will be for the APA.
And a big thanks to James Risen!
It should come as no surprise that the American Psychology Association would be monitoring CIA torture activities in black operations facilities.
After all…the quack profession has to make sure that CIA is employing the techniques properly, or should I say using the most effective behavior modification control techniques for the job at hand.
Within the Medical Industrial Complex, Psychology (the underlying research branch of Psychiatry) and Psychiatry, play an integral monetary-generating role although there is not one shred of definitive biological evidence to support any psychiatric diagnosis. The pseudo-science is not based in biological science. It is wholly based on behavior-modification studies which have been cited as medical fact. Yet; psychiatric mind-altering drugs with dangerous side-effects (which are actually KNOWN effects of the drugs upon actual underlying biological systems) are grossly prescribed with complete legal authority. This generates huge profits for the Pharmaceutical Industry, inflates insurance premiums, and provides for kick-backs to the prescribing “professionals”; thus boosting profits for the Medical Industrial Complex.
It is critical that people all over the planet, understand that behavior modification techniques routinely use mind control and torture to implement the desired modification.
This knowledge is important for individual and societal welfare. To that end, I highly recommend that all who happen upon this post watch the following film. It gives the whole sordid history of the “profession” of psychiatry, their research branch of psychology, and discusses numerous forms of “treatment” for non-existent medical problems.
“The Most SHOCKING Psychiatry Documentary EVER ”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=II96QkZaz1E#t=15
Note: this film is about 1 hour and 48 Minutes but your life or the life of someone you love, could depend upon the truth it presents.
Steer well-clear of this “profession” and their torture therapies.
I cannot believe the ignorance of the US counter-espionage establishment. They should all be locked up until they have read the books written by Col. Oreste Pinto (“Spycatcher”; “Spycatcher 2″, and another whose title I forget). He was the most famous and most successful interrogator and catcher of German spies in 2 world wars and these are his accounts. He knew that harsh methods didn’t get information or confessions but gentle, sympathetic conversation did, over and over. Bullied and tortured men will confess to anything to stop the pain. A hundred years on and Americans still haven’t gotten the word.
Torture is mere rationale for psychopaths to excuse their depravity.
Jane, it is true, the level of ignorance is incredible. But you are, and I say this respectfully, neglecting the entertainment aspect.
I have been reflecting on the new threat of ‘whistleblowers from beyond the grave’. It appears this new breed of whistleblower has very little fear of punishment, and consequently lacks any incentive to hold back on even the most embarrassing details of government malfeasance. There appear to be several possible solutions to this problem.
One method would be to pass a law declaring that the dead are non-persons and therefore no evidence based their acts can be introduced in a court of law. This, however, might create a problem with the disposition of wills, and so some other solution must be found.
Another method would be to place all government employees and contractors into suspended animation following the termination of their employment contracts. That way, if any whistleblowing documents were subsequently published, they could be awakened and appropriately punished. This would prevent them for escaping responsibility for their actions by employing the convenient stratagem of dying. This solution seems attractive, but I must admit to not having done a complete analysis on whether the requisite technology exists and whether the costs are affordable. But it certainly merits further investigation.
A third option would be to pass a law that only convicted felons serving a life term could be eligible for government employment. Each night on returning back to their cells after work, they could be strip searched and any documents or electronic devices on their person could be confiscated. The problem is there are too few people in the US who are currently serving life sentences. This however could be rectified by passing a law to impose a mandatory life sentence for anyone convicted of a crime, or if that didn’t suffice, on anyone chosen by random lot.
These are only off the top of my head, and I’m sure that government think tanks have concocted many more. So like any problem, it is perhaps not so insurmountable as it first appears.
I agree, Benito. The threat of anything foreign, including other nations, the arisen dead or the alien species are worthwhile investigations to consider prosecuting. The United States authorities are presently prosecuting the planet itself for the crime of discovering obvious truths which are reprehensible to common humanity. Given that the planet earth has been guilty of this shameful act before, we know the wrath that one man can do to the entire world. If these foreign threats happen to land anywhere in the continental United States, I’m afraid they’d have no choice but to aim a nuclear missile at it. Very reasoned, very thought out and reasonable. After all, these unknown unknowns as Rumsfeld warned us of are worthy of assault.
For anyone who follows the School of the Americas Watch, this story is entirely similar to the FOI release of the torture manuals used by the CIA at the various international training schools around the world, which also involved hiring doctors to teach the “limits” to which torture can be applied. There was similar outrage and, if memory serves, organizing withing the AMA and other oversight organizations. It seems worth linking this historically and to continue applying pressure http://www.soaw.org/about-the-soawhinsec/soa-manuals/98-soa-manuals-index
Risen writes
This slur on the APA should not go unchallenged. It implies they won the right to advise Bush simply because no one else was interested in filling this important role. In fact, the APA won out on the basis of their expertise and hard work and all the other professional associations that are now carping about the role of the APA, are simply expressing their own jealously at not being chosen themselves. They rationalize their own failure by now claiming they were never interested in the first place.
Now that Bush is out of power, and there is no longer any cachet to redrawing boundaries between enhanced interrogation and torture, the APA can return to its well deserved obscurity. But they had their moment of glory, and should not be denied recognition for it, no matter how brief.
“This slur on the APA…”
I don’t see it as a “slur” — I see it as a fact.
“First do no harm” is a “guiding principle” for most healthcare professionals. (Those who “went along” are in the wrong business.)
It’s very easy now for the other professional associations to claim they were motivated by higher principles, as embodied by their hypocritic oath. But at the time, they would have given their right arm, or at least the fingernails on their right hand, to advise the Bush administration on torture.
I’ll give a little. You’re right that *some* would have “gone along” — we know this from MKUltra and related programs. I’m not sure that the AMA would have “joined up”, however.
“I will give a little” *nurse
Put it in reverse (and back away), would be my advice. *Benitoe has post-doctoral letters of degree in linguistic reverse engineering.
Hypocritic oath? That’s pretty uncouth and snarky. Are you really a duke?
About issues related to CIA torture and “mind control”, psychologist Jeff Kaye writes: “I know the impulse is to turn away.”
Not only must we not “turn away”, we must squarely face these issues. It’s time for for new Senate hearings — it’s time for us to try to find our way back… There are activities taking place on U.S. soil that no one with a conscience could support.
“Book Review – Surviving Evil: CIA Mind Control Experiments in Vermont”
By: Jeff Kaye Thursday June 19, 2014 2:06 am
http://dissenter.firedoglake.com/2014/06/19/book-review-surviving-evil-cia-mind-control-experiments-in-vermont/
“Surviving Evil is the testimony of a witness and must be respected. We all owe Karen Wetmore a debt of gratitude. I know the impulse is to turn away from such evil as she reports, but we owe it to her, and to ourselves, not to do that. The people who did terrible things to Karen, and hundreds or thousands of others, were never held to account for it. Now a new generation practices their dark arts at CIA black sites, Guantanamo, and who knows where else. The archives remain mostly closed. Thousands of documents have been destroyed. Some few voices are still trying to speak out. Here’s one. Listen.”
(“Jeffrey Kaye is a psychologist in private practice in San Francisco… He worked over 10 years professionally with torture victims and asylum applicants. Active in the anti-torture movement since 2006, he has his own blog, Invictus. He has published previously at Truthout, Alternet, and The Public Record.)
Here’s more on Susan Brandon and mind control experimentation.
Obama Interrogation Official Linked to U.S. Mind Control Research
By Jeffrey Kaye
The Public Record
May 25th, 2010
Susan E. Brandon, the Obama administration’s Chief for Research in the DCHC’s Behavioral Science Program.
A new article at Truthout I co-wrote with author and investigative journalist H.P. Albarelli describes how the CIA’s Artichoke Project* was the contemporaneous and operational side of the MK-ULTRA mind control research program. It was not superceded by MK-ULTRA in the 1950s, as often supposed.
Even more, Artichoke-derived methods of using drugs, hypnosis, sensory deprivation and overload, behavioral modification techniques and other methods of mind control have resurfaced as a primary component of U.S. interrogation practice.
The Truthout article includes some amazing revelations, including the largest description to date of the roles of then-Ford administration officials Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld in working hand-in-glove with the CIA to suppress information on Artichoke from surfacing.
The article also references the November 2006 release of an “Instruction” from the Secretary of the Navy (3900.39D) regarding its “Human Research Protection Program.” While this memo specifically prohibits the use of research upon prisoners, including so-called “unlawful enemy combatants,” waivers of informed consent for research, or suspension of the protections enumerated in the memo can be made by the Secretary of the Navy under conditions of “operational contingency or during times of national emergency.” It is likely the latter rests upon the legislative language within the September 18, 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force, where terrorist acts are said to “continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”
The waivers allowed for normal human research testing gains further piquancy when one considers the kinds of research referenced in the Secretary of the Navy’s memo. Section 7(a)(2)(a) describes the Undersecretary of the Navy as the “approval authority” for research done upon prisoners, as well as “Severe or unusual intrusions, either physical or psychological, on human subjects (such as consciousness-altering drugs or mind-control techniques)” [emphasis added].
This referencing of “mind-control techniques” in a document specifically discussing human subjects protections by then Secretary of the Navy, Donald C. Winter, is not an anomaly, but a rare instance in which the actual activities of the government in this area are openly revealed. Some of these activities can be documented via publicly available materials. This article describes how some of the individuals involved in U.S. government mind control and torture activities can be tracked and identified.
APA, CIA: “How might we overload the system or overwhelm the senses…?”
Another instance in which the curtain was pulled back on mind control research by the U.S. government involved the online description by the American Psychological Association (APA) of a CIA and Rand Corporation workshop which it co-sponsored in July 2003 at Rand’s Arlington, Virginia headquarters. The event was attended by approximately 40 research psychologists, psychiatrists, neurologists, as well as “representatives from the CIA, FBI and Department of Defense with interests in intelligence operations.”
One of these workshops, ostensibly on detection of deception, specifically described how participants should consider “sensory overloads on the maintenance of deceptive behaviors,” including the use of “pharmacological agents. “How might we,” the workshop asked, “overload the system or overwhelm the senses and see how it affects deceptive behaviors?”
The man in charge of “recruiting the operational expertise” for the workshop was Kirk Hubbard, Chief of the Research & Analysis Branch, Operational Assessment Division of the CIA. It appears likely that Hubbard was responsible for the presence at the workshop of SERE psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, who were instrumental in the construction of the Bush administration’s “enhanced interrogation” torture program. Hubbard was also reported (by Scott Shane of the New York Times) to have brought James Mitchell to an informal meeting “of professors and law enforcement and intelligence officers… to brainstorm about Muslim extremism” at the home of former APA president Martin Seligman in November 2001.
Sometime in the past six months, the APA eliminated all references to the webpage described above, even going so far as to eliminate linked references to it on other webpages on its site. While the webpage that described the workshops has been scrubbed, mirrored images of the site remain available at well-known web archive sites, as I described in a recent article on this attempt to rewrite or hide APA’s offensive history. In one sense, this attempt to hide its history is not surprising, because the kind of activities discussed in these workshops are exactly like those that involved CIA and military mind control torture programs going back fifty years or more, and evidently still operational today.
The Role of Government Psychologist Susan Brandon
In a recent article, Scott Horton at Harper’s picked up on the unique link between the APA/CIA workshop and the recent revelations about torture at a hitherto unknown black site prison at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan. That link was an individual, Susan Brandon.
Referenced by Horton as working for the Defense Intelligence Agency’s (DIA), Defense Counterintelligence and Human Intelligence Center (DCHC), a recent publication identified Brandon more fully as Chief for Research in the DCHC’s Behavioral Science Program. As Horton notes, a recent column by Marc Ambinder at The Atlantic described the DCHC as providing “intelligence operatives and interrogators….. [performing] interrogations for a sub-unit of Task Force 714, an elite counter-terrorism brigade.” Interrogations at the Afghan black site reportedly have included use of sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, brutality, isolation, relying on the guidelines of the Army Field Manual, including its Appendix M. Many human rights groups have criticized Appendix M as including techniques tantamount to torture and/or cruel, inhumane and degrading and illegal by domestic and international law.
Back in 2003, according to an APA news article, Brandon “jointly conceived” the APA/CIA workshops with Rand Associate Policy Analyst, Scott Gerwehr. (Mr. Gerwehr reportedly died a few years ago.) At the time, psychologist Susan Brandon was the Program Officer for Affect and Biobehavioral Regulation at the National Institute of Mental Health, and worked on the APA/CIA program while also serving as “Senior Scientist” at the APA.
In the early 2000s, Dr. Brandon served as Behavioral and Social Science Principal at the Mitre Corporation, a company highly linked to U.S. Air Defense. Subsequent to her stint as APA’s Senior Scientist, she went on to work in for the Bush administration as Assistant Director of Social, Behavioral, and Educational Sciences for the White House Office of Science & Technology Policy. In addition, she became an instrumental member of the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBES) Subcommittee of the National Science and Technology Council’s Committees on Science and Homeland and National Security.
Subsequently, as described in an important article by Stephen Soldz that extends many of the points in this essay, Brandon joined the Defense Department’s Counterintelligence Field Activity group (CIFA), which was later disbanded and reformed as part of the DCHC. Soldz also reminds us that Brandon was “one of the silent observers at the [APA] PENS [Psychological Ethics and National Security] taskforce described by dissident taskforce member Jean Maria Arrigo as exerting pressure on members to adopt a likely pre-approved policy in favor of participation in Guantánamo, CIA, and other interrogations. According to a 2005 article by Geoff Mumford, APA’s Director of Science Policy, Dr. Brandon “helped steer much of the association’s scientific outreach relevant to counter-terrorism after 9/11.”
One example of such outreach would include the June 11, 2002 meeting between Brandon, and other top APA officials with “two senior staff members in the National Security Council’s (NSC’s) Office of Combating Terrorism” (OCT). Since Vice Admiral William McRaven was head of OCT at that time, perhaps Brandon’s acquaintance with the world of Special Operations dates to that time, as McRaven was to become Commander of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC).
JSOC is the other Defense Department component, besides DIA, that has been linked currently with the management of the black site prisons run by the Obama administration, subsequent to President Obama’s apparent closure of the CIA black sites. One reputable source has informed me that there are eight such black site prisons in Afghanistan alone. A recent report by the BBC corroborated earlier reports by the New York Times and the Washington Post. The article by Ambinder further elaborated upon this story.
Why is the Obama Administration Still Involved in Torture?
It is not known if Dr. Brandon has been involved in any of the reported abuses of prisoners coming out of Bagram’s Tor prison, or elsewhere. Yet one would think the Obama administration and the Pentagon has a lot to explain in utilizing as their behavioral chief of research for an agency involved in intelligence operations, including interrogation. But then, why is the Obama administration involved in torture or operating secret prisons at all? President Obama has manifestly broken his promise to the American people to end torture and close all secret prisons. Nor has Congress done their due diligence in investigating these matters. Only when the American people fully understand the extent to which these activities have occupied the government and their various collaborators, like the APA, will society be able to take the necessary steps to end these abuses, and hold those accountable for what amount to crimes against humanity.
As for psychologists, Dr. Soldz rightly notes, “Psychology as a profession is at a crossroads.” The same holds true for other professions involved with this abusive and criminal history, including the activities of anthropologists in the military’s Human Terrain System teams in Afghanistan, researchers in numerous academic departments across the country, and the many reports of doctors and other medical personnel involved in the monitoring of torture activities for the CIA and Defense Department. The use of torture has suborned U.S. civil society as a whole in activities that are dark and evil, and the society as a whole must make a tremendous effort if it is to extirpate such evil from its midst.
*For an early document referring to Artichoke’s history, see CIA, Memorandum for the Record, Subject: Project ARTICHOKE, January 31, 1975. While this MOR downplays Artichoke’s history, it represents the degree to which the CIA was willing to reveal such operations. The Truthout article discusses Operation Dormouse, where then Ford administration officials Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld worked with the CIA to limit revelations about Artichoke and other CIA torture and assassination operations.
Originally published on Firedoglake.
Jeffrey Kaye is a psychologist living in Northern California who writes regularly on torture and other subjects for The Public Record, Truthout and Firedoglake. He also maintains a personal blog, Invictus. His email address is sfpsych at gmail dot Obama Interrogation Official Linked to U.S. Mind Control Research
By Jeffrey Kaye
The Public Record
May 25th, 2010
Susan E. Brandon, the Obama administration’s Chief for Research in the DCHC’s Behavioral Science Program.
A new article at Truthout I co-wrote with author and investigative journalist H.P. Albarelli describes how the CIA’s Artichoke Project* was the contemporaneous and operational side of the MK-ULTRA mind control research program. It was not superceded by MK-ULTRA in the 1950s, as often supposed.
Even more, Artichoke-derived methods of using drugs, hypnosis, sensory deprivation and overload, behavioral modification techniques and other methods of mind control have resurfaced as a primary component of U.S. interrogation practice.
The Truthout article includes some amazing revelations, including the largest description to date of the roles of then-Ford administration officials Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld in working hand-in-glove with the CIA to suppress information on Artichoke from surfacing.
The article also references the November 2006 release of an “Instruction” from the Secretary of the Navy (3900.39D) regarding its “Human Research Protection Program.” While this memo specifically prohibits the use of research upon prisoners, including so-called “unlawful enemy combatants,” waivers of informed consent for research, or suspension of the protections enumerated in the memo can be made by the Secretary of the Navy under conditions of “operational contingency or during times of national emergency.” It is likely the latter rests upon the legislative language within the September 18, 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force, where terrorist acts are said to “continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”
The waivers allowed for normal human research testing gains further piquancy when one considers the kinds of research referenced in the Secretary of the Navy’s memo. Section 7(a)(2)(a) describes the Undersecretary of the Navy as the “approval authority” for research done upon prisoners, as well as “Severe or unusual intrusions, either physical or psychological, on human subjects (such as consciousness-altering drugs or mind-control techniques)” [emphasis added].
This referencing of “mind-control techniques” in a document specifically discussing human subjects protections by then Secretary of the Navy, Donald C. Winter, is not an anomaly, but a rare instance in which the actual activities of the government in this area are openly revealed. Some of these activities can be documented via publicly available materials. This article describes how some of the individuals involved in U.S. government mind control and torture activities can be tracked and identified.
APA, CIA: “How might we overload the system or overwhelm the senses…?”
Another instance in which the curtain was pulled back on mind control research by the U.S. government involved the online description by the American Psychological Association (APA) of a CIA and Rand Corporation workshop which it co-sponsored in July 2003 at Rand’s Arlington, Virginia headquarters. The event was attended by approximately 40 research psychologists, psychiatrists, neurologists, as well as “representatives from the CIA, FBI and Department of Defense with interests in intelligence operations.”
One of these workshops, ostensibly on detection of deception, specifically described how participants should consider “sensory overloads on the maintenance of deceptive behaviors,” including the use of “pharmacological agents. “How might we,” the workshop asked, “overload the system or overwhelm the senses and see how it affects deceptive behaviors?”
The man in charge of “recruiting the operational expertise” for the workshop was Kirk Hubbard, Chief of the Research & Analysis Branch, Operational Assessment Division of the CIA. It appears likely that Hubbard was responsible for the presence at the workshop of SERE psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, who were instrumental in the construction of the Bush administration’s “enhanced interrogation” torture program. Hubbard was also reported (by Scott Shane of the New York Times) to have brought James Mitchell to an informal meeting “of professors and law enforcement and intelligence officers… to brainstorm about Muslim extremism” at the home of former APA president Martin Seligman in November 2001.
Sometime in the past six months, the APA eliminated all references to the webpage described above, even going so far as to eliminate linked references to it on other webpages on its site. While the webpage that described the workshops has been scrubbed, mirrored images of the site remain available at well-known web archive sites, as I described in a recent article on this attempt to rewrite or hide APA’s offensive history. In one sense, this attempt to hide its history is not surprising, because the kind of activities discussed in these workshops are exactly like those that involved CIA and military mind control torture programs going back fifty years or more, and evidently still operational today.
The Role of Government Psychologist Susan Brandon
In a recent article, Scott Horton at Harper’s picked up on the unique link between the APA/CIA workshop and the recent revelations about torture at a hitherto unknown black site prison at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan. That link was an individual, Susan Brandon.
Referenced by Horton as working for the Defense Intelligence Agency’s (DIA), Defense Counterintelligence and Human Intelligence Center (DCHC), a recent publication identified Brandon more fully as Chief for Research in the DCHC’s Behavioral Science Program. As Horton notes, a recent column by Marc Ambinder at The Atlantic described the DCHC as providing “intelligence operatives and interrogators….. [performing] interrogations for a sub-unit of Task Force 714, an elite counter-terrorism brigade.” Interrogations at the Afghan black site reportedly have included use of sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, brutality, isolation, relying on the guidelines of the Army Field Manual, including its Appendix M. Many human rights groups have criticized Appendix M as including techniques tantamount to torture and/or cruel, inhumane and degrading and illegal by domestic and international law.
Back in 2003, according to an APA news article, Brandon “jointly conceived” the APA/CIA workshops with Rand Associate Policy Analyst, Scott Gerwehr. (Mr. Gerwehr reportedly died a few years ago.) At the time, psychologist Susan Brandon was the Program Officer for Affect and Biobehavioral Regulation at the National Institute of Mental Health, and worked on the APA/CIA program while also serving as “Senior Scientist” at the APA.
In the early 2000s, Dr. Brandon served as Behavioral and Social Science Principal at the Mitre Corporation, a company highly linked to U.S. Air Defense. Subsequent to her stint as APA’s Senior Scientist, she went on to work in for the Bush administration as Assistant Director of Social, Behavioral, and Educational Sciences for the White House Office of Science & Technology Policy. In addition, she became an instrumental member of the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBES) Subcommittee of the National Science and Technology Council’s Committees on Science and Homeland and National Security.
Subsequently, as described in an important article by Stephen Soldz that extends many of the points in this essay, Brandon joined the Defense Department’s Counterintelligence Field Activity group (CIFA), which was later disbanded and reformed as part of the DCHC. Soldz also reminds us that Brandon was “one of the silent observers at the [APA] PENS [Psychological Ethics and National Security] taskforce described by dissident taskforce member Jean Maria Arrigo as exerting pressure on members to adopt a likely pre-approved policy in favor of participation in Guantánamo, CIA, and other interrogations. According to a 2005 article by Geoff Mumford, APA’s Director of Science Policy, Dr. Brandon “helped steer much of the association’s scientific outreach relevant to counter-terrorism after 9/11.”
One example of such outreach would include the June 11, 2002 meeting between Brandon, and other top APA officials with “two senior staff members in the National Security Council’s (NSC’s) Office of Combating Terrorism” (OCT). Since Vice Admiral William McRaven was head of OCT at that time, perhaps Brandon’s acquaintance with the world of Special Operations dates to that time, as McRaven was to become Commander of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC).
JSOC is the other Defense Department component, besides DIA, that has been linked currently with the management of the black site prisons run by the Obama administration, subsequent to President Obama’s apparent closure of the CIA black sites. One reputable source has informed me that there are eight such black site prisons in Afghanistan alone. A recent report by the BBC corroborated earlier reports by the New York Times and the Washington Post. The article by Ambinder further elaborated upon this story.
Why is the Obama Administration Still Involved in Torture?
It is not known if Dr. Brandon has been involved in any of the reported abuses of prisoners coming out of Bagram’s Tor prison, or elsewhere. Yet one would think the Obama administration and the Pentagon has a lot to explain in utilizing as their behavioral chief of research for an agency involved in intelligence operations, including interrogation. But then, why is the Obama administration involved in torture or operating secret prisons at all? President Obama has manifestly broken his promise to the American people to end torture and close all secret prisons. Nor has Congress done their due diligence in investigating these matters. Only when the American people fully understand the extent to which these activities have occupied the government and their various collaborators, like the APA, will society be able to take the necessary steps to end these abuses, and hold those accountable for what amount to crimes against humanity.
As for psychologists, Dr. Soldz rightly notes, “Psychology as a profession is at a crossroads.” The same holds true for other professions involved with this abusive and criminal history, including the activities of anthropologists in the military’s Human Terrain System teams in Afghanistan, researchers in numerous academic departments across the country, and the many reports of doctors and other medical personnel involved in the monitoring of torture activities for the CIA and Defense Department. The use of torture has suborned U.S. civil society as a whole in activities that are dark and evil, and the society as a whole must make a tremendous effort if it is to extirpate such evil from its midst.
*For an early document referring to Artichoke’s history, see CIA, Memorandum for the Record, Subject: Project ARTICHOKE, January 31, 1975. While this MOR downplays Artichoke’s history, it represents the degree to which the CIA was willing to reveal such operations. The Truthout article discusses Operation Dormouse, where then Ford administration officials Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld worked with the CIA to limit revelations about Artichoke and other CIA torture and assassination operations.
Originally published on Firedoglake.
Jeffrey Kaye is a psychologist living in Northern California who writes regularly on torture and other subjects for The Public Record, Truthout and Firedoglake. He also maintains a personal blog, Invictus. His email address is sfpsych at gmail dot com
It appears from your voluminous post that there is enough information in the public domain to go after these amoral psychopathic government supported maniacs. What is need is a concerted effort by public and government(which is supposed to be the people) to root out and clean this vile stain on our name. Keep shouting. Seems like that’s still a freedom we have.
Also, alas, it seems it traces back to Obama. And has Nixon said, ‘It’s legal when the president does it.’ Not quite, but then who has the authority to confront a criminal president?
More from Kaye & collaborator:
When the newly created U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) was created just weeks later with Nelson A. Rockefeller as Under-Secretary, the CIA found it remarkably easy to gain HEW’s approval for use of Federal medical facilities as fronts for covert drug and interrogation experiments using unwitting human subjects. Inevitably, nearly all those unwitting experimental subjects chosen for HEW-sponsored projects were African-Americans and persons from immigrant groups and what one Agency document referred to as the “lower classes.”
http://truth-out.org/archive/component/k2/item/89725:cries-from-the-past-tortures-ugly-echoes
More from Kaye regarding
government health officials approval of experimentation on unwitting citizens.
http://truth-out.org/archive/component/k2/item/89725:cries-from-the-past-tortures-ugly-echoes
Psychologist Jeffrey Kaye parted company with the APA back in 2008:
http://www.alternet.org/story/78909/why_torture_made_me_leave_the_apa
Writing for Firedoglake, Kaye mentioned Gerwehr in a posting back in 2010. (There are references to Hubbard, as well.):
http://my.firedoglake.com/valtin/2010/05/23/obama-interrogation-official-linked-to-u-s-mind-control-research/
“Back in 2003, according to an APA news article, Brandon “jointly conceived” the APA/CIA workshops with Rand Associate Policy Analyst, Scott Gerwehr. (Mr. Gerwehr reportedly died a few years ago.) At the time, psychologist Susan Brandon was the Program Officer for Affect and Biobehavioral Regulation at the National Institute of Mental Health, and worked on the APA/CIA program while also serving as “Senior Scientist” at the APA.
In the early 2000s, Dr. Brandon served as Behavioral and Social Science Principal at the Mitre Corporation, a company highly linked to U.S. Air Defense. Subsequent to her stint as APA’s Senior Scientist, she went on to work in for the Bush administration as Assistant Director of Social, Behavioral, and Educational Sciences for the White House Office of Science & Technology Policy. In addition, she became an instrumental member of the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBES) Subcommittee of the National Science and Technology Council’s Committees on Science and Homeland and National Security.
Subsequently, as described in an important article by Stephen Soldz that extends many of the points in this essay, Brandon joined the Defense Department’s Counterintelligence Field Activity group (CIFA), which was later disbanded and reformed as part of the DCHC. Soldz also reminds us that Brandon was “one of the silent observers at the [APA] PENS [Psychological Ethics and National Security] taskforce described by dissident taskforce member Jean Maria Arrigo as exerting pressure on members to adopt a likely pre-approved policy in favor of participation in Guantánamo, CIA, and other interrogations. According to a 2005 article by Geoff Mumford, APA’s Director of Science Policy, Dr. Brandon “helped steer much of the association’s scientific outreach relevant to counter-terrorism after 9/11.”
One example of such outreach would include the June 11, 2002 meeting between Brandon, and other top APA officials with “two senior staff members in the National Security Council’s (NSC’s) Office of Combating Terrorism” (OCT). Since Vice Admiral William McRaven was head of OCT at that time, perhaps Brandon’s acquaintance with the world of Special Operations dates to that time, as McRaven was to become Commander of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC).
JSOC is the other Defense Department component, besides DIA, that has been linked currently with the management of the black site prisons run by the Obama administration, subsequent to President Obama’s apparent closure of the CIA black sites. One reputable source has informed me that there are eight such black site prisons in Afghanistan alone. A recent report by the BBC corroborated earlier reports by the New York Times and the Washington Post. The article by Ambinder further elaborated upon this story.”
Thank you nurse for your valuable contributions here.
My suggestion would be carefully-crafted and concise FOIA requests directed to the appropriate agencies.
I read Kaye’s review when it was first published. I am grateful to him for his attention to these widely-overlooked or ignored crimes against humanity. As I struggle to stay on even footing while being shocked, electronically harassed and slandered, the words from Kaye’s review that resonate most with me are: “…Just as frustrating is the lack of help or interest in those to who she repeatedly reached out for assistance, documentation and just plain human empathy.”
While many are guilty of the crime of “silence” (or worse), Kaye also says this:
“Luckily for Karen, at crucial times she found people who were supportive or sympathetic. … It worth noting that while the Vermont native was horribly abused by many doctors and other medical personnel — whose crime in many cases was silence in the face of unethical and illegal behavior — she finds some doctors and nurses to praise for their humanity, kindness, and assistance.”
And there are many good people…
You’re welcome, EC. May you and the many other victims of these heinous, criminal programs find relief.
Thank you. I’m waiting for someone to rise up and deliver the truth.
Remember, torture over there always returns home. The US medical community is compromised — they play a big part in local and overseas gangstalking.
Domestically, they try to fuck with your head, resulting in complete loss of trust. In other countries, physical torture is common; patriots rent torturers with ease.
For targets, every visit to a dentist, doctor, and medical lab is a potential torture session. Fortunately for me, only most of them are torture sessions.
Great article, Ms. Currier. Keep digging.
“PHR Calls for Federal Probe into American Psychological Association’s Role in CIA Torture Program”
http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/press/press-releases/phr-calls-for-federal-probe-into-american-psychological-associations-role-in-cia-torture-program.html
Great link, a nurse. I hope everyone gets a chance to read at least some of the excellent reports by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) on torture. From the article you linked to:
“Since 2005, PHR has documented the systematic use of psychological and physical torture on national security detainees in U.S. custody in its groundbreaking reports, including Break Them Down (2005), Leave No Marks (2007), Broken Laws, Broken Lives (2008), Aiding Torture (2009), Experiments in Torture (2010), and Buried Alive (2013).” [In the article a nurse linked to — above — there are live links to all these reports.]
And finally, a nurse, I wanted to say thanks for “having my back” in the comment section for The Intercept’s article, “The Ghost of Ronald Reagan Authorizes Most NSA Spying.” Maybe when the APA comes clean regarding their participation in the torture of detainees — or is forced to come clean by a federal probe — some info regarding the domestic psyops directed at innocent Americans will also come out.
My pleasure, ICHH.
You wrote: “Maybe when the APA comes clean regarding their participation in the torture of detainees — or is forced to come clean by a federal probe — some info regarding the domestic psyops directed at innocent Americans will also come out.”
Yes — it’s my hope, as well.
Why is it so hard to do this? There are more than enough testimonials from experts — Cheryl Welsh from MindJustice.org, former CIA researcher Dr. Robert Duncan, former MI5 microwave specialist Barrie Trower and reporter/target Vic Livingston just for starters. There are dozens or more begging for attention to this issue on Twitter. Why can’t people add 1+1=2 anymore? Where are the reporters? People are being targeted now yet no one seems to care.
“Why is it so hard to do this?” -EC
Given the names of the “experts” mentioned in your comment, it would appear that you’ve answered your own question.
“Where are the reporters?” -EC
One has to wonder.
“People are being targeted now yet no one seems to care.” -EC
What is clearly a counterintelligence program will eventually collapse under its own weight, if good journalists are unable to unmask it first. The hubris of those involved is mind-boggling, but it will ultimately be the undoing of those involved in this sadistic program, IMO.
As Edward Snowden said, “The truth is coming…”
Those experts have spent years documenting this issue. I hope the program will collapse under its own weight but I am not convinced with the indifference shown by the media at-large. People’s lives are being destroyed. And the culprits in my building are indeed bloated by their hubris. The evidence is in my walls, yet I cannot persuade any reporter to come with a countermeasures expert. Like others, I’m
waiting, waiting. And I can’t help but wonder if the indifference to the victims is due to class bias.
“The APA, in its statement, said that any suggestion [] “that APA had a financial motivation” to support U.S. detainee policies “is absurd.””
Okay. For psychology professionals to come out — formally — with a statement like this…………… It’s just embarrassing. There are many effective defensive postures one might assume in the face of these revelations. A huffily pompous exclamation of incredulity isn’t among them.
Were they trying to send the message of: ” Yes, YES!! We’re guilty as sin; throw the book at us!”? They aren’t the kind who could fail to know how this reads. Those among them who work in the private sector are commonly employed in PR; good, effective spin is their entire purpose, their raison d’etre.
How should journalists respond to this pitiful cri de coeur, if not with more & tougher questions? Given their tortured, but obvious desire to unload, decency all but demands it of you.
I think that the point in Risen’s book is not that there was some immediate, direct, financial relationship between the APA and the government, but that there were a lot of people in the psychology profession that needed the intelligence and defense establishment, both for research funding and for employment.
I will give Fluffy’s rather pettish psychobabble snark a 6. I will give you a half dozen, Cora.
*and, btw cora, do you mean “the psychology profession… needed the intelligence and defense establishment, both for research funding and for employment” to study these dark arts?
GITMO IS THE CHILD OF “OPERATION PAPERCLIP” NAZI INFLUENCE
“… I believe that Gerwehr encountered something deeply disturbing,” said Raymond. “I think that there needs to be a serious and robust federal investigation into Gerwehr’s past in terms of whistleblowing.”
Why is it so hard to connect the dots. Many have connected those dots but being cowards or involved themselves with these psychopaths have not taken action.
For each coward refusing to stand up to tyranny thousand suffer the consequences. When large numbers of men and women step back into the shadows and not out into the light the nation and the world suffers.
The difference between barbarism and civilization
It’s more worthwhile to pursue a criminal case against torture for the incidents that have already been documented and contested. It seems like the most logical step to take in order to call them out for the incidents that happened. But in comes Judge Moron coupled with the DOJ to let the torturers rest assured that they will never face legal consequences for the act. That way, they can continue developing the sophisticated technique known as administering unnecessary amounts of pain to the point of having the victim approach death. Only the best and the brightest could accomplish that mission. Only, the Central Intelligence Agency.
I commented today on both this story and on the story about the government pursuing criminal chargers related to the silencers. The two stories have something in common. In both cases, the evidence was destroyed. The senate intelligence oversight committee has said that the videotapes of the torture (that they were trying to obtain) were destroyed. The documents related to the silencers were stuffed in a burn bag.
Yes, they are all criminals and purvey the clear sense that they are psychopaths to any objective observer. Sometimes it seems that they’ve decided to project that on all of humanity in order to make themselves sleep at night. I’m sure that helps this ultimate, undeniable sense of triumphant justice that their judges erected and their image of themselves as having a noble mission — which is simply bullshit.
If you let the military torture, the Fed control interest rates, the money supply, and asset values, and the NSA spy, you will get corrupt psychologists, doctors, economists, computer scientists, and statisticians.
Why would the APA do something that is blatantly unconstitutional and flat out illegal?
People forget that the government has 2 powerful ways of influencing to get what they want (despite what they want being unconstitutional and flat out illegal):
1: The federal government has unlimited money
2: They have the ability to send people to jail for a very long time
So let’s apply these 2 principles to the APA
1: If you go along with torture, you will be hansomely rewarded (financially)
2: If you publicly complain about torture, you will go to jail for the rest of your life for leaking classified information