For How Long Has the CIA Engaged in Torture?
Then came 9/11. When the Twin Towers collapsed killing thousands, influential "pro-pain pundits" promptly repudiated those Enlightenment ideals and began publicly discussing whether torture might be an appropriate, even necessary weapon in George Bush's war on terror. The most persuasive among them, Harvard academic Alan M. Dershowitz, advocated giving courts the right to issue "torture warrants," ensuring that needed information could be prized from unwilling Arab subjects with steel needles.
Despite torture's appeal as a "lesser evil," a necessary expedient in dangerous times, those who favor it ignore its recent, problematic history in America. They also seem ignorant of a perverse pathology that allows the practice of torture, once begun, to spread uncontrollably in crisis situations, destroying the legitimacy of the perpetrator nation. As past perpetrators could have told today's pundits, torture plumbs the recesses of human consciousness, unleashing an unfathomable capacity for cruelty as well as seductive illusions of potency. Even as pundits and professors fantasized about "limited, surgical torture," the Bush administration, following the president's orders to "kick some ass," was testing and disproving their theories by secretly sanctioning brutal interrogation that spread quickly from use against a few "high target value" Al Qaeda suspects to scores of ordinary Afghans and then hundreds of innocent Iraqis.
As we learned from France's battle for Algiers in the 1950s, Argentina's dirty war in the 1970s, and Britain's Northern Ireland conflict in the 1970s, a nation that harbors torture in defiance of its democratic principles pays a terrible price. Its officials must spin an ever more complex web of lies that, in the end, weakens the bonds of trust that are the sine qua non of any modern society. Most surprisingly, our own pro-pain pundits seemed, in those heady early days of the war on terror, unaware of a fifty-year history of torture by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), nor were they aware that their enthusiastic proposals gave cover to those in the Bush Administration intent on reactivating a ruthless apparatus.
Torture's Perverse Pathology
In April 2004, the American public was stunned by televised photographs from
Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison showing hooded Iraqis stripped naked, posed in contorted
positions, and visibly suffering humiliating abuse while U.S. soldiers stood
by smiling. As the scandal grabbed headlines around the globe, Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld quickly assured Congress that the abuses were "perpetrated
by a small number of U.S. military," whom New York Times columnist
William Safire soon branded "creeps."
These photos, however, are snapshots not of simple brutality or even evidence of a breakdown in "military discipline." What they record are CIA torture techniques that have metastasized like an undetected cancer inside the U.S. intelligence community over the past half century. A survey of this history shows that the CIA was, in fact, the lead agency at Abu Ghraib, enlisting Army intelligence to support its mission. These photographs from Iraq also illustrate standard interrogation procedures inside the gulag of secret CIA prisons that have operated globally, on executive authority, since the start of the president's war on terror.
Looked at historically, the Abu Ghraib scandal is the product of a deeply contradictory U.S. policy toward torture since the start of the Cold War. At the UN and other international forums, Washington has long officially opposed torture and advocated a universal standard for human rights. Simultaneously, the CIA has propagated ingenious new torture techniques in contravention of these same international conventions, a number of which the U.S has ratified. In battling communism, the United States adopted some of its most objectionable practices -- subversion abroad, repression at home, and most significantly torture itself.
From 1950 to 1962, the CIA conducted massive, secret research into coercion and the malleability of human consciousness which, by the late fifties, was costing a billion dollars a year. Many Americans have heard about the most outlandish and least successful aspect of this research -- the testing of LSD on unsuspecting subjects. While these CIA drug experiments led nowhere and the testing of electric shock as a technique led only to lawsuits, research into sensory deprivation proved fruitful indeed. In fact, this research produced a new psychological rather than physical method of torture, perhaps best described as "no-touch" torture.
The Agency's discovery was a counterintuitive breakthrough, the first real
revolution in this cruel science since the seventeenth century -- and thanks
to recent revelations from Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo, we are now all too familiar
with these methods, even if many Americans still have no idea of their history.
Upon careful examination, those photographs of nude bodies expose the CIA's
most basic torture techniques -- stress positions, sensory deprivation, and
sexual humiliation.
For over 2,000 years, from ancient Athens through the Inquisition, interrogators
found that the infliction of physical pain often produced heightened resistance
or unreliable information -- the strong defied pain while the weak blurted out
whatever was necessary to stop it. By contrast, the CIA's psychological torture
paradigm used two new methods, sensory disorientation and "self-inflicted
pain," both of which were aimed at causing victims to feel responsible
for their own suffering and so to capitulate more readily to their torturers.
A week after the Abu Ghraib scandal broke, General Geoffrey Miller, U.S. prison
commander in Iraq (and formerly in Guantanamo), offered an unwitting summary
of this two-phase torture. "We will no longer, in any circumstances, hood
any of the detainees," the general said. "We will no longer use stress
positions in any of our interrogations. And we will no longer use sleep deprivation
in any of our interrogations."
Under field conditions since the start of the Afghan War, Agency and allied
interrogators have often added to their no-touch repertoire physical methods
reminiscent of the Inquisition's trademark tortures -- strappado, question de
l'eau, "crippling stork," and "masks of mockery." At the
CIA's center near Kabul in 2002, for instance, American interrogators forced
prisoners "to stand with their hands chained to the ceiling and their feet
shackled," an effect similar to the strappado. Instead of the Inquisition's
iron-framed "crippling stork" to contort the victim's body, CIA interrogators
made their victims assume similar "stress positions" without any external
mechanism, aiming again for the psychological effect of self-induced pain
Although seemingly less brutal than physical methods, the CIA's "no touch"
torture actually leaves deep, searing psychological scars on both victims and
-- something seldom noted -- their interrogators. Victims often need long treatment
to recover from a trauma many experts consider more crippling than physical
pain. Perpetrators can suffer a dangerous expansion of ego, leading to escalating
acts of cruelty and lasting emotional disorders. When applied in actual operations,
the CIA's psychological procedures have frequently led to unimaginable cruelties,
physical and sexual, by individual perpetrators whose improvisations are often
horrific and only occasionally effective.
Just as interrogators are often seduced by a dark, empowering sense of dominance
over victims, so their superiors, even at the highest level, can succumb to
fantasies of torture as an all-powerful weapon. Our contemporary view of torture
as aberrant and its perpetrators as abhorrent ignores both its pervasiveness
as a Western practice for two millennia and its perverse appeal. Once torture
begins, its perpetrators, plunging into uncharted recesses of consciousness,
are often swept away by dark reveries, by frenzies of power and potency, mastery
and control -- particularly in times of crisis. "When feelings of insecurity
develop within those holding power," reads one CIA analysis of the Soviet
state applicable to post-9/11 America, "they become increasingly suspicious
and put great pressures on the secret police to obtain arrests and confessions.
At such times police officials are inclined to condone anything which produces
a speedy 'confession' and brutality may become widespread."
Enraptured by this illusory power, modern states that sanction torture usually
allow it to spread uncontrollably. By 1967, just four years after compiling
a torture manual for use against a few top Soviet targets, the CIA was operating
forty interrogation centers in South Vietnam as part of its Phoenix Program
that killed over 20,000 Viet Cong suspects. In the centers themselves, countless
thousands were tortured for information that led to these assassinations. Similarly,
just a few months after CIA interrogators first tortured top Al Qaeda suspects
at Kabul in 2002, its agents were involved in the brutal interrogation of hundreds
of Iraqi prisoners. As its most troubling legacy, the CIA's psychological method,
with its legitimating scientific patina and its avoidance of obvious physical
brutality, has provided a pretext for the preservation of torture as an acceptable
practice within the U.S. intelligence community.
Once adopted, torture offers such a powerful illusion of efficient information
extraction that its perpetrators, high and low, remain wedded to its use. They
regularly refuse to recognize its limited utility and high political cost. At
least twice during the Cold War, the CIA's torture training contributed to the
destabilization of two key American allies, Iran's Shah and the Philippines'
Ferdinand Marcos. Yet even after their spectacular falls, the Agency remained
blind to the way its torture training was destroying the allies it was designed
to defend.
CIA Torture Research
The CIA's torture experimentation of the 1950s and early 1960s was codified
in 1963 in a succinct, secret instructional booklet on torture -- the "KUBARK
Counterintelligence Interrogation" manual, which would become the basis
for a new method of torture disseminated globally over the next three decades.
These techniques were first spread through the U.S. Agency for International
Development's Public Safety program to train police forces in Asia and Latin
America as the front line of defense against communists and other revolutionaries.
After an angry Congress abolished the Public Safety program in 1975, the CIA
worked through U.S. Army Mobile Training Teams to instruct military interrogators,
mainly in Central America.
At the Cold War's end, Washington resumed its advocacy of universal principles,
denouncing regimes for torture, participating in the World Conference on Human
Rights at Vienna in 1993 and, a year later, ratifying the UN Convention Against
Torture. On the surface, the United States had resolved the tension between
its anti-torture principles and its torture practices. Yet even when Congress
finally ratified this UN convention it did so with intricately-constructed reservations
that cleverly exempted the CIA's psychological torture method. While other covert
agencies synonymous with Cold War repression such as Romania's Securitate, East
Germany's Stasi, and the Soviet Union's KGB have disappeared, the CIA survives
-- its archives sealed, its officers decorated, and its Cold War crimes forgotten.
By failing to repudiate the Agency's propagation of torture, while adopting
a UN convention that condemned its practice, the United States left this contradiction
buried like a political land mine ready to detonate with such phenomenal force
in the Abu Ghraib scandal.
Memory and Forgetting
Today the American public has only a vague understanding of these CIA excesses
and the scale of its massive mind-control project. Yet almost every adult American
carries fragmentary memories of this past -- of LSD experiments, the CIA's Phoenix
program in Vietnam, the murder of a kidnapped American police adviser in Montevideo
who was teaching CIA techniques to the Uruguayan police, and of course the Abu
Ghraib photographs. But few are able to fit these fragments together and so
grasp the larger picture. There is, in sum, an ignorance, a studied avoidance
of a deeply troubling topic, akin to that which shrouds this subject in post-authoritarian
societies.
With the controversy over Abu Ghraib, incidents that once seemed but fragments
should now be coming together to form a mosaic of a clandestine agency manipulating
its government and deceiving its citizens to probe the cruel underside of human
consciousness, and then propagating its discoveries throughout the Third World.
Strong democracies have difficulty dealing with torture. In the months following
the release of the Abu Ghraib photos, the United States moved quickly through
the same stages (as defined by author John Conroy) that the United Kingdom experienced
after revelations of British army torture in Northern Ireland in the early 1970s
-- first, minimizing the torture with euphemisms such as "interrogation
in depth"; next, justifying it on grounds that it was necessary or effective;
and finally, attempting to bury the issue by blaming "a few bad apples."
Indeed, since last April, the Bush administration and much of the media have
studiously avoided the word "torture" and instead blamed our own bad
apples, those seven Military Police. In July, the Army's Inspector General,
Paul T. Mikolashek, delivered his report blaming 94 incidents of "abuse"
on "an individual failure to uphold Army Values." Although the New
York Times called his conclusions "comical," the general's views
seem to resonate with an emerging conservative consensus. "Interrogation
is not a Sunday-school class," said Republican Senator Trent Lott. "You
don't get information that will save American lives by withholding pancakes."
In June, an ABC News/Washington Post poll found that 35 percent of Americans
felt torture was acceptable in some circumstances.
In August, Major General George R. Fay released his report on the role of Military
Intelligence at Abu Ghraib. Its stunning revelations about the reasons for this
torture were, however, obscured in opaque military prose. After interviewing
170 personnel and reviewing 9,000 documents, the general intimated that this
abuse was the product of an interrogation policy shaped, in both design and
application, by the CIA.
Significantly, General Fay blamed not the "seven bad apples," but
the Abu Ghraib interrogation procedures themselves. Of the 44 verifiable incidents
of abuse, one-third occurred during actual interrogation. Moreover, these "routine"
interrogation procedures "contributed to an escalating 'de-humanization'
of the detainees and set the stage for additional and severe abuses to occur."
After finding standard Army interrogation doctrine sound, General Fay was forced
to confront a single, central, uncomfortable question: what was the source of
the aberrant, "non-doctrinal" practices that led to torture during
interrogation at Abu Ghraib? Scattered throughout his report are the dots, politely
unconnected, that lead from the White House to the Iraqi prison cell block:
President Bush gave his defense secretary broad powers over prisoners in November
2001; Secretary Rumsfeld authorized harsh "Counter-Resistance Techniques"
for Afghanistan and Guantanamo in December 2002; hardened Military Intelligence
units brought these methods to Iraq in July 2003; and General Ricardo Sanchez
in Baghdad authorized these extreme measures for Abu Ghraib in September 2003.
In its short answer to this uncomfortable question, General Fay's report, when
read closely, traced the source of these harsh "non-doctrinal methods"
at Abu Ghraib to the CIA. He charged that a flouting of military procedures
by CIA interrogators "eroded the necessity in the minds of soldiers and
civilians for them to follow Army rules." Specifically, the Army "allowed
CIA to house 'Ghost Detainees' who were unidentified and unaccounted for in
Abu Ghraib," thus encouraging violations of "reporting requirements
under the Geneva Conventions." Moreover, the interrogation of CIA detainees
"occurred under different practices and procedures which were absent any
DoD visibility, control, or oversight and created a perception that OGA [CIA]
techniques and practices were suitable and authorized for DoD operations."
With their exemption from military regulations, CIA interrogators moved about
Abu Ghraib with a corrupting "mystique" and extreme methods that "fascinated"
some Army interrogators. In sum, General Fay seems to say that the CIA has compromised
the integrity and effectiveness of the U.S. military.
Had he gone further, General Fay might have mentioned that the 519th Military Intelligence, the Army unit that set interrogation guidelines for Abu Ghraib, had just come from Kabul where it worked closely with the CIA, learning torture techniques that left at least one Afghani prisoner dead. Had he gone further still, the general could have added that the sensory deprivation techniques, stress positions, and cultural shock of dogs and nudity that we saw in those photos from Abu Ghraib were plucked from the pages of past CIA torture manuals.
American Prestige
This is not, of course, the first American debate over torture in recent memory. From 1970 to 1988, the Congress tried unsuccessfully, in four major investigations, to expose elements of this CIA torture paradigm. But on each occasion the public showed little concern, and the practice, never fully acknowledged, persisted inside the intelligence community.
Now, in these photographs from Abu Ghraib, ordinary Americans have seen the
reality and the results of interrogation techniques the CIA has propagated and
practiced for nearly half a century. The American public can join the international
community in repudiating a practice that, more than any other, represents a
denial of democracy; or in its desperate search for security, the United States
can continue its clandestine torture of terror suspects in the hope of gaining
good intelligence without negative publicity.
In the likely event that Washington adopts the latter strategy, it will be a
decision posited on two false assumptions: that torturers can be controlled
and that news of their work can be contained. Once torture begins, its use seems
to spread uncontrollably in a downward spiral of fear and empowerment. With
the proliferation of digital imaging we can anticipate, in five or ten years,
yet more chilling images and devastating blows to America's international standing.
Next time, however, the American public's moral concern and Washington's apologies
will ring even more hollowly, producing even greater damage to U.S. prestige.
This article first appeared on www.tomdispatch.com, a weblog of the Nation Institute, which offers a steady flow of alternate sources, news and opinion from Tom Engelhardt, a long time editor in publishing, the author of The End of Victory Culture, and a fellow of the Nation Institute.
Copyright C2004 Alfred W. McCoy