MK Ultra: Experimentar com a mente
Por Thomas E. Ricks
O CIA estava ansioso para examinar o uso de drogas pharmaceutical perigosas modificar o comportamento de indivíduos alvejados, e assim que pediu que os fabricantes comerciais da droga passassem ao longo das amostras das medicinas rejeitadas para a venda comercial “por causa dos efeitos laterais desfavoráveis,” de acordo com um memorando undated incluído nas dúzias dos originais do CIA liberados ontem.
Os cientistas do CIA testaram algumas das drogas em macacos e os ratos, o memorando disseram. Drugs that showed promise, it said, “were then tested at Edgewood, using volunteer members of the Armed Forces.” This appears to be a reference to an Army laboratory north of Baltimore now called the Edgewood Chemical Biological Center. The memo doesn’t discuss the reactions of those human subjects.
The three-paragraph memo reports that the late Carl Duckett, a senior CIA technologist, had said the testing program was not intended to find new techniques to be used offensively, but rather was an effort to detect if such drugs were being employed by others.
Duckett “emphasizes that the program was considered as defensive, in the sense that we would be able to recognize certain behavior if similar materials were used against Americans,” it states. Duckett, the CIA’s deputy director for science and technology, retired in 1977 and died in 1992.
Another document, dated May 8, 1973, mentions the existence of a 1963 account of agency scientists administering mind- or personality-altering drugs on “unwitting subjects” — that is, testing hallucinogens such as LSD on people without their knowledge. The document doesn’t provide details.
One of the most notorious such cases involved Frank R. Olson, a CIA germ-warfare expert who died in a fall from a hotel window in 1953, nine days after a CIA doctor spiked Olson’s after-dinner drink with LSD. In 1975, President Gerald R. Ford invited Olson’s family to the White House to apologize; the government also paid the family $750,000.
Sidney Gottlieb, the chief of the CIA’s technical services division, who directed the mind-control experiments, retired from the government in 1973 and died in 1999. The released documents shed little light on those experiments.
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