RINF.COM: HET BREKENDE ALTERNATIEF VAN HET NIEUWS
|
|
BREKEND NIEUWS |
De Amerikaanse Psychologische Marteling van de Steunen van de Vereniging
Woensdag, 28 Mei, 2008
In een brief aan de Amerikaanse Burgerlijke Unie van Vrijheden (ACLU), Dr. van APA. Behnke verklaarde: „In zorgvuldig het herzien van de documenten, merken wij op dat volgens de informatie die door ACLU wordt verkregen, de psychologen ondersteunend ondervragingen `hun scheiding van gevangene medische zorg' benadrukten, en dat een psycholoog die misbruik `verdacht de ondervraging niet adviseerde te werk gaan en in medisch personeel bracht om de gevangene te evalueren.' Volgens deze documenten, diende het beleid van APA van overeenkomst het voorgenomen doel: om ondervragingen tegen te houden die de grenzen van ethische correctheid.“ kruisen Om Dr. te geven. Krediet van Behnke, erkende hij de misbruiken die in het onlangs vrijgegeven materiaal worden beschreven „weerzinwekkend.“ Nochtans, valt om het even welk onbevooroordeeld „zorgvuldig overzicht“ van de documenten veel plotseling van het steunen van Dr. De conclusie van Behnke. Vrij heft het tegendeel, het rapport nieuwe zorgen over de rollen van psychologen in de ondervragingen van de V.S. op. Dr. Brief van Behnke aan ACLU werd verspreid binnen APA als defensie van het lang-betwiste beleid van de vereniging. Het daarom belangrijk zijn eisen in de context zorgvuldig om te onderzoeken van wat over ondervragingsmisbruiken in Irak gekend is. In een afzonderlijk artikel, antwoordde de Band Trudy aan Dr. De eisen van Behnke in de zelfde brief, die zijn beweringen vraagt dat APA bereid is om rapporten van psychologen te oordelen die aan gevangenemisbruik deelnemen. Ik zal me in plaats daarvan hier bij het onderzoeken van Dr. concentreren. De eis dat van Behnke het Rapport van de Kerk het beleid van APA van participatie in gevangeneondervragingen steunt. In dit proces bezoek ik kort vorige rechtvaardigingen voor beleid APA opnieuw. De onlangs Vrijgegeven Materialen van het Rapport van de Kerk Op 30 Mei, 2008, kondigde de Amerikaanse Burgerlijke Unie van Vrijheden (ACLU) de versie, in het kader van het Akte van de Vrijheid van Informatie, van eerder opgestelde gedeelten van het Rapport van de Kerk over militaire de gevangenemisbruiken van de V.S. aan. Dit materiaal bevat talrijke rapporten van fysiek en geestelijk misbruik, met inbegrip van verscheidene gevangenesterfgevallen. Het rapport maakt duidelijk dat: “[M]edical personnel often have exposure to the circumstances of detainee treatment.” In discussing a number of these deaths the report states: “We do not know if medical personnel reported suspicions of detainee abuse in this case, but the circumstances probably should have led them to consider detainee abuse.” Although the language is sanitized, this statement nevertheless strongly points to the failure of medical personnel to take appropriate action in the face of likely interrogation abuse. Yet, in only one of eight deaths judged “suspicious for abuse” is there evidence that an Army physician reported the abuse. Thus, even in the face of potential homicide, medical personnel, for the most part, appear to have remained silent. With regard to psychologists, the report stated: “In Iraq, we interviewed two military personnel and one civilian serving in this capacity. All three emphasized their separation from detainee medical care. Only one believed he had observed or suspected detainee abuse. No details were offered, except that, when this occurred, he recommended the interrogation not proceed and brought in medical personnel to evaluate the detainee.” The newly released material also reports that interrogation techniques [authorized by a September 2003 memorandum from commanding General Ricardo Sanchez] continued to be widely used until at least July 2004, well after some techniques were retracted in October 2003. Other techniques were banned in May 2004 [in the wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal]. These included: ” Isolation.” ” Environmental Manipulation: Altering the environment to create moderate discomfort (e.g. adjusting temperature or introducing an unpleasant smell)…. [Caution: Based on court cases in other countries, some nations may view application of this technique in certain circumstances to be inhumane. Consideration of these views should be given prior to use of this technique.]” ” Presence of Military Working Dog: Exploits Arab fear of dogs while maintaining security during interrogations.” ” Yelling, Loud Music, and Light Control: Used to create fear, disorient detainee and prolong capture shock.” ” Sleep Management: Detainee provided minimum 4 hours of sleep per 24 hour period, not to exceed 72 continuous hours.” ” Stress Positions: Use of physical postures (sitting, standing, kneeling, prone, ect.) for no more than 1 hour per use. Use of technique(s) will not exceed 4 hours and adequate rest between use of each position will be provided.” As was confirmed by the just released Justice Department Inspector General report on FBI involvement in abusive interrogations, these techniques were derived from the military’s Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape (SERE) program to train US military personnel how to resist breaking under torture. As the Defense Department Inspector General reported, these techniques were “reverse engineered” by military and intelligence psychologists into US interrogation techniques. Authorization to use these techniques was hidden as, even after the Abu Ghraib scandal, the administration refused to release the Sanchez memo for nearly a year. These techniques, according to the Church Report, continued in widespread use long after their use had been retracted. Special Forces According to accounts by individuals like former Iraq Army interrogator Tony Lagouranis, these SERE techniques were regularly used by Special Forces in Iraq. Other interrogators learned of them, directly or indirectly, from Special Forces and attempted to imitate the techniques used by these revered units. Abuses by the Navy SEALS, a Special Forces unit, were reported by Lagouranis: “They would actually have the detainee stripped nude, laying on the floor, pouring ice water over his body. They were taking his temperature with a rectal thermometer. We had one guy who had been burned by the navy SEALs. He looked like he had a lighter held up to his legs. One guy’s feet were like huge and black and blue, his toes were obviously all broken, he couldn’t walk.” Further reports of abuse by Special Forces include the New York Times’s March 19, 2006 article chillingly entitled “In Secret Unit’s ‘Black Room,’ a Grim Portrait of U.S. Abuse”: The ICRC further reported: “In certain cases such as in Abu Ghraib military intelligence section, methods of physical and psychological coercion used by the interrogators appeared to be part of the standard operating procedures by military intelligence personnel to obtain confessions and extract information. Several military intelligence officers confirmed to the ICRC that it was part of the military intelligence process to hold a person deprived of his liberty naked in a completely dark and empty cell for a prolonged period to use inhumane and degrading treatment, including physical and psychological coercion” (p. 11). It is important to note that no one was prosecuted or convicted at Abu Ghraib for isolating or humiliating prisoners, or for putting prisoners in ‘stress positions.’ These were considered standard operating procedures by the prosecution. The convictions were handed down for taking the infamous photographs or when there was evidence of physical abuse that went beyond these techniques. The Church Report It is relevant to understand that the Church Report is widely viewed as an attempt to whitewash detainee abuse through sidestepping the extent to which abuse was standard operating procedure and thus reducing command responsibility for that abuse. Thus Human Rights Watch characterizes the Church Report as a partial cover-up containing patent falsehoods: “The Church report was supposed to be the definitive report on the development of interrogation techniques and detainee abuse in the “global war on terror” but the unclassified summary suggests a careful attempt — months after the Schlesinger and Fay/Jones report put the Pentagon on the defensive — to present a version of the facts that would not cause any trouble for the hierarchy. Time and again, the summary goes out of its way to rebut any inference that government policy was to blame, to the point of straining credibility and flatly contradicting the earlier reports. The report concluded that there was ‘no single, overarching explanation’ for the ‘few’ cases in which detainees had not been treated humanely. Although Secretary Rumsfeld and General Sanchez both approved the use of guard dogs to strike fear in detainees, and although guard dogs were featured prominently in the Abu Ghraib photos, the Church executive summary states that ‘it is clear that none of the pictured abuses at Abu Ghraib bear any resemblance to approved policies at any level, in any theater.’ Indeed, the only mention of dogs in the entire summary is the patently false statement that in Afghanistan and Iraq ‘interrogators clearly understood that abusive practices and techniques — such as … terrorizing detainees with unmuzzled dogs … — were at all times prohibited.’ ” Given the nature of this report, it should be taken as a statement of what cannot be denied, and not as a definitive account of the nature or the extent of detainee abuse. Previous APA Policy Justifications The APA has utilized many questionable arguments and deceptive tactics to justify psychologists’ participation in interrogations. In 2005, the APA appointed a Presidential Task Force on Psychological Ethics and National Security (PENS). This Task Force was given the mandate to determine APA policy on psychologists’ participation in detainee interrogations. The majority of the Task Force membership, it turns out, consisted of military and intelligence psychologists who played roles in post 9/11 interrogations at Guantánamo, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the CIA’s “black site” torture centers. Not surprisingly, this task force emphasized psychologists important role is aiding national security by participating in these interrogations. In support of its policy the APA has highlighted every available report of psychologists resisting interrogation abuses. While finding small pockets of resistance would hardly defend the policy, the APA has been able to offer only three incidents of psychologists ostensibly opposing the abusive interrogation policy. This despite the central role of psychologists in interrogations at Guantánamo and the CIA black sites and their participation in interrogations in both Iraq and Afghanistan. The most noteworthy example offered thus far has been that of Michael Gelles, a Navy Criminal Investigative Service psychologist. Gelles forcefully opposed opposed some of the worst abuses committed at Guantánamo and reported them to his commander, leading to policy changes. While Dr. Gelles acted honorably and may have helped change policies, one should remember that, long after these interventions the ICRC found conditions at Guantánamo continued to be abusive. As the New York Times described the ICRC findings during their June 2004 visit: “[I]nvestigators had found a system devised to break the will of the prisoners at Guantánamo, who now number about 550, and make them wholly dependent on their interrogators through ‘humiliating acts, solitary confinement, temperature extremes, use of forced positions.’ Investigators said that the methods used were increasingly ‘more refined and repressive’ than learned about on previous visits. ”The construction of such a system, whose stated purpose is the production of intelligence, cannot be considered other than an intentional system of cruel, unusual and degrading treatment and a form of torture,’ the report said. It said that in addition to the exposure to loud and persistent noise and music and to prolonged cold, detainees were subjected to ’some beatings.’ The report did not say how many of the detainees were subjected to such treatment.” Thus, whatever successes Dr. Gelles’ achieved, they did little to dismantle the abusive system, described in the ICRC report as “tantamount to torture.” Even Dr. Gelles’ valiant attempt to oppose these interrogation techniques did little, in the end, to keep interrogations “safe, legal, ethical, and effective.” The APA has also at times pointed to Col. Larry James as an example of a psychologist successfully opposing torture. But there is simply no evidence to support this claim. Col. James was the Chief Psychologist on the Joint Intelligence Task Force in charge of the Behavioral Science Consultation Team (BSCT) at Guantánamo in early 2003. As the Red Cross noted when they returned to Guantánamo a year after col. James’ departure, conditions had only become increasingly “more refined and repressive” since Col. James was stationed there. Additionally, during Col. James’ tour at Guantánamo, the Camp Delta Standard Operating Procedures were adopted mandating a minimum of four weeks isolation for all new detainees: “to enhance and exploit the disorientation and disorganization felt by a newly arrived detainee in the interrogation process. It concentrates on isolating the detainee and fostering dependence of the detainee on his interrogator.” The Joint Intelligence Task Force, of which Col. James was the Chief Psychologist, was in fact assigned the role of deciding when a detainee had been sufficiently disoriented, disorganized, and dependent on his interrogator enough to be released from this isolation. When this policy was described in Harpers online, Dr. Behnke, the APA’s Ethics wrote a letter agreeing that this use of isolation was unethical for psychologists: “With the recent posting on the Internet of what has been identified as the U.S. military’s 2003 operating manual for the Guantánamo detention center, attention has been directed to the use of isolation and sensory deprivation as interrogation procedures. APA policy specifically prohibits using any such technique, alone or in combination with other techniques for the purpose of breaking down a detainee.” Nonetheless, even after this information became public, APA officials have continued to cite Col. James to audiences as an anti-torture hero. APA and the Newly-Released Materials Contained in the newly released sections of the Church Report is an official acknowledgement that psychologists in so-called Behavioral Science Consultation Teams (BSCTs) functioned in both Iraq and Afghanistan. But what had not been clear before is that these BSCTs are “mostly within Special Operations, where they provide direct support to military operations.” That is, the BSCT psychologists were, as described above, within the units especially known for using brutal means for dealing with detainees (Arrigo & Bennett, 2007). Given this context, it is especially misleading that the APA’s Ethics Director points to two vague sentences in the report to argue that this material supports the APA’s policy of “engagement” with the Bush administration’s interrogation regime. Here are the relevant sentences from the Church report: “In Iraq, we interviewed two military personnel and one civilian serving in this capacity. All three emphasized their separation from detainee medical care. Only one believed he had observed or suspected detainee abuse. No details were offered, except that, when this occurred, he recommended the interrogation not proceed and brought in medical personnel to evaluate the detainee.” Given that these BSCT psychologists are “mostly within Special Operations” and are assigned to military intelligence, a curious reader might wonder about the routine nature of interrogations witnessed or participated in by the BSCT psychologists. These routine interrogations likely included techniques approved by the September 2003 memorandum from Gen. Sanchez which the very same Church Report materials document were still in widespread use through at least July 2004. Given this background, there is a more plausible reading of these sentences. It is most likely that what was “abuse” to a BSCT psychologist were interrogation tactics that went beyond those authorized by the September 2003 memo as ‘standard operating procedure.’ That is, given the “No Blood, No Foul” attitude of many Special Forces units, “abuse” would very likely be tactics that led to serious and visible physical harm. The fact that the BSCT “brought in medical personnel to evaluate the detainee” also supports such an interpretation. In years of reading and writing about detainee abuse in Iraq and elsewhere, I have never seen accounts of medical personnel being brought in to examine victims exposed “merely” to psychological abuse such as isolation, stress positions, sleep deprivation, or exposure to loud noises or freezing temperatures. It is unlikely that this sole report of a psychologist reporting abuse was referring to these widespread, but standard, abuses. Can I prove my interpretation of this passage is the correct one? No. The wording is ambiguous and “no details were offered.” But Dr. Behnke’s claim that these newly released materials provide evidence that “APA’s policy of engagement served the intended purpose – to stop interrogations that cross the bounds of ethical propriety” – is totally unsupported. In contrast, my interpretation is grounded in knowledge about detainee abuse in Iraq and about the Church report. Dr. Behnke’s “careful” review of these documents does not attempt to understand the role of psychologists in abuse of detainees but, like U.S. “intelligence” about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, fixes the data around established APA policy. Reference Have Your Say: American Psychological Association Supports Torture Please note, only selected comments will be published. Or discuss this report in our our new forums This entry was posted on Wednesday, May 28th, 2008 at 9:02 am and is filed under Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News, General . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. |
Translations![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Free Newsletter
Related News
Email This Page To A Friend Latest Headlines
More Breaking News Archive |
TOP NEWS DISCUSSIONS |
LATEST NEWS DISCUSSIONS |
|
|
Monbiot plans citizen's arrest of John Bolton Over 60% of People Do Not Trust the Government Oil: A global crisis 25 USA Military Officers Challenge Official 9/11 Account Students Denied Legal Aid Lorry drivers to shut down London roads in protest McCain's Plan - Millions Will Lose Insurance Coverage The War on Drugs - '30 Years of Failure' The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder Indymedia and Anti-Semitism John Bolton Escapes Citizen’s Arrest All War All The Time |
Herschel Logan commented on: John Bolton Escapes Citizen’s Arrest It would be great if it were that easy to bring him and others like him to justice. Continue Reading & Reply Malcolm commented on: Family wants answers after Taser death My heart felt condolences, Ms. Abram. Loosing a loved one always leaves an empty feeling. Left your... Continue Reading & Reply Malcolm commented on: All War All The Time Wonderful exposition, Mr Smith. What do you think of CDI.org? they have an interesting article this month. Basically,... Continue Reading & Reply Pauline commented on: Smoking Ban To Hit Amsterdam Coffee Shops re Kags, What on earth were you doing in a coffeeshop if it wasn’t to smoke weed? You say... Continue Reading & Reply |
Awesome street art Not sure if this should be posted in multimedia bu. […] Thread Started By: the-nameless-one Peak Oil? Hoax or Reality? I don't think it's a hoax. We need to find alterna. […] Thread Started By: the-nameless-one Can I be a mod? I'm level headed, I'm not afraid to call a spade a. […] Thread Started By: the-nameless-one Over 60% of People Do Not Trust the Government Report I published recently ---Quote--- A poll con. […] Thread Started By: editor Is it time to legalise all drugs! In the face of overwhelming evidence that the so c. […] Thread Started By: loki Hello from me Helo everyone names is Veles, i am here, you are r. […] Thread Started By: Veles ![]() |
The views expressed in the RINF news wire and newsletter are the sole responsibility of the author (s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the webmaster. RINF.COM: Breaking News & Alternative Media is Copyleft - Copy & Distribute Freely. News Forum |