Archive for February 27th, 2007

Respons to Padilla and ‘truth serums”

A psychologist reader responds to this morning post of Jeff Stein’s article Padilla Case Opens Old Questions on CIA ‘Truth Serums’.

But you know what always surprises when I hear this story, being someone in the drug and addictions field myself, is the sort of naivete of Padilla’s attorneys to say they think he was injected with PCP or LSD.

It would sort of be like a NUCLEAR WEAPON hitting a city and saying, we know it must be an enormous amount of DYNAMITE that they used.”

But we can’t figure out why they would even try using dynamite because it never produces an explosion that big.

The attorneys and everyone else in this case seem to have no scientific sense or even creative thinking about how drugs have evolved, how much they develop each decade, particularly with military funding. No one in the military is using LSD or PCP–unless it is just some soldier who snuck it on the ship–I guess that’s possible. Even ecstasy and methamphetamine are child’s play with what the government is likely to have at its disposal. The assumption is also that the government is giving detainees one drug at a time rather than combinations and sequences of far more advanced drugs.

Oxytocin that’s involved in natural infant attachment to the mother is a hormone that has been found to increase trust in adult research participants and could be used in conjunction with sensation producing euphorics like ecstasy to produce a situation far more conducive to interrogations than LSD or PCP. It is far more targeted but any subjective description from someone who was given this combination of these things a month before would make it sound like a typical hallucinogen. But the right combinations and the right sequences and how they interact with the procedures in the army field manual are probably what’s key and exactly what the military wants to test, and may be testing.

So I think we should not accept this argument that oh the government would never try to use truth serums because our research from 4 decades ago says they’re not effective. It comes back to our efficacy question. It may not be effective yet, but that’s not going to stop them from trying.

I guess in this whole thing I am guilty of underestimating the government’s savvy and dedication to science to increase their arsenal to win their “war”.

Add comment February 27th, 2007

Gilbert Burnham discusses counting Iraq dead at MIT

Gilbert Burnham, lead author of the 2006 Lancet Iraq casualty study. You can watch the seminar here.

I was there and felt he did a credible job presenting and defending the study. While there were quite a number of questions, there was no one among this highly qualified audience who thought the study was not highly credible.

A few of the details he presented reduced some of my qualms about the study, as did my brief discussions with him afterwards. He seemed to be a careful researcher and did not dismiss reasonable critiques.

One thing that Burnham revealed is that they hope soon to release the identifier-removed data to a select group of qualified researchers. It will help to have independent analyses, though I doubt that it will do much to calm the criticism.

In the end, as Burnham and Les Roberts have said from the beginning, what is needed is replication, should researchers decide that the dangers are worth taking in a climate that is even more violent than that when the study was conducted last summer.

11 comments February 27th, 2007

The General’s revolt

Robert Parry writes of the general’s revolt against the forthcoming Iran war:

A number of U.S. military leaders, reportedly including the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have waged an extraordinary behind-the-scenes resistance to what they fear is a secret plan by George W. Bush to wage war against Iran.

Add comment February 27th, 2007

Padilla and Catch 22

The government is showing its respect for literature as it defends the torture of Jose Padilla. A government psychologist has decided to provide a real-life illustration of the relevance of Catch 22. In claiming that Padilla is competent to stand trial, despite being turned into a passive vegetable through three grueling years of total isolation and sensory deprivation, Rodolfo Buigas, the psychologist of the Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami, testified:

that the affidavit Mr. Padilla signed alleging mistreatment at the brig was evidence of his mental competence.

So, if he claims mistreatment, he wasn’t mistreated? Have we got that right? Thanks for the literature lesson!

Add comment February 27th, 2007

Padilla and ‘truth serums’?

Jeff Stein, Congressional Quarterly National Security Editor says:

Padilla Case Opens Old Questions on CIA ‘Truth Serums’

By Jeff Stein, CQ National Security Editor

Why won’t the government just deny that U.S. interrogators administered a “truth serum” to Jose Padilla?

What are they trying to hide?

Lawyers for the Chicago-born al Qaeda wannabe say their client told them he was given an LSD-like hallucinogen during his 44 months-and-counting stay in a Navy brig in South Carolina.

The government refuses to say what is almost certainly true: that interrogators did not, in fact, use any kind of so-called “truth serum” on Padilla.

Instead, it issues wobbly canned statements that dodge the question, like this one last week from a spokesman for Secretary of Defense (and former CIA director) Robert M. Gates:

“It has always been our policy to treat all detainees humanely.”

And: “The government in the strongest terms denies Padilla’s allegations of torture — allegations made without support and without citing a shred of record evidence.”

But I hadn’t asked about torture.

I asked again about “truth serums.”

Now the spokesman was more circumspect.

The Pentagon would have no further comment, Navy Commander J.D. Gordon said, “because the case is in litigation.”

But it had no problem flatly denying torture.

The CIA and Navy would not comment for the record.

For its part, the FBI did not hesitate to answer the question.

“The FBI would neither use, condone nor be partner to the use of any such tactic,” public affairs unit chief Rich Kolko responded within minutes of an e-mailed inquiry.

Indeed, the FBI had objected to the harsh methods that CIA and Defense Department interrogators were using on Padilla and other detainees at Guantanamo and elsewhere.

The irony of the government’s silence on truth serums — to me anyway — is that nobody I talked to outside of Padilla’s camp believes U.S. interrogators employed drugs to loosen his tongue. (Padilla’s lawyers, federal public defenders in Miami, did not return several calls seeking elaboration.)

Why? The first reason is that the drugs normally associated with the term “truth serum” aren’t likely to work.

But not for want of trying.

In some of the chilliest compartments of the Cold War, the CIA and the Russians raced to perfect a hallucinogen that could unlock — and control — the minds of enemy spies and detainees.

“The Search for the Manchurian Candidate,” as author John Marks dubbed the CIA’s efforts, ran under such esoteric- sounding code names as MKULTRA, ARTICHOKE and BLUEBIRD.

The CIA was particularly fascinated by LSD, a hallucinogen it tested on hundreds of unwitting subjects in the 1950s and ’60s, including pub crawlers, hospital patients and its own scientists.

One of them, Frank Olson, plunged from the window of a New York hotel room on Nov. 28, 1953.

The case remains mired in controversy.

Olson was paranoid and depressed by the LSD, the CIA said in 1977 under pressure from the Rockefeller Commission , which was investigating the spy agency’s clandestine domestic activities.

But Olson’s son, who has spent decades investigating his father’s death, and some of Olson’s former colleagues at Ft. Detrick say they believe Olson was pushed out the window because he had turned against the LSD experiments.

“The Good Shepherd,” the Robert DeNiro film about the CIA’s early days, made an oblique reference to the experiments when a KGB defector injected with a hallucinogen hurled himself out a window.
Green Berets in Vietnam

Most of the CIA’s drug experiments were illegal, of course, which is why they were stamped top secret in the name of national security.

Most analysts say testing drugs on unwitting enemy combatants also violates Geneva Convention prohibitions against medical experiments on prisoners.

But in at least one known case, a secret Green Beret intelligence unit in Vietnam in 1969 employed “truth serums” in an attempt to crack a suspected communist double agent, a man by the name of Thai Khac Chuyen.

The injections of sodium pentothal and thorazine succeeded only in making Chuyen groggy — and eventually hostile, as I detailed in my 1992 book, A Murder in Wartime.

At that point the Green Berets figured Chuyen knew too much. They drugged him again, took him to sea, shot him in the head and dumped him overboard weighted with chains.

He had never confessed, and years later many in the unit said they felt he was innocent.

The Green Berets eventually were found out and headed for trial on first-degree murder charges when then-CIA Director Richard Helms, fearing disclosure of his own assassination program, persuaded President Richard M. Nixon to intervene.
Drugs Abandoned

Most experts say they think the use of “truth serums” has long been in remission.

“I would have expected that if there was some sort of truth drug in general use I would have heard rumors of it. I never did,” Gordon H. Barland, a research psychologist who spent 14 years at the Defense Department’s Polygraph Institute, told The Washington Post last year.

Today, Barland said, “It would be very difficult to get a project like that off the ground.

“In my time, it was never used,” former CIA operative Robert Baer, who retired in 1997, told me. “And it was never considered an option.”

But in 2002, William H. Webster, who has headed both the FBI and CIA, argued for the use of “truth drugs” on uncooperative al Qaeda and Taliban captives.

But most FBI officials frowned on it as ineffective — and illegal.

Jack Cloonan, a retired senior FBI counterterrorism specialist who objected to some of the CIA and Defense Department interrogation methods, thought the nation’s premier civilian law enforcement agency should not be a party to illegal activity.

In an interview last week, Cloonan also reiterated a long-held view that drugs “don’t suddenly make people blurt out the truth”—with the legendary exception of alcohol.

The Defense Department and CIA also experimented with varieties of alcohol injections, too, to little avail.

“In vino veritas” — the Latin aphorism that says in wine there is truth — can’t be relied on, it turns out.

Cloonan says he doesn’t think “truth serums” were used on Padilla — but he can’t be sure.

“The Navy prevented us from speaking with him, despite our repeated attempts to do so,” Cloonan told me last week.

Cloonan said the explanation he got was that Padilla was beyond the FBI’s reach “because of his status as an ‘enemy combatant.’

“I have no firsthand knowledge a truth serum was used on Padilla,” he said. “Having said that, I suspect other means might have been employed.”

David Brandt, the retired former head of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, who also had objected to some of the CIA and Defense interrogation methods, also told me he hadn’t heard anything about drugs being used on Padilla.

“Even if sodium pentothal wasn’t actually used, I could imagine interrogators telling the detainee they had administered a truth serum (to try to persuade him that resistance is pointless),” Joanne Mariner, the top terrorism expert at Human Rights Watch, said by e-mail.

“They definitely used this type of psychological technique (even to the extent of trying to falsely convince detainees that they had been handed over to abusive governments),” Mariner wrote.

A half dozen relevant congressional offices I contacted declined to respond, mostly on the grounds that the subject is “too sensitive.”
Is It Legal?

Most experts say that the use of “truth serums” would violate Executive Order No. 12333, “United States Intelligence Activities,” signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1981, which prohibits “research on human subjects except in accordance with guidelines issued by the Department of Health and Human Services.”

Other guidance is provided by Army Field Manual 34-52, which includes in the definition of coercion “drugs that may induce lasting and permanent mental alteration and damage.”

But to former CIA operative Melissa Boyle Mahle, President Bush left truth serums on the table in a “signing statement” that he attached to his ratification of last year’s anti-torture legislation (PL 109-148).

“In essence, Bush is saying in the signing statement that as commander-in-chief, he reserves the right to waive the law’s restrictions in the name of protecting national security,” Mahle blogged. Or, “when it comes to war, the president is above the law and can authorize the CIA to act above the law.”

Daniel J. Gallington, a ranking national security official in past Democratic and Republican administrations, says he thinks that’s good.

“While we are prohibited from conducting ‘medical experiments’ on a detainee, the reality is we can consider nearly anything else so long as we get the appropriate level of approval to do it,” says Gallington, deputy counsel for intelligence policy at the Justice Department in the 1990s.

And the “appropriate level” in the event of a Jack Bauer-type ticking nuclear bomb scenario, Gallington told me, “might be at the highest levels of elected government, perhaps with appropriate congressional notification or consultation.”

“It would be both ‘legal’ and morally justifiable under the circumstances,” he argues.
Sources and Methods

“Confusion continues about the permissibility of various interrogation techniques, even after the enactment of the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005,” said the conference report [109-359] accompanying the fiscal 2006 Defense Appropriations bill (PL 109-148).

Officials sympathetic to the CIA’s rationale for refusing to confirm or deny the use of truth serums argue that doing so would reveal the spy agency’s “sources and methods.”

In contrast, counterterrorism officials have defended the use of water boarding, stress positions, sexual humiliation and other controversial methods used on detainees.

Padilla’s lawyers argued in court last week that the interrogation methods used on him — including “truth serums” — have rendered him “immobilized by anxiety” and mentally incompetent to stand trial.

The government ridicules the idea.

But the truth on the truth serum may finally emerge this week. Over government objections, U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke summoned prison officials to appear at a Feb. 28 hearing on Padilla’s treatment.

“These are the people from his time in the brig who would know that,” the judge told the prosecutors. “What’s the problem?”

Jeff Stein can be reached at jstein@cq.com.

1 comment February 27th, 2007


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