Archive for August, 2007

Military JAGs concerned about authority for CIA abuse

The top military JAG lawyers from all three services have expressed concerns to Congress about the President’s order authorizing the CIA’s “enhanced techniques” [aka, "torture"], the Boston Globe reports:

Top military lawyers have told senators that President Bush’s new rules for CIA interrogations of suspected terrorists could allow abuses that violate the Geneva Conventions, according to Senate and military officials.

The Judge Advocates General of all branches of the military told the senators that a July 20 executive order establishing rules for the treatment of CIA prisoners appeared to be carefully worded to allow humiliating or degrading interrogation techniques when the interrogators’ objective is to protect national security rather than to satisfy sadistic impulses.

The JAGs expressed their concerns at a meeting late last month with Senators John Warner of Virginia, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, and an aide representing John McCain of Arizona, who could not attend because he was campaigning for president. All three senators are Republicans who have been key proponents of laws banning the abuse of detainees, and have vowed to monitor the Bush administration’s treatment of prisoners.

The top JAG for the US Army, Major General Scott C. Black, followed up on the meeting this month by sending a memo to lower-ranking soldiers reminding them that Bush’s executive order applies only to the CIA, not to military interrogations. Black told soldiers they must follow Army regulations, which “make clear that [the Geneva Conventions are] the minimum humane treatment standard” for prisoners.

“This Executive Order does not change the standard for the Army. . . . I want to ensure that there is no confusion concerning the Executive Order’s lack of applicability to the Army,” Black wrote in the memo, a copy of which was obtained by the Globe. “As a Corps, we must be diligent to ensure that all interrogation and detention operations comply with the Army standard.”

In an e-mail yesterday, a Justice Department spokesman defended Bush’s order as “consistent” with the minimum standards of humane treatment required by the Geneva Conventions.

But the JAGs told the senators that a key part of the order opens the door to violations of the section of the Geneva Conventions that outlaws “cruel treatment and torture” and “outrages upon personal dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment,” officials familiar with the discussion said.

The JAGs cited language in the executive order in which Bush said CIA interrogators may not use “willful and outrageous acts of personal abuse done for the purpose of humiliating or degrading the individual.” As an example, it lists “sexual or sexually indecent acts undertaken for the purpose of humiliation.”

Among lawyers, “for the purpose” language is often used to mean that a person must specifically intend to do something, such as causing humiliation, in order to violate a statute. The JAGs said Bush’s wording appears to make it legal for interrogators to undertake that same abusive action if they had some other motive, such as gaining information.

Other law-of-war specialists agreed that this part of Bush’s executive order creates an escape clause allowing abusive treatment….

The Bush administration legal team had previously invoked a similar “intent” loophole to give legal cover to harsh interrogations. In a once-secret Aug. 1, 2002, Justice Department memo about an antitorture law, the administration legal team said interrogators could avoid violating anti-torture laws if they said their motivation was protecting national security.

“Even if the [interrogator] knows that severe pain will result from his actions, if causing such harm is not his objective, he lacks the requisite specific intent,” the 2002 memo read.

The memo was leaked after the Abu Ghraib torture scandal in 2004 and sparked an outcry over its permissive attitude toward torture.

It was subsequently withdrawn by the Justice Department.

Add comment August 25th, 2007

I will be on WBAI Monday

I am scheduled to be on WBAI radio Monday at 7:25 AM (thankfully moved from 6:25) to discuss the issue of psychologists and abusive interrogations. Evidently, if you are not in New York, you can listen live at http://wbai.org/. Apparently, the shows are also archived for 90 days and available for download.

Add comment August 25th, 2007

Author Mary Pipher returns award to American Psychological Association

Note: An expanded version of this post has been published on CounterPunch as Why Mary Pipher Returned Her APA Award.

In a dramatic development in the struggle to get psychologists out of abusive interrogations (aka “torture”) , psychologist and author Mary Pipher (author of Reviving Ophelia among many other books) has decided to return her Presidential Citation award from the American Psychological Association in protest. Here is her letter to APA President Brehm:

August 21, 2007

American Psychological Association, 750 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242

President Brehm:

I am writing to inform you that I am returning my Presidential Citation dated 2/02/06 and awarded to me by then President of the American Psychological Association, Dr. Gerald Koocher. I have struggled for many months with this decision, and I make it with pain and sorrow. I was honored to receive this award and proud to be a member of APA. Over the years I have spoken at national conventions many times and had enjoyed an excellent relationship with the APA and its staff. With this letter, I feel as if I am ostracizing a good friend.

I do not want an award from an organization that sanctions its members’ participation in the enhanced interrogations at CIA Black Sites and at Guantanamo. The presence of psychologists has both educated the interrogation teams in more skillful methods of breaking people down and legitimized the process of torture in defiance of the Geneva Conventions.

The behavior of psychologists on these enhanced interrogation teams violates our own Code of Ethics (2002) in which we pledge to respect the dignity and worth of all people, with special responsibility towards the most vulnerable. I consider prisoners in secret CIA-run facilities with no right of habeas corpus or access to attorneys, family or media to be highly vulnerable. I also believe that when any of us are degraded, all of human life is degraded. This letter is as much about us as it is about prisoners.

In our Ethics Code we agree to promote honesty and accuracy. Our involvement in these projects has been secretive and dishonest. Finally, as psychologists we vow to do no harm. Without question, we violate this oath when we allow people in our care to be deprived of sleep or subjected to sensory over-stimulation or deprivation.

I cannot accept the August 19, 2007 Reaffirmation of APA’s Position Against Torture (Substitute Motion Three.) Under this motion, psychologists will be allowed to continue working on interrogation teams that are not subject to the Geneva Conventions. This motion places our organization on the side of the CIA and Department of Defense and at odds with the United Nations, The Red Cross, the American Psychiatric Association and the American Medical Association. With this reaffirmation we have made a terrible mistake.

I know that the return of my Presidential Citation from Dr. Koocher will be of small import, but it is what I can do to disassociate myself from what I consider to be a heinous policy. All of my life I have tried my best to stand up for those with no voices and no power. The prisoners our government labels as enemy combatants are in this category.

I return my citation as a matter of conscience and in the hopes that the APA will reconsider its current unethical position. We have long been a wonderful organization that respected human rights and promoted tolerance, kindness, and peace. Nothing is more fundamental to our core orientation and professional service to others than our commitment to all people’s inherent dignity, safety and welfare. I hope my letter may be useful in restoring the APA to its long-respected and important stance as a beacon of integrity and kindness for all human beings.

Respectfully,

Dr. Mary Pipher

The Lincoln Journal Star has an article on Pipher’s action: Pipher returns award in protest. Here is their article:

Pipher returns award in protest
By JoANNE YOUNG / Lincoln Journal Star
Thursday, Aug 23, 2007

Lincoln author and psychologist Mary Pipher says she didn’t act impulsively when deciding to protest the actions taken by her professional organization.

She thought about it for more than a year. She listened to what others had to say, read articles and reports.

On Tuesday, she sent a three-page letter to the president of the American Psychological Association, Sharon Stephens Brehm, to say she is returning her 2006 Presidential Citation, given to recognize her work in helping to resettle refugees.

“I have struggled for many months with this decision and I make it with pain and sorrow,” she said in the letter. “I do not want an award from an organization that sanctions its members’ participation in the enhanced interrogations at CIA ‘black sites’ and at Guantanamo.”

A report on Monday, by “Democracy Now,” a national, daily, independent news program heard in Lincoln on radio station KZUM, set Pipher in motion.

The report said the American Psychological Association’s policymaking council had voted to reject a resolution at its annual convention Sunday that would have banned members from participating in interrogations at Guantanamo Bay and other U.S. detention centers around the world often referred to as “black sites.”

In its place, the council had approved a resolution prohibiting psychologists from direct or indirect participation in 19 “unethical” interrogation techniques and called on the U.S. government to ban their use.

The list includes mock executions, simulated drowning or suffocation, sexual humiliation, exploitation of phobias, exposure to extreme heat or cold and isolation or sleep deprivation “that represents significant pain or suffering, or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm.”

The resolution left what Pipher sees as loopholes on such techniques as sensory and sleep deprivation, which cause people to fall apart very quickly. And it stopped far short of banning psychologists from participating in the interrogations of prisoners at the military sites, she said.

The vote upset Pipher, who has worked with victims of torture and has seen the lifelong harm it can inflict.

Many innocent people get tortured, she said.

The presence of the psychologists has educated the interrogation teams in more skillful methods of breaking people down and legitimized the process of torture in defiance of the Geneva Conventions, she said.

The association’s code of ethics pledges to respect the dignity and worth of all people, especially the most vulnerable, she said. And prisoners in secret CIA-run facilities, with no right of habeas corpus or access to attorneys, family or media are highly vulnerable.

“I also believe that when any of us are degraded, all of human life is degraded,” she told the association.

Without their psychologist partners, she believes the secret “black sites” would have to shut down.

The former association president, Gerald Koocher, has said in interviews that the association doesn’t tell its members they can’t work for a given employer. Psychologists at the prison sites have brought about positive changes, he said.

Pipher has been following the association’s response to the issue since at least June 2006, four months after she received the framed citation, when she heard another “Democracy Now” interview with Koocher.

She thought at the time about how Koocher, who had signed her citation, was taking a position diametrically opposed to her own. She thought about returning the award then. But she waited.

Over the next months, she read other articles in “The New Yorker,” “Vanity Fair” and “Salon.com” that outlined how psychologists have helped design interrogations and train those who do them.

According to “Democracy Now,” association members were outraged by the revelations and introduced a moratorium resolution that called for a ban on participation.

In her letter to the association president, Pipher said she had been honored to receive her award and proud to be a member of the group during her career. She retired in 2000. With her rejection of the award, she feels she is ostracizing a good friend.

But Sunday’s resolution placed the association on the side of the CIA and Department of Defense, and at odds with the United Nations, the Red Cross, the American Psychiatric Association and American Medical Association, she said.

“I know that the return of my Presidential Citation … will be of small import,” she said in her letter to the association, “but it is what I can do to disassociate myself from what I consider to be a heinous policy.”

Her hope is that the organization will reconsider its position.

Pamela Willenz, manager of the association’s public affairs office, said in an e-mail Wednesday that the association had no response to Pipher’s letter because those people who could speak on the issue were traveling back to Washington, D.C., from the annual convention in San Francisco.

A Monday news release from the association said its policy condemns and prohibits psychologists from planning, designing, assisting in or participating in interrogations that involve torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

It is to be hoped that many other prominent psychologists will similarly act on this vital issue of conscience.

2 comments August 24th, 2007

Effect Measure on difference between psychiatrists and psychologists

Effect Measure, my favorite public health blog, has just weighed in on APA, psychologists, and torture: American Psychological Association flunks ethical litmus test. Here’s the first paragraph:

One of my colleagues (a clinical psychologist) was once asked the difference between a psychiatrist and a psychologist. “You have to understand,” he said, “that a psychiatrist doesn’t have a PhD.” It turns out there is at least one more difference. The professional association of psychiatrists have rejected the idea it is ethical for a medical doctor to be complicit in interrogation abuse or abusive conditions under which interrogations are conducted. The professional association of psychologists have twice declined to take that step. I think that’s a more telling difference than the nature of their degrees.

Add comment August 24th, 2007

Austrailians psychologists upset with APA stance on interrogations

Colleagues in Australia, facing a visit from former American Psychological Association President Gerald Koocher, are mobilizing to raise APA’s unacceptable positions on psychologists and torture with their Australian Psychological Society prior to the APS September Conference, where Dr. Koocher is scheduled to speak:

Psychologists, torture and the 2007 APS Conference keynote speaker

The membership of the APS should know something about the controversial invitation of Dr Gerald P. Koocher, Past President of the American Psychological Association (APA), to.be a keynote speaker at this year’s APS Conference in Brisbane.

The ABC’s Four Corners program about torture on June 4 and 11 reminded us that it should be of particular concern to psychologists: in the USA psychologists have had a long connection with military and CIA interrogation techniques; Behavioral Science Consultation. Team (B2SCT or “biscuiot teams; are involved in the interrogation of detainees in the so called ‘war on terror’, and these interrogation techniques amount to torture under the United Nations and indeed common sense definitions.

In an earlier ABC program, Lateline, on March 26, the US bioethicist Stephen Miles made the point that since psychiatrists (and other bodies representing health professionals in the USA) have come out against involvement in ‘interrogations’ like those carried out at Guantanamo, the US Defense Department now approves only of psychologists to participate in the organisation or management of interrogation teams. This is because the APA took the position that it’s OK to participate in such interrogations - something that has put it in opposition to other health professions, even if it recommends it to the US defence establishment.

The APA was at that time under the presidency of Dr Koocher, and he was actively involved in organising the APA’s response to the criticism in the media and by some psychologists that the involvement was contrary to the ‘do no harm’ principle underlying its professional code. Dr Koocher used his APA presidency to defuse criticism of the APA’s soft stance on psychologists’ involvement in interrogations that many rightly see as torture. Dr Koocher is criticised by a number of APA members, and also the wider media, because he refused to condemn the involvement, is seen as having helped the APA to exculpate psychologists involved in torture, and to prevent it from endorsing clear and unequivocal rejection of this involvement.

We urge any one who cares about the principle that psychologists should do no harm to raise the issue with their local APS, and to make their views on the issue known to the APS Conference Organising Committee.

Members of staff and graduate students, School of Psychology, University of Wollongong, and regional psychologists
Wollongong, NSW

Response from Amanda Gordon, APS President

The issues concerning Professor Gerald Koocher came to the attention of the APS after he had been invited to be a keynote speaker at this year’s APS National Conference. Since learning about the controversy, we have planned a Public Forum at the Conference on Lessons from Guantanamo Bay: Ethical Issues for Psychologists Working in the Military, Intelligence and Detention Facilities, in which Professor Koocher has been invited to participate. We felt it was vitally important to provide members with the opportunity to hear first hand the APA’s position on these issues and to consider their application in the Australian context.

The APS, like the APA, condemns the use of torture and any psychological practice that is demeaning or serves to inflict suffering. Like the APA, the APS needs to have a debate about the ethics of psychologists working in sections of the military, in the Australian Federal Police and State police investigation units, and in immigration detention and related facilities. It needs to consider whether the APS Code of Ethics is sufficiently robust to be applied to members who work in those settings and whether the APS is in a position to dictate where and for whom its members will or will not work.

If you are attending this year’s Conference, I encourage you to come along and participate in the Public Forum in which these crucial issues will be aired.

Add comment August 23rd, 2007

Houston Chronicle on APA, psychologists, and torture

The Houston Chronicle, in an editorial today, expresses what is most wrong with the APA’s policies:

Aug. 22, 2007, 8:07PM
Human wrongs
Psychologists have no place assisting interrogations at places such as Guantanamo Bay.

One of the mental health profession’s strengths is its grasp of ambiguity. Love and hate, rage and attraction, altruism and greed can coexist in the same person, and practitioners help clients accept that.

The Hippocratic oath, on the other hand, is simple. Do no harm. Based on this mandate, American psychologists should have nothing to do with the interrogation of terrorist suspects in prisons such as Guantanamo Bay.

Even when legal, the harsh techniques used in these centers include inflicting mental anguish; the very basis on which these prisoners are held — depriving them of both the protections afforded prisoners of war and the legal rights of criminal suspects — comprises a human rights violation. By helping interrogators in such prisons, psychologists are promoting, not healing, mental distress.

Unfortunately, the American Psychological Association last week concluded otherwise. To its credit, in a closely watched decision at their annual meeting, the group forbade members from “direct or indirect participation” in about 20 extreme interrogation techniques that have been used recently by U.S. military forces and intelligence agencies.

The association singled out waterboarding, exploiting detainees’ phobias and exposure to extreme temperatures.

But the resolution didn’t go far enough. Because psychologists are heavily involved in intelligence work — from giving advice to conducting studies — any ambiguity about their role in inflicting harm has special consequence.

The American Medical Association and American Psychiatric Association ban their members from taking any part in prisoner interrogations. According to Leonard Rubenstein of the nonprofit Physicians for Human Rights, medical professionals’ ethics plainly ban them from using their expertise in any situation in which distress is purposely inflicted.

Though the American Psychological Association “unequivocally condemns torture,” its members may still help interrogators at Guantanamo and similar facilities.

Still worse, a number of exposés show that in recent years psychologists have been pivotal in creating some of the most abusive tactics in use since 9/11.

These extreme measures don’t even produce reliable evidence, many mental health and intelligence experts agree. Under duress, prisoners just say what they think interrogators want to hear. Experienced interrogators, on the other hand, build rapport and incentives, which do produce useful information. Psychologists are neither trained, nor necessary, for this non-therapeutic questioning process.

The worst argument for psychologists’ presence at interrogations comes from U.S. Army Col. Larry James, director of the psychology department of a military medical center.

“If we lose psychologists from these facilities, people are going to die,” he said at the APA meeting. Psychologists, James suggested, can rein or report overzealous violators.

Any interrogation system that teeters so close to atrocities needs more than a psychologist. It requires thorough overhaul and specific bans of the most extreme methods. The Department of Defense has listed such prohibitions. The CIA has not.

Torturing prisoners doesn’t produce reliable data. It does, however, violate human rights and strip Americans of the right to protest torture of its own men and women. Above all, it blurs our credibility as a democracy worth defending.

No American psychologist should have a part in an interrogation system with the potential to devolve into murder. No American should.

Add comment August 23rd, 2007

Survivors International on APA “Anti-torture” Resolution

Here is a comment on APA events from Survivors International, which treats torture survivors, expressing skepticism about APA actions and intentions:

Survivors International guarded about APA’s Resolution on Torture
Comments from SI Clinical Director, Uwe Jacobs, PhD

San Francisco, CA, August 21, 2007 – The Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association (APA) issued a resolution to re-affirm its condemnation of torture and other forms of abuse in the context of detaining so-called enemy combatants. While APA Ethics Director, Dr. Stephen Behnke, characterized the new resolution as “a step in the right direction”, Dr. Uwe Jacobs, Clinical Director of Survivors International, expressed mixed emotions and said the APA did not go far enough.

“I am concerned that inserting qualifiers into the language in the manner it was done weakens the intent and enforceable standards. There is absolutely no necessity to do that if your only interest is to protect human rights”, said Jacobs, referring to a struggle he said the human rights faction of psychologists partly lost. “We wanted to simply say that sleep deprivation and sensory deprivation were prohibited, for example, and the leadership insisted that we insert qualifiers that require that the abuse causes lasting harm, for example, and we’re not sure that this can always be proved. What if this was done and somebody thinks it didn’t cause lasting harm? Does that make it ethical? You expect to compromise a little in any politics but this is a difference that’s hard to split.”

Jacobs went on to say that in spite of its wonderful appearance as a human rights document, the passage of the new resolution suffered from problems, some in content and some more procedural, and pointed to the following issues:

- A simple moratorium that would have asked psychologists not to work in detention centers in which human rights are known to be violated was rejected by the APA leadership;

- The alternate resolution that was passed by the Council of Representatives, APA’s governing body, was introduced specifically for the purpose of not letting the moratorium resolution come to a vote;

- Even though the APA is an accredited non-governmental organization at the United Nations, the resolution does not adopt the UN Convention Against Torture (CAT) in its original form as its reference but the U.S. Reservations to the CAT. These reservations were articulated by the Reagan administration and are commonly regarded as weakening the CAT in questionable area of non-physical torture or other inhuman and degrading treatment;

- The APA steadfastly refused to drop the qualifying statements with regard to sleep and sensory deprivation, in spite of repeated requests and explanations why they should not be adopted.

“Only time will tell how much of a step this really was in the right direction”, Jacobs concluded, and a lot will depend on the advocacy APA is willing to put behind this resolution from here on forward. At least we have a clear prohibition of the most common techniques of mental torture, but we need to do more work to close all possible loopholes and to get our language absolutely clear.”

Add comment August 22nd, 2007

APA, torture, and the CIA

Back from the struggle at the American Psychological Association to change their policies abetting abusive interrogations, I’ll start posting material on the Convention. Here is the resolution APA adopted on Sunday, declaring certain interrogation tactics as unethical, but carefully circumscribing this condemnation to protect the use of the CIA’s favorite venerable abusive techniques of isolation, sensory deprivation, and sensory overstimulation.

The best press article so far on the APA decision is Mark Benjamin’s Will psychologists still abet torture?. Benjamin explicitly questions, as do many of us, whether the APA’s resolution was subtly modified to protect the CIA’s contemporary version of its “enhanced techniques.” During the negotiations on the APA resolution, numerous mysterious changes, never mentioned to those negotiating from our side, were introduced into texts that allowed psychologists to continue abusing detainees.

The final version of the clause allowing this was a prohibition on psychologists using “isolation, sensory deprivation and over-stimulation and/or sleep deprivation used in a manner that represents significant pain or suffering or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm.” It was the addition of the phrase “in a manner that represents significant pain or suffering or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm” that was of concern. The second clause — “or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm” — was actually added on the night before the final vote, allowing no time to even notify members of Council what was going on. Further, restraint on the use of these techniques applies only to use in interrogations, whereas, as Valtin points out, they are usually used as part of the detention environment to soften detainees up for interrogation. Thus, again, APA has parsed words to maintain psychologists right to abuse.

Lets take a look at the wording of this entire section, which forbids psychologist participation in :

“the following used for the purposes of eliciting information in an interrogation process: hooding, forced nakedness, stress positions, the use of dogs to threaten or intimidate, physical assault including slapping or shaking, exposure to extreme heat or cold, threats of harm or death; and isolation, sensory deprivation and over-stimulation and/or sleep deprivation used in a manner that represents significant pain or suffering or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm”

The APA here is protecting the ability of psychologists to participate in “forced nudity,” “physical assault,” use of temperature extremes, etc., as long as these are used outside of interrogations. Thus, the Resolution seems to affirm that psychologists can participate in abuse, as long as they aren’t using it to get information. This is perhaps one of the most warped ethical statements I have ever seen.

The APA ethics code states as its Principle A that “Psychologists strive to benefit those with whom they work and take care to do no harm.” The Convention decisively abandoned this Principle without any discussion.

Nonetheless, some readers of the final Resolution feel that, despite the loopholes, it can be seen as a condemnation of the CIA’s”enhanced techniques” used in the black sites. Physicians for Human Right, in a press release, argued that the APA had, indeed, condemned the CIA techniques:

“The American Psychological Association’s (APA) ‘unequivocal condemnation’ of enhanced interrogation techniques used by the CIA such as water-boarding, mock execution, exploitation of phobias, exposure to extremes of heat and cold reinforces the urgency of abolishing the use of these methods in all intelligence-gathering activities conducted by the US government, Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) said today.”

It remains to be seen if the PHR approach is justified, or if the APA deliberately left such huge holes in their resolution as to give the CIA a Get Out of Jail Free card. It makes sense to press the interpretation of the APA resolution as far as we can, while simultaneously pointing out its limitations and pressing to fix them. But, given the influence of the military-intelligence establishment on the APA, I’m not sure that anything less than a takeover of the APA could bring significant change.
The other major issue up at the Convention was an amendment that stated that psychologists should not work in any role other than a health provider in detention centers where fundamental human rights are violated. This amendment was a derivative of Neil Altman’s Moratorium Resolution, which the APA successfully destroyed with a parliamentary maneuver in violation of their own Council Handbook. However, the vote was so lopsided, with less than 20% of the approximately 165 Council members voting in support, that the Moratorium clearly never stood a chance. [See Psychologists oppose torture yet vote to attend terror interrogations] Few members were willing to buck the leadership on an issue considered vital in APA’s efforts to curry favor with the military-intelligence establishment. Physicians For Human Rights urged future adoption of this provision:

” ‘It is an illusion to believe that psychologists can act ethically in situations, particularly in an interrogation support capacity, where such severe violations of human rights are taking place,’ said Rubenstein. ‘At Guantanamo and elsewhere, detainees deprived of due process and subject to indefinite detention experience cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment as a consequence of the terms of their detention.’ “

Human rights concerns were clearly trumped by military-intelligence ties, raising the question as to whether the APA can be rescued. It may be too sunk in the quagmire of the National Security State to have any positive role to play in the future.

For another take on the Convention events and their meanings, see Valtin,’s analysis in Daily Kos: Postmortem: APA Torture Resolution Puzzle (Bookmark this).

Mark Benjamin’s article is reproduced here:

Will psychologists still abet torture?
At their annual convention, psychologists officially condemned some brutal interrogation techniques, but critics decry a resolution they say isn’t stringent enough.

By Mark Benjamin

Aug. 21, 2007 | The American Psychological Association has adopted a new resolution on the interrogation of detainees in the so-called war on terror, denouncing a list of specific interrogation techniques including some allegedly employed by the CIA.

The move comes after months of revelations that exposed how psychologists helped develop coercive interrogation programs after 9/11 for the intelligence agency and the military, and weeks after the White House announced the renewal of the CIA’s “black site” interrogations — likely to be overseen by psychologists.

But it was a step still mired in controversy. At their annual meeting in San Francisco over the weekend, the psychologists voted against a proposal that would have aligned them with the position taken by the equivalent associations of American medical doctors and psychiatrists, which have banned their members altogether from participating in interrogations at places like the military prison in Guantánamo Bay. Moreover, the group’s new condemnation of nearly 20 specific interrogation techniques, in a 174-line resolution that “unequivocally condemns torture,” contains gray areas that left some psychologists wondering if the APA played right into the CIA’s hands.

The APA has condemned torture in the past. But this year the organization was responding, in part, to intense internal pressure from some members who were angered by the Bush administration’s permissive interpretation of prohibitions on abuse. The new resolution aims to be more precise and detailed, articulating “an absolute prohibition for psychologists against direct or indirect participation” in brutal interrogation methods, from mock executions to waterboarding.

“The APA came in line with the minimum of its responsibilities by condemning, in certain circumstances, the most egregious forms of torture being committed in our name,” said Steven Reisner, a psychologist who has been pressing the organization to withdraw from detainee interrogations. “But they left huge loopholes that permit these techniques to be used in other circumstances.”

For example, the resolution denounces isolation and sleep deprivation only when “used in a manner that represents significant pain or suffering or in a manner that a reasonable person would judge to cause lasting harm.” Yet, isolation and sleep deprivation are hallmark interrogation techniques reportedly used by the CIA at the black sites, and they have been honed with eerie precision by decades of practice. The CIA’s infamous 1963 KUBARK interrogation manual describes sensory deprivation and the disruption of sleep patterns as central tenets of coercive interrogations, quickly provoking hallucinations and stress that become “unbearable for most subjects.” That manual also notes the “profound moral objection to applying duress past the point of irreversible psychological damage.”

What worries psychologists like Reisner is that the potential loophole in the APA’s resolution echoes a similar one in the Military Commissions Act, which had a provision allegedly inserted into it at the behest of the Bush administration. President Bush signed that bill into law last October, setting new definitions in U.S. law for violations of the Geneva Conventions, which ban torture internationally. The potential loophole in the law comes with the criminalization of mental pain and suffering, but only damage that is “serious and non-transitory.” Bush said last fall the new law would allow the CIA to continue its interrogations at the black sites.

Interrogations were clearly the hot topic at the convention, with at least a dozen packed meetings on ethics and interrogations. The convention drew protesters, including people staging Abu Ghraib-style stress positions both inside and outside the premises.

There is disagreement about whether the language adopted by the APA with Sunday’s vote really does give psychologists carte blanche to keep helping the CIA use brutal mental coercion against al-Qaida suspects. Leonard Rubenstein, the president of Physicians for Human Rights and a lawyer, first suggested the explicit condemnation of CIA tactics in a June 14 letter to APA president Sharon Stephens Brehm. Rubenstein wrote that the list would provide “explicit, operational guidance” to psychologists. After the vote, he said that the long-term mental damages of psychological techniques such as long-term sensory deprivation are well documented. “We interpret this as a condemnation of the CIA’s interrogation program,” Rubenstein said after the vote.

But getting a straight explanation from the APA leadership on the loophole issue was not easy. Brehm, the APA president, would not discuss the interrogation issue with Salon at all when confronted after a conference panel on Saturday. Stephen Behnke, the director of the APA’s ethics office who drafted the resolution, insisted on Saturday that Physicians for Human Rights had suggested some qualifying language with respect to sleep and sensory deprivation. In fact, PHR had fought vigorously against any qualifying language, including a letter sent to Behnke asking for the removal of any “qualifications” regarding sensory and sleep deprivation.

But Rhea Farberman, an APA spokeswoman, dismissed the idea of a CIA loophole. “We want to step in and say these enumerated acts are unethical and should not be happening,” Farberman said. “In being specific in what we think would be unethical, we are trying to add specificity where it has been lacking, to the detriment of some detainees.”

But the new resolution remained a disappointment to psychologists who believe the profession should not support the interrogation of so-called unlawful enemy combatants at all, not least because detainees have been robbed of due process at places like Guantánamo. “These detention centers by their very nature impose cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment on detainees,” argued Bernice Lott, a member of the APA’s council.

What’s at stake with the APA’s role was made clear when President Bush signed a new executive order last month reauthorizing the CIA interrogation program: The White House emphasized that all interrogations would be overseen by medical officials, as a way of ensuring the safety of prisoners. Since doctors and psychiatrists have ruled themselves out as professional groups, that leaves the psychologists to do the work. And some of them worry that the APA’s latest position will still allow the abuse of detainees psychologically, so long as the pain doesn’t last too long.

Notice that, in addition to interpreting the bizarre APA resolution, Benjamin documents that the APA’s “Ethics Director” directly lied to him regarding where the reservations on banning certain techniques originated:

“But getting a straight explanation from the APA leadership on the loophole issue was not easy. Brehm, the APA president, would not discuss the interrogation issue with Salon at all when confronted after a conference panel on Saturday. Stephen Behnke, the director of the APA’s ethics office who drafted the resolution, insisted on Saturday that Physicians for Human Rights had suggested some qualifying language with respect to sleep and sensory deprivation. In fact, PHR had fought vigorously against any qualifying language, including a letter sent to Behnke asking for the removal of any “qualifications” regarding sensory and sleep deprivation.”

PHR, in facy, had twice sent APA letters demanding that any qualifiers be removed. Our Coalition for and Ethical APA also wrote Dr. Behnke demanding changes in this pro-abuse language.

The question on the table is whether there is any point in further work inside the APA. Most members of its governing structures seem accepting of its role as an auxiliary of the military-intelligence establishment. Most members seem oblivious to this corruption of our professional organization. The choices now are launching a massive effort to remake the organization, to work on creating a new organization for psychologists, or to give up and accept the dominance of the military-intelligence forces, and of the accompanying daily corruption of lies and deception that characterize the APA today.

5 comments August 22nd, 2007

In Iraq, poor women forced into prostitution

A long time ago, I first wrote of the specter of prostitution in Iraq. Evidence is now emerging that, like many countries in conflict, many poor women are being forced into prostitution, either by economic means or by force. Aljazeera sadly reports on the rise of prostitution:

In Iraq, sex is traded for survival
By Afif Sarhan in Baghdad

When Rana Jalil, 38, lost her husband in an explosion in Baghdad last year, she could never have imagined becoming a prostitute in order to feed her children.

A mother of four, Jalil sought out employment, but job opportunities for women had decreased since the US invasion.

She begged shop owners, office workers and companies to hire her but was treated with what she calls chauvinistic discrimination.

Within weeks of her husband’s death, a doctor diagnosed her children with malnutrition.

Fighting tears, she recalled the desperation which led her to the oldest profession: “In the beginning these were the worst days in my life. My husband was the first man I met and slept with, but I didn’t have another option … my children were starving.”

She left the house in a daze, she recalled, and walked to the nearest market to find someone who would pay her for sex.

She said: “I’m a nice-looking woman and it wasn’t difficult to find a client. When we got to the bed I tried to run away … I just couldn’t do it, but he hit and raped me. When he paid me afterwards, it was finished for me.

“When I came home with some food I had bought from that money and saw my children screaming of happiness, I discovered that honour is insignificant compared to the hunger of my children.”

Iraqi widows desperate

Prior to the US invasion, Iraqi widows, particularly those who lost husbands during the Iran-Iraq war, were provided with compensation and free education for their children. In some cases, they were provided with free homes.

However, no such safety nets currently exist and widows have few resources at their disposal.

According to the non-governmental organisation Women’s Freedom in Iraq (OWFI), 15 per cent of Iraqi women widowed by the war have been desperately searching for temporary marriages or prostitution, either for financial support or protection in the midst of sectarian war.

Nuha Salim, the spokesperson for OWFI, told Al Jazeera: “Widows are one of our priorities but their situation is worsening and we are feeling ineffective to cope with this significant problem. Hundreds of women are searching for an easy way to support their loved ones as employers refuse to hire them for fear of extremists’ reprisals.”

She said the NGO has documented the disappearance of some 4000 women, 20 per cent of whom are under 18, since the March 2003 invasion.

OWFI believes most of the missing women were kidnapped and sold into prostitution outside Iraq.

Although few reliable statistics are available on the total number of widows in Iraq, the ministry of women’s affairs says that there are at least 350,000 in Baghdad alone, with more than eight million throughout the country.

Bitter trade

As Iraqi families continue to fall on hard times, some have been forced to make the most painful of decisions – selling their daughters.

Abu Ahmed, a handicapped father of five who is himself a widower, sold his daughter Lina to an Iraqi man who came to Iraq to “shop” for sex workers. Abu Ahmed said he could not afford to buy food for his other children.

He told Al Jazeera: “I’m sure that whatever she is, at least she is having food to eat. I have three other girls and a son and what they paid me for Lina is enough to raise the remaining ones.”

Abu Ahmed had been initially approached by Shada, the alias of a woman living in Baghdad, who sought young women for Iraqi gangs running prostitution rackets in neighbouring Arab countries.

She told Al Jazeera that her role was to convince young women from impoverished families that a better life awaited them beyond the country’s borders.

She said: “Families don’t want them and we are helping the girls to survive. We offer them food and housing and about $10 a day if they have had at least two clients.”

“Our priority is virgin girls; they can be sold at very expensive prices to Arab millionaires.”

Shada said she sleeps in a different house every few nights as armed groups have marked her for trial and assassination.

Escape from Jordan

OWFI’s Salim says cases like Lina’s have become very common as poverty is increasing in Iraq and desperate families sometimes sell their daughters for less than $500 to traffickers.

But increasingly, young Iraqi women arrive in neighbouring capitals to find that prostitution carries a heavy and dangerous price.

Suha Muhammad, 17, was sold to an Iraqi gang by her mother, herself a prostitute, after her father was killed.

When she arrived in Jordan, she was gang-raped by four men who told her they were teaching her the tricks of the trade.

She told Al Jazeera she had been sold to a gang that caters to VIPs in Syria and was often shuttled to Amman, the Jordanian capital, for high-profile clients.

After six months, she escaped: “I ran away and an Iraqi family helped me by driving me to the immigration department where they helped me get a passport to return to Iraq.

“My aunt is now taking care of me in Baghdad. She never imagined that my mother could sell me, but unfortunately women in Iraq are not important and respected.”


Traffic

Mayada Zuhair, a spokesperson for the Baghdad-based Women’s Rights Association (WRA), said Iraqi and Arab NGOs are trying to monitor the trafficking of young women from the war-ravaged country to neighbouring destinations.

She told Al Jazeera: “We are trying to find out the fate of many widows and teenager girls who were trafficked. Unfortunately it is not an easy process and without international support, funding, and resources, we fear more young Iraqi women will be taken abroad to work in the sex trade.”

In the meantime, however, prostitution remains the only option for Nirmeen Lattif, a 27-year-old widow who lost her husband in an attack on Shia pilgrims south of Baghdad.

When she turned to her husband’s relatives for financial support, they could not afford to help her.

She says she tries not to think of the gravity of what she does or the dishonour it carries in conservative Muslim society.

“I think of my children, only my children; without money we starve in the streets.”

3 comments August 15th, 2007

Mark Benjamin on APA controversies

Mark Benjamin, in Salon today covers the APA controversy that comes to boil later this week.

Psychologists to CIA: We condemn torture

In a rebuke of President Bush, the American Psychological Association has resolved to condemn brutal CIA and military interrogations. By Mark Benjamin

Aug. 15, 2007 | The American Psychological Association, the world’s largest professional organization of psychologists, is poised to issue a formal condemnation of a raft of notorious interrogation tactics employed by U.S. authorities against detainees during the so-called war on terror, from simulated drowning to sensory deprivation. The move is expected during the APA’s annual convention in San Francisco this weekend.

The APA’s anti-torture resolution follows a string of revelations in recent months of the key role played by psychologists in the development of brutal interrogation regimes for the CIA and the military. And it comes just weeks after news that the White House may be calling on psychologists once again: On July 20, President Bush signed an executive order restarting a coercive CIA interrogation program at the agency’s “black sites.” Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell has indicated that psychological techniques will be part of the revamped program, but that the interrogations would be subject to careful medical oversight. That oversight is likely to be performed by psychologists.

In fact, given what promises to be the continuing involvement of psychologists in coercive interrogation, there is intense infighting within the organization about whether simply condemning abusive tactics is enough. Some of the APA’s 148,000 members think the anti-torture resolution put forward by APA leadership is too weak, and they are putting intense pressure on the organization’s leadership to go a step further and ban psychologists from participating in detainee interrogations altogether. They have introduced their own resolution proposing a moratorium. “I and others think that a moratorium is essential to try to tell the government that psychologists are not going to participate in the interrogation of enemy combatants,” said Bernice Lott, a member of the Council of Representatives, the APA’s policy-making body. Others oppose the moratorium because they think psychologists must be involved in the interrogations to prevent abuse — and because the government may just choose to use non-APA members for its interrogations, as has already happened.

Whether or not the APA imposes a moratorium at this weekend’s convention, its Council of Representatives is likely to approve the resolution condemning specific interrogation techniques. A draft of the resolution obtained by Salon includes “an absolute prohibition” on psychologists directly or indirectly participating in interrogations that involve a list of coercive measures, including, but not limited to, mock executions; water-boarding; sensory deprivation; “hooding”; forced nudity; sexual humiliation; rape; cultural or religious humiliation; exploitation of phobias or psychopathology; stress positions; dogs; physical assault; slapping and shaking; exposure to extreme heat or cold; induced hypothermia; psychotropic drugs or mind-altering substances; isolation and sleep deprivation; threats of harm or death, or threats to members of an individual’s family.

And even without a moratorium, adopting a resolution condemning specific interrogation techniques — including some allegedly used by the CIA — could be interpreted as a rebuke of the agency and the White House. Stephen Soldz, a faculty member at the Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis, supports a moratorium. But he said the new condemnation of specific harsh tactics would in itself be “an advance because it would be a blow to the CIA.” (The military last September disavowed the tactics and embraced a new interrogation field manual that expressly prohibits the coercive methods, but the CIA, under Bush’s new executive order, seems to be going ahead full steam.)

But how much of a rebuke it would be is debatable. “It is somewhat of a rebuke, because it does name some interrogation techniques that have been used or advocated by the White House and the CIA,” said Neil Altman, a former member of the APA’s council. “But it still allows psychologists to continue to be part of a process which overall is cruel, inhuman and degrading,” he added. “There is no due process. It is indefinite detention without being charged. The entire setting is cruel, inhuman and degrading.”

Altman introduced the resolution calling for a moratorium. Last year, the American Medical Association and American Psychiatric Association banned doctors and psychiatrists from participating in coercive interrogation of so-called enemy combatants. Some psychologists warn, however, against the effects of following their sister organizations’ example. The argument is that psychologists can make valuable contributions to an ethical, non-coercive interrogation built on establishing rapport with a prisoner. Michael Gelles, the former chief psychologist of the Navy Criminal Investigative Service, who played a key role in forcing the Pentagon to dial back the coercive techniques used at the military’s Guantánamo prison in 2003, said psychologists should still be able to help ethical interrogators do their jobs. “Psychologists can help the interrogator think about how he directs questions in a rapport-based approach to facilitate the most accurate information,” Gelles explained. They can also help determine if a subject is mentally ill, or even lying.

Gelles said he doesn’t have any problem with condemning coercive interrogation techniques, but he called a moratorium “equivalent to throwing the baby out with the bath water.”

What remains unclear is whether the APA leadership, headed by APA president Sharon Stephens Brehm, will even allow a vote on Altman’s moratorium. That leadership is seen by some psychologists as too chummy with government interests and with the military in particular. Backers of the moratorium are set to meet with APA leadership before next weekend just to negotiate for the opportunity to bring their resolution up for a vote before the council.

And there is another worry. Psychologists interviewed by Salon noted a series of potential loopholes embedded in the resolution condemning CIA tactics. A simple example is the ban on isolation and sleep deprivation, favorite tactics of the CIA. But the resolution from Brehm and the APA leadership only forbids the methods when “used in a manner that adversely affects an individual’s physical or mental health.” There will be efforts in San Francisco to plug those loopholes, and to force a vote on a moratorium.

At least on paper, what happens in San Francisco could make a big difference to the CIA. Mike McConnell told Tim Russert on “Meet the Press” last month that under Bush’s new executive order the CIA was going to continue to mentally pressure detainees, using a “psychological approach to causing someone to have uncertainty and in a situation where they will feel compelled to talk to you about what you’re asking about.” He insisted that the pressure did not amount to torture and there would be no permanent damage to prisoners, but admitted that “I would not want a U.S. citizen to go through the process.”

McConnell assured Russert that the program would be “under medical supervision.” And the executive order Bush signed to continue the CIA interrogation program calls for “effective monitoring of the program, including with respect to medical matters, to ensure the safety of those in the program.”

But since doctors and psychiatrists have ruled themselves out, that leaves psychologists as the last of the medical professionals willing to support the interrogation of so-called high-value detainees. Presumably, what the APA deems unacceptable would make a big difference.

But it is unclear whether an APA resolution will have any effect on real-world interrogations conducted by the CIA. Salon reported in June that two CIA-employed psychologists, James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, were in the cross hairs of Senate investigators looking into the genesis of the brutal, and very similar, post 9/11 interrogation regimes developed by the CIA and the military.

Mitchell and Jessen are part of a cabal of psychologists associated with the military’s secretive Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape program. The program trains soldiers to resist torture if captured by exposing them to brutal techniques employed by Cold War adversaries who would violate the Geneva Conventions to provoke confessions: water-boarding; forced nudity; stress positions; lengthy isolation; sleep deprivation; sexual humiliation. The plan was to reverse-engineer those techniques for use on real detainees.

The military employed the same game plan at the same time, suggesting high-level government coordination. A previously classified Department of Defense inspector general report released in May detailed efforts in 2002 by the Army Special Operations Command’s Psychological Directorate to reverse-engineer SERE training for use at Guantánamo, including a September 2002 “SERE psychologist conference” at Fort Bragg to brief staff from Guantánamo on the use of SERE tactics.

But Mitchell and Jessen, the psychologists who helped the agency, are not APA members. So a resolution might not matter much to men like them.

Theoretically, a psychologist could lose his state-issued license for violating an APA resolution, regardless of APA membership, which might plant a seed of doubt in a psychologist’s mind when he steps into a CIA interrogation booth. Military psychologists, for example, are required to maintain a state license.

But the CIA might not be so strict. When asked a series of questions on whether the CIA requires psychologists working with that agency to maintain a state license, CIA spokesman George Little responded, “On these questions, I decline to comment.”

Still, psychologists predict that their colleagues — even those employed by the CIA — will be less inclined in the future to participate in harsh interrogations that have been explicitly condemned by the APA. “These are our rules and our professional ethics,” said Brad Olson, president of the Divisions for Social Justice within the APA. “What this whole group of professionals believes does matter. What psychologists say they are willing to do and not willing to do does matter.”

The simmering debate over interrogations inside the APA has been increasingly heating to a boil for several years. In 2005, a group of 10 psychologists drafted new APA ethics guidelines that condemned torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment — but that also noted that psychologists helping interrogators were performing a “valuable and ethical role to assist in protecting our nation, other nations, and innocent civilians from harm.” (Salon reported last summer that six of the 10 psychologists who drafted that policy had close ties to the military, including the chief of the Army Special Operations Command’s Psychological Directorate, Col. Morgan Banks.)

Then last summer, the APA’s council passed a resolution reaffirming a “condemnation of torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or cruel, inhuman, or degrading punishment wherever it occurs.”

But the positions taken by the APA so far — the ethics principles drafted by those 10 psychologists and the resolution last summer — contain legal vagaries of the flavor repeatedly exploited by the Bush administration to pursue coercive interrogations in one theater or another. The concern among psychologists is that their profession is being dragged along for the ride. And that is what is driving the resolutions the psychologists are wrestling with now, to specifically outlaw individual interrogation techniques or even ban psychologists from interrogations altogether.

In its continued effort to fashion a legal defense of the CIA’s interrogation program, the Bush administration has employed a dexterous strategy: decry international standards that ban detainee abuse as hopelessly “vague.” Demand detailed clarifications from Congress, and then drive loopholes into those clarifications to allow coercive interrogations to continue.

The most recent example is the Military Commissions Act, a law signed by Bush last October that contains a detailed ban on prisoner abuse. Experts in international law have been scouring the bill for loopholes inserted by the Bush administration, including language that could give the administration wiggle room to inflict mental pain on detainees — the specialty of the CIA. An example is a definition, apparently included at the behest of the White House, that seems to outlaw serious mental pain and suffering, but defines it as suffering that must be “serious and non-transitory.”

“If I screw up your brains for two weeks, three weeks, a month, is that non-transitory?” Scott Silliman, a professor at Duke University School of Law who specializes in national security, asked rhetorically. Water-boarding is simulated drowning. It creates sudden, extreme, brief panic. “If I was defending someone in the CIA who was charged with water-boarding, I would make an argument that unless the government can prove that serious mental harm was prolonged and non-transitory — which means permanent — then there has been no offense.” The executive order that Bush signed July 20 to continue the CIA interrogation program was written to comply with the Military Commissions Act.

The CIA will not comment on the future of the agency’s high-value detainee interrogation program, or the possible role of psychologists. Little, the CIA spokesman, would say only that the program had been “implemented lawfully, with great care and close review — including extensive discussion within the executive branch and oversight from Congress.”

But whatever happens, it will be done in secret. Little confirmed that the CIA will not allow officials from the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit the agency’s detention facilities or monitor detainees held by the agency. Simon Schorno, an ICRC spokesman in Washington, said his organization “deplores any form of undisclosed detention and repeats its call to have access to any person who might be detained by the United States.”

He also said his organization remains concerned about people who have been held by the CIA since 9/11 but seem to have disappeared. In June, six human rights groups published the names of 39 such individuals believed to have been held by the CIA in secret locations. Said Schorno, “The ICRC remains gravely concerned by the fate of the persons previously held in the CIA detention program who remain unaccounted for.”

Psychologists now have to decide if they still want to associate themselves with that kind of a program. Or if after six years of brutal interrogations, enough is enough.

“Psychologists have been involved one way or another in supporting the CIA in various forms of psychological torture for years,” said Leonard Rubenstein, president of Physicians for Human Rights. “The issue is coming to a head because there are so many people within the profession who really feel that the whole integrity of the profession is at stake … This is the profession coming to terms with itself.”

– By Mark Benjamin

2 comments August 15th, 2007

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