Archive for September 26th, 2007

Robert Adler: Unwitting accomplices in interrogation abuse

The New Scientist has an article on the role of psychologists in interrogations that shows greater understanding than all the American Psychological Association’s resolutions put together:

Unwitting accomplices in interrogation abuse

by Robert Adler 

AT ITS annual meeting last month, the American Psychological Association APA) adopted a resolution reaffirming its position against torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

Among those whom psychologists must protect, the organisation included “enemy combatants” – the term the US administration uses for suspected terrorists. It said that neither war, political instability, public emergency nor any laws, regulations or orders can ever justify torture or abuse. It banned its members from taking part in any of a long list of interrogation techniques, including waterboarding, sexual or religious humiliation, the use of psychotropic drugs, hooding, aggressive dogs, physical assault and threats of harm or death.

Despite this, the association decided to allow psychologists to continue to be involved in interrogations at US detention centres, including those carried out “outside normal legal channels”, such as at Guantanamo Bay.

Interrogations carried out in secret and without legal oversight can lead to horrific treatment being inflicted on prisoners, as photographs taken inside Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq proved in 2004. The Red Cross, United Nations and Amnesty International say such practices continue at Guantanamo Bay and at US-run “black sites” in Thailand, Afghanistan and eastern Europe.

Those who support psychologists’ involvement argue that the APA resolution as passed ensures that none of the organisation’s 148,000 members would facilitate such abuses.

Some go further, arguing that there is an ethical imperative for psychologists to be involved in these interrogations because they can help to stop abuse – as whistle-blower Michael Gelles and military psychologist Larry James did at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib.  James has told Agence France-Presse: “If we remove psychologists from Guantanamo, innocent people are going to die.”

This is superficially persuasive, but it misses the bigger picture.  When psychologists work in situations as coercive and secretive as CIA- run black sites, the situation is far more likely to corrupt the psychologist – no matter how highly trained and ethically aware they are – than the psychologist is to correct the situation.  To make matters worse, the psychologists’ presence lends legitimacy to these settings and whatever takes place within them.

If any group should be aware of the corrupting power of such situations, it is psychologists.  Decades of their own research, starting with Stanley Milgram’s studies of obedience to authority in the 1960s and Philip Zimbardo’s infamous Stanford Prison Experiment, has shown time and again that when healthy, normal people are put into situations that legitimise and systematise abuse they consistently and readily come to act abusively themselves (New Scientist, 14 April 2007, p 42).

Most people are vulnerable to this effect, but some individuals fill their roles so fully that they demonstrate what Zimbardo calls “creative evil”.  Within a few days, for example, Zimbardo’s college-student “guards” invented some of the same forms of sexual abuse that surfaced decades later at Abu Ghraib.

Psychologists and other professionals are not immune from such corruption.  In his recent book, The Lucifer Effect: Understanding how good people turn evil, Zimbardo ruefully describes how he did not realise how far his experiment had spiralled into abuse until he was confronted by a colleague who was not part of the experiment and was sickened by what she saw.  “It was a slap in my face,” Zimbardo writes, “the wake-up call from the nightmare I had been living.”

More recently, psychologists have been intimately involved in the development and refinement of interrogation and “softening up” techniques used at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib.  “If we look at the history, psychologists are not noted for being protectors of the ethics of these situations,” says Steven Reisner, a psychologist at Columbia University’s International Trauma Studies Program in New York City.  “The strategies of abuse that have been carried out by the CIA and Department of Defense have been created, supervised and spread by psychologists, according to the department’s own reports, eye witnesses from the CIA, and the press.”

Given what their own research has shown, and the degree to which some psychologists have been implicated in ethically questionable forms of detention and interrogation, it seems remarkably naive – or arrogant – for psychologists to believe they are immune from situations far more nightmarish than the Stanford basement “prison” in 1971.

Both the American Medical Association and the American Psychiatric Association have recently prohibited involvement in any type of interrogation, stating that their members may only use their skills to care for patients or to train others.  The sooner the country’s psychologists join them, the better.

September 26th, 2007

Baiting and killing, one Iraqi at a time

Yesterday the Washington Post reported that American snipers are using weapons to bait Iraqis. They spread various weapons parts around and then killed anyone curious enough about the stuff to pick it up:

A Pentagon group has encouraged some U.S. military snipers in Iraq to target suspected insurgents by scattering pieces of “bait,” such as detonation cords, plastic explosives and ammunition, and then killing Iraqis who pick up the items, according to military court documents.

The classified program was described in investigative documents related to recently filed murder charges against three snipers who are accused of planting evidence on Iraqis they killed.

“Baiting is putting an object out there that we know they will use, with the intention of destroying the enemy,” Capt. Matthew P. Didier, the leader of an elite sniper scout platoon attached to the 1st Battalion of the 501st Infantry Regiment, said in a sworn statement. “Basically, we would put an item out there and watch it. If someone found the item, picked it up and attempted to leave with the item, we would engage the individual as I saw this as a sign they would use the item against U.S. Forces.”

In documents obtained by The Washington Post from family members of the accused soldiers, Didier said members of the U.S. military’s Asymmetric Warfare Group visited his unit in January and later passed along ammunition boxes filled with the “drop items” to be used “to disrupt the AIF [Anti-Iraq Forces] attempts at harming Coalition Forces and give us the upper hand in a fight.”

In relatively polite terms, the Post raises the issue of whether this is a reasonable way to identify and kill “insurgents”:

Eugene Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military Justice, said such a baiting program should be examined “quite meticulously” because it raises troubling possibilities, such as what happens when civilians pick up the items.

“In a country that is awash in armaments and magazines and implements of war, if every time somebody picked up something that was potentially useful as a weapon, you might as well ask every Iraqi to walk around with a target on his back,” Fidell said.

Juan Cole at his Informed Comment blog is not quite as polite. He asks: “Is Weapons Baiting a War Crime?”After all, in a devastated Iraq, selling scrap metal is common one way to obtain a little cash, putting all Iraqis at risk.

It turns out, however, that Iraqis are not being bated and killed only with weapons parts. Steven Shalom sends a June 16, 2007 Oregonian article that contains this account by a deserter:

His recruiter told him a tour in Iraq would give him the opportunity to build schools and support war-weary Iraqis, so against the advice of his parents, he signed up.

But once in Iraq, he was assigned to a “small kill” team that set traps for insurgents. They’d place a fake camera on a pole with a sign labeling it as U.S. property, giving the team the right to shoot anyone who messed with it. Burmeister, who provided perimeter security for the team, said he could never get over his distaste for the tactic.

No wonder information on the bait-and-kill operations is classified. After all, war crimes are usually hidden and denied. The US denied that it used white phosphorous to burn the flesh off Iraqis in Fallujah until the lie became impossible to maintain. Will the media and/or Congress follow up this new evidence of war crimes by US occupation forces? Don’t hold your breath.

September 26th, 2007

Amnesty to release film of US torture techniques simulated by an actor

An article I missed in the September 10 Independent reports on an Amnesty International film — Waiting For The Guards — to be released next month in which a dancer illustrates the positions American captives have been forced to adopt as “stress positions”:

Amnesty film shows agony of US detention techniques
By Terri Judd

Forced on to the balls of his feet, bent double with his hands handcuffed behind his back, the near-naked man shook violently. From beneath the hood, muted moans were audible. It seemed obscene to stare at this apparently frail, vulnerable man, caught in a stress position reminiscent of the images of Iraqi prisoners being interrogated by US soldiers at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison. Yet this was not torture. It was art.

In an attempt to draw attention to human rights abuses, Amnesty International has filmed a dancer in the positions captives have been forced to adopt by US troops. The resulting film makes shocking viewing. During a break in filming, Jiva Parthipan, a Sri Lankan performance artist, appeared relieved as he rubbed his limbs, which were aching after just a couple of minutes in a position that suspects in President George Bush’s “war on terror” are expected to endure for hours.

The star of the Amnesty International film, which is being released online next month to highlight the agony of such interrogation techniques, said he found the experience painful, both physically and psychologically. In secret jails across the world, Amnesty insists, captives in the fight against terrorism are expected to maintain these poses. They are not considered torture, simply “enhanced interrogation techniques”. Alfred McCoy, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, argued recently that the photographs from Abu Ghraib reflected standard CIA torture techniques of ” stress positions, sensory deprivation, and sexual humiliation”.

In August, President Bush issued an order decreeing that Article 3 of the Third Geneva Convention – which prohibits the humiliating or degrading treatment of prisoners of war – should apply to the CIA’s detention and interrogation programme. But Amnesty believes the order does not go far enough in specifying what constitutes degrading treatment.

It is calling for an end to all secret detentions, as well as for detainees to be given access to lawyers, medical care and monitors. It wants all allegations of enforced disappearance, torture and ill treatment levelled at the CIA to be investigated independently.

Amnesty’s film, entitled Waiting For The Guards, forms the backbone of a new campaign the charity hopes will draw attention to such interrogation techniques. The film, by Marc Hawker and Ishbel Whitaker, does not attempt to document the mental torture of being kept in a secret location with no contact with the outside world, simply the physical agony of such allegedly innocuous methods. The crew expected it to be an arduous task but were shocked and disturbed by how quickly Parthipan found it impossible to endure the stress position.

“He is somebody who is physically fit but suffered excruciating pain. It was shocking how real and visceral the process was,” said Hawker, adding: “He was surprised himself just how quickly the position took over. He was in a lot of pain and felt a lot of emotion.

“He was in a safe environment but we said that, if you were just off a jet, did not know where you were or what your future held, how psychologically tortuous it would be.”

Richard Lowdon, the actor who plays the interrogator, added: “It was quite unpleasant watching Jiva. There was something unbearable about it. It is degrading to the person who is doing it, as well as to the person to whom it is done. It is very dehumanising.”

Amnesty hopes its campaign will prompt people to object to such practices. It recently named 38 men and a woman it claims were whisked away on secret CIA “rendition” flights and disappeared into prisons worldwide. The charity has spoken to former detainees, such as the British al-Qa’ida suspect Moazzam Begg, who was held in the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

“The suggestion is that they suffer a bit of discomfort, when in fact they endure quite severe pain,” said Sara MacNeice, Amnesty’s campaigns co-ordinator. “We are sending the message that this is ill treatment, but we should be calling it by its rightful name.”

[h/t to LeftLink]

September 26th, 2007

Mary Pipher & APA’s Rhea Farberman talk about psychologists and torture on CBC

Psychologist Mary Pipher was on the Canadian CBC yesterday, followed by the APA Communications Director Rhea Farberman giving the usual APA spin afterwards, distorting every issue. The CBC interviewer confronts her pretty hard about the “wiggle room” in the APA’s new resolution involving the phrases “significant harm” and “long-lasting harm.” In general, Farberman is confronted pretty hard, but does respond fairly well. Evidently Farberman is replacing Stephen Behnke as APA’s public spokesperson on the interrogations issue.

Pipher and Farberman are followed by a brief excerpt from a prior interview with Alfred McCoy.

Listen here.

[h/t Jack's Daily Hotchpotch.]

September 26th, 2007

Mike Wessells: Help the APA to act in an ethical, responsible manner

Mike Wessells, one of the three non-military affiliated members of the American Psychological Association’s PENS [Presidential Ethics and National Security] task force, has written a letter to APA President Sharon Brehm outlining his concerns about APA policy on participation of psychologists in national security interrogation. He raises concerns regarding the AP’s countenancing psychologists participating in activities that are in violation of international human rights standards. He also expresses concern about the pattern of dishonest communication from APA officials on these issues:

September 25, 2007

Dr. Sharon Brehm

President

American Psychological Association

Dear Dr. Brehm,

I am writing to you out of strong concern regarding the ethics of psychologists’ involvement in coercive interrogations. Events during and following the 2007 APA Annual Convention have created significant ethical questions regarding both the substance of APA’s position and the process through which APA leaders debate these complex issues.

Substantively, the main problem is that the 2007 Resolution by APA Council makes it ethical practice for psychologists to violate international human rights standards. In particular, the resolution allows psychologists to practice and support interrogations in sites that operate outside the protections offered by the Geneva Conventions and other international human rights instruments such as the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT). The illegal, indefinite detention of people at these sites itself constitutes a violation of international law and human rights standards, and psychologists’ presence at these sites only legitimates these human rights violations. No profession should put itself above international human rights standards as the APA has done in this matter. In fact, international human rights standards ought to be the foundation of any professional Code of Ethics. By allowing psychologists to practice in ways that flaunt international human rights standards, APA has committed itself to an unethical course of action.

The process of the communications following the APA Convention is also cause for significant concern. The recently released statement of the APA Communications Office on APA’s position on torture presents a view that falls short of accepted standards of full, accurate disclosure. In particular, the statement conveniently fails to mention the aforementioned point that illegal, indefinite detention itself violates the CAT and that psychologists who practice at sites operating outside international human rights protections thereby enable a form of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. A more balanced, honest statement would outline the important steps that the APA has taken on these issues and also point out the ongoing debates within the Association and the issues that warrant further analysis. Stronger concern arises out of the statement made by former APA President Gerald Koocher in which he attempted to use in public sensitive, psychological disinformation (most of it was false) to discredit the statements and activities of a former PENS Task Force member who criticized the PENS process. Such misuse of sensitive, personal information by an APA leader is ethically questionable, diverts attention from the wider issues that warrant much discussion, and could have a chilling effect on the open discussion and debate that are badly needed on these complex issues.

I urge you to exercise leadership in helping the APA to act in an ethical, responsible manner in addressing these issues of substance and process. Your leadership is needed to bring the APA in line with international human rights standards and to enable the processes of accurate disclosure, dialogue and mutual learning that will promote ethical action within the APA.

Sincerely,

Michael Wessells, PhD

Columbia University

1 comment September 26th, 2007


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