Steven J. Reisner is again running for American Psychological Association President on a platform of removing psychologists from abusive interrogations of “enemy combatant” detainees. Please give him your #1 nomination when you receive your nomination form. His campaign statement can be read here and is available as a pdf here. It can also be read at www.ethicalapa.com/Reisner_statement.html. Here is an email he recently sent out. Please help to distribute it widely:
Dear Colleagues,
Because of a printing error, the APA Presidential nomination ballots are in the mail again, and once again, I am asking for your support. Please put STEVEN J. REISNER on the first line when you receive the new ballot.
And, if it is possible, please spread the word to other psychologists, groups and listservs.
The issue remains the same: the APA must take a principled stance against our nation’s policy of using psychologists to oversee abusive and coercive interrogations of detainees and ‘enemy combatants’ at centers like Guantánamo and secret CIA black sites, that operate in violation of international law and the Geneva conventions.
For thousands of years, health professionals have been guided by the ethical precept, “Do no harm.” At the time the ethics code of the American Psychological Association was written, wise psychologists went even further, adding a further obligation: “to safeguard the welfare and rights of those with whom they interact professionally and other affected persons.”
Unfortunately, the recent record of the APA has been to undermine this fundamental principle. When the US government called for harsh interrogation strategies for detainees, psychologists answered the call. When psychologists’ roles in these abuses were exposed, the APA leadership first denied that these things actually took place. Even now, the APA defends its policy by claiming that APA should not interfere in the legitimate practice of other psychologists. While I agree wholeheartedly with this value, I do not believe it extends to a supposed ‘freedom’ for psychologists to participate in abusive detainee interrogations, or in any interrogations that take place in conditions where human rights and international law are being flagrantly violated
When, as recently as last week, the President of the United States re-asserted the right to continue to use waterboarding; when just this week, a sitting Supreme Court Justice publicly referred to such techniques as “so-called torture” (“It would be absurd to say you couldn’t…stick something under the fingernail, [or] smack him in the face.” — Antonin Scalia, BBC interview, 2/12/08), we, the health professionals dedicated to human health and welfare, must take a stand. Now is the time for us to reassert the humane standard that has guided health professionals in times of conflict: “Do no harm.”
But since 2002, our ethics code has permitted violations of those standards when they conflict with law or military regulation. In fact, guidelines drafted for Army psychologists providing psychological support for detainee interrogations reminds them: “The Ethics Code is always subordinate to the law and regulations.”
Right now, doing harm, violating the rights and welfare of others, abusing detainees are all legal (“We’ll make sure professionals have the tools necessary to do their job, within the law.” — President Bush, BBC News, Feb. 14, 2004). This is precisely the reason that a clear ethical standard is so important, so that psychologists may remind their superiors that they are required to adhere to the humane standard that has guided health professionals in times of conflict: “Do no harm.”
Many good psychologists have resigned or are withholding their dues because of this issue. Among them is Ken Pope, who wrote in his recent resignation letter from the APA: “APA’s creation of an enforceable standard allowing psychologists to violate these fundamental ethical responsibilities in favor of following a regulation, a law, or a governing legal authority clashes with its ethical foundation, historic traditions, and basic values…This new enforceable standard, in my opinion, contradicts one of the essential ethical values voiced in the Nuremberg trials. Even in light of the post-9-11 historical context and challenges, I believe we can never abandon the fundamental ethical value affirmed at Nuremberg.”
It is time for us to turn the APA around. It is time for the APA to join the other health professional organizations around the world, including the World Medical Association, the American Medical Association, the American Nurses Association, and the American Psychiatric Association, in upholding the United Nations Principles of Medical Ethics and in saying ‘no’ to participation in unethical interrogations and human rights violations.
I am asking for you to help me reverse the APA’s direction and restore our fundamental principles.
Please put STEVEN J. REISNER first when you receive the ballot in the mail. Please remember, these are substitute ballots, so even if you voted once, you must vote again!
And please, spread the word to other APA members, listservs, and groups.
My nomination statement can be read here or downloaded as a pdf here. It can also be read at http://www.ethicalapa.com/Reisner_statement.html For a detailed history of the issue of psychologists, interrogations, and the APA, please see the ‘Commentary on the APA’s FAQ on Interrogations,’ prepared by the Coalition for an Ethical Psychology: http://tinyurl.com/ys3fjy
Thank you again for your time and your vote!
Steven Reisner, Ph.D.
Steven Reisner, Ph.D.
Coalition for an Ethical Psychology
225 West 15th Street, Apt C
New York, NY 10011
phone 212-633-8391
email: sreisner@psychoanalysis.net
Remmeber to read Steven’s full campaign statement here or download as a pdf here
February 17th, 2008
Steven Reisner is again running for American Psychological Association President on a platform of removing psychologists from abusive interrogations of “enemy combatant” detainees. Please give him your #1 nomination when you receive your nomination form. His campaign statement is below. It is also available available as a pdf here.
PLEASE NOMINATE STEVEN REISNER FOR APA PRESIDENT
DR. REISNER’S STATEMENT:
I am seeking nomination for President of the American Psychological Association because I believe that the APA must take a principled stance against our nation’s policy of using psychologists to oversee abusive and coercive interrogations of detainees and ‘enemy combatants at centers like Guantánamo and secret CIA black sites, that operate in violation of international law and the Geneva conventions.
Reports from military investigations, as well as from the press, have revealed that our nation has undertaken a program of systematic abuse and torture of detainees and ‘enemy combatants’ captured in the ‘war on terror.’ More ominously for our profession, psychologists have been instrumental in the planning, research, execution and supervision of the processes of that abuse.
Since 2005, the APA leadership has supported psychologists’ roles in the machinery of abusive CIA and military interrogations. Most recently, after significant pressure from the membership, the APA Board proposed a resolution that purported to restrict such activity, but the carefully crafted language of that resolution undermines its effectiveness. The most commonly used abusive techniques are prohibited only if they can be shown to cause “significant” or “lasting” harm. Thus, the APA’s “Resolution Against Torture” actually maintains our profession’s departure from our first ethical principle, which is to “do no harm.” I ask for your vote because the APA’s policy on detainee interrogations continues to have serious and detrimental consequences – not only for detainees held outside of international law, but for our colleagues, our profession, and our nation.
I come from a family that endured the Holocaust. My family has firsthand experience with a government that labeled masses of people threats to ‘national security’ and decided that those ‘enemies’ were not entitled to human or civil rights. In my family’s history, like so many other persecuted families in the Holocaust, in South Africa, in Latin America, and elsewhere, health professionals played a crucial role in the atrocities.
When leaders of other health professions reject all participation in detainee abuse, and our leaders justify participation, I am ashamed of our profession. I wish we had a spokesperson as honorable as ApA President Sharfstein, after his visit to Guantánamo:
“This is a paramount challenge to our ethics and our Hippocratic training. Judging from the record of the actual treatment of detainees, it is the thinnest of thin lines that separates such consultation from involvement in facilitating deception and cruel and degrading treatment. Innocent people being released from People-people who never were our enemies and had no useful information in the War on Terror-are returning to their homes and families bearing terrible internal scars. Our profession is lost if we play any role in inflicting these wounds.”
In contrast, here are the remarks of our President, Ron Levant after the same visit:
“I accepted this offer to visit Guantánamo because I saw the invitation as an important opportunity to continue to provide our expertise and guidance for how psychologists can play an appropriate and ethical role in national security investigations. Our goals are to ensure that psychologists add value and safeguards to such investigations and that they are done in an ethical and effective manner that protects the safety of all involved.”
Dr. Sharfstein’s first concern was to protect the humanity of both the psychiatrists and the detainees. Dr. Levant, in contrast, was more concerned with protecting psychologists’ positions of influence in the military and intelligence services. Psychiatrists, physicians, and nurses have addressed the realities of abuse, while psychologists have denied them. Here for example is how APA President Gerald Koocher (who followed Levant) addressed the issue:
“A number of opportunistic commentators masquerading as scholars have continued to report on alleged abuses by mental health professionals.”
My candidacy calls for a clear departure from the complicity of psychologists in state-sponsored abuses of human rights, whether these take place at Guantánamo, CIA black sites, or domestic supermax prisons.
I have been told that psychologists might fear for their jobs if we hold to a principled stance on detainees’ basic human rights. I fear for our nation and our profession if we don’t. And I hope that there are enough psychologists who feel similarly to me, so that the APA might at last join the other health professions in unambiguously opposing the practices that have brought shame to our profession and our nation.
When systematic violations of international law and human rights, sanctioned by government, take place in secret, and when arrests, detentions, and abusive interrogations are deemed appropriate without evidence or the rule of law, we cannot expect individual military or intelligence psychologists to stop those abuses. Instead, the APA must articulate standards that ensure that no health professionals in our country are put in such vulnerable positions. Health associations must band together to prohibit their members from taking part, and to remind our government of our basic ethical responsibilities.
The refusal of other health professional organizations to participate in such interrogations on ethical grounds has successfully interfered with the government’s ability to assert that these interrogations are safe, legal, and ethical. Unfortunately, psychologists, with the APA’s approval, have rushed in to fill that gap, and the military has responded by making psychologists the senior supervisors of those interrogations and of those detention conditions.
The APA chose psychologists from the very commands responsible for military and CIA interrogations to write APA’s policy on interrogations and to convince the Council to maintain these policies when it debated the ensuing resolutions on interrogations.
The APA selected psychologists who had been responsible for supervising military and CIA interrogation programs at Guantánamo, Bagram, Abu Ghraib, and at CIA black sites to write the APA’s ethical policy on interrogation. It should surprise no one that those resolutions and reports employed language that echoed current military, intelligence, and Bush administration policy. Thus, for example, the APA’s 2007 Council Resolution condemns the most widely used CIA torture techniques – isolation, sleep deprivation, sensory-deprivation, and sensory bombardment – only if they can be shown to cause “significant” or “lasting” harm. The Bush Administration, too, in the infamous ‘torture memo,’ written by John Bybee, defined torture in similar language: to be prohibited the act must “result in significant psychological harm of significant duration”. The Bush Administration continues to claim that the techniques of psychological abuse, such as sleep deprivation, isolation, sensory deprivation and sensory bombardment, do not reach that standard, and thus are not prohibited.
Psychologists’ ethics require the APA to be on the other side of this issue. The APA has an obligation to protest the manipulation of psychological knowledge and research for abusive interrogations and as part of the rationalization of abusive confinement conditions.
Thus far, the APA has not condemned the abuse of psychological knowledge by our military and intelligence agencies, even when military health professional claim “pre-existing conditions” to deny veterans mental health benefits or to claim that Guantánamo suicide attempts are not the result of torture or indefinite isolation.
How will history judge us? Will future scholars of atrocity write a book about the complicity of American psychologists in torture? Or will they be able to say that a group of psychologists prevailed in holding our profession to a higher standard? Will the story end with the fact that the APA’s ethical policy on detainees was written by psychologists from the Joint Intelligence Group at Guantánamo and the CIA’s Counter Terrorism Center? Or will historians of psychology be able to say that the membership rejected the policy written by psychologists from those commands, and put in its place a policy that prioritized our first ethical principle:
“Psychologists strive to benefit those with whom they work and take care to do no harm. In their professional actions, psychologists seek to safeguard the welfare and rights of those with whom they interact professionally and other affected persons…”
I encourage you to join me in rectifying APA policy on national security detentions and interrogations. We can then welcome back to the APA the many members who have resigned or withheld dues and the academic departments opposed to APA policy.
I ask for your support in nominating me first on the ballot for APA President.
Sincerely,
Steven Reisner, Ph.D.
sreisner@psychoanalysis.net
DR. REISNER’S BIO:
Steven Reisner, Ph.D., is Senior Faculty and Supervisor at the International Trauma Studies Program (an affiliate of the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University). He is Adjunct Professor of Psychology and Education at Columbia University, Teachers College, and on the faculties of the Department of Psychiatry and the Psychoanalytic Institute at the New York University Medical School. Dr. Reisner has worked in diverse roles as a consultant in the effects of war, exile, and torture, including training psychiatrists in Iraq to treat survivors of Saddam Hussein’s torture regime, and training returning refugees in Kosovo to use theater and testimony to address the trauma of exile. Currently he is a consultant to the clinical staff at the United Nations for stress and trauma of UN staff in over 150 countries.
FOR A DETAILED HISTORY OF THE ISSUE OF PSYCHOLOGISTS, INTERROGATIONS, AND THE APA, PLEASE SEE:
“Analysis of the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding APA’s Policies and Positions on the Use of Torture or Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment During Interrogations” by the Coalition for an Ethical Psychology. The document can be found at: http://tinyurl.com/ys3fjy
Notes:
1. Report of the American Psychological Association Presidential Task Force on Psychological Ethics and National Security
2. Memorandum for Alberto R. Gonzales, Counsel to the President
3. Injured Iraq War Veterans Sue VA Head
4. Threats and response: Captive; tales of Despair from Guantánamo
February 17th, 2008