Originally posted at The Seminal/Firedoglake
A new article  at Truthout, by H.P. Albarelli and Jeffrey Kaye, describes how the  CIA’s Artichoke Project* was the contemporaneous and operational side of  the MK-ULTRA mind control research program. It was not superseded by  MK-ULTRA in the 1950s, as often supposed. Even more, Artichoke-derived  methods of using drugs, hypnosis, sensory deprivation and overload,  behavioral modification techniques and other methods of mind control  have resurfaced as a primary component of U.S. interrogation practice. 
The Truthout article includes some amazing revelations, including the  largest description to date of the roles of then-Ford administration  officials Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld in working hand-in-glove with  the CIA to suppress information on Artichoke from surfacing.
The article also references the November 2006 release of an  "Instruction" from the Secretary of the Navy (3900.39D)  regarding its "Human Research Protection Program." While this memo  specifically prohibits the use of research upon prisoners, including  so-called "unlawful enemy combatants," waivers of informed consent for  research, or suspension of the protections enumerated in the memo can be  made by the Secretary of the Navy under conditions of "operational  contingency or during times of national emergency." It is likely the  latter rests upon the legislative language within the September 18, 2001  Authorization  to Use Military Force, where terrorist acts are said to "continue  to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and  foreign policy of the United States."
The waivers allowed for normal human research testing gains further  piquancy when one considers the kinds of research referenced in the  Secretary of the Navy’s memo. Section 7(a)(2)(a) describes the  Undersecretary of the Navy as the "approval authority" for research done  upon prisoners, as well as "Severe or unusual intrusions, either  physical or psychological, on human subjects (such as  consciousness-altering drugs or mind-control techniques)"  [emphasis added].
This referencing of "mind-control techniques" in a document  specifically discussing human subjects protections by then Secretary of  the Navy, Donald C. Winter, is not an anomaly, but a rare instance in  which the actual activities of the government in this area are openly  revealed. Some of these activities can be documented via publicly  available materials. This article describes how some of the individuals  involved in U.S. government mind control and torture activities can be  tracked and identified.
APA, CIA: "How might we overload the system or overwhelm the  senses…?"
Another instance in which the curtain was pulled back on mind control  research by the U.S. government involved the online description by the  American Psychological Association (APA) of a CIA and Rand Corporation  workshop which it co-sponsored in July 2003 at Rand’s Arlington,  Virginia headquarters. The event was attended by approximately 40  research psychologists, psychiatrists, neurologists, as well as  "representatives from the CIA, FBI and Department of Defense with  interests in intelligence operations." 
One of these workshops, ostensibly on detection of deception,  specifically described how participants should consider "sensory  overloads on the maintenance of deceptive behaviors," including the use  of "pharmacological agents. "How might we," the workshop asked,  "overload the system or overwhelm the senses and see how it affects  deceptive behaviors?"
The man in charge of "recruiting the operational expertise" for the  workshop was Kirk Hubbard, Chief of the Research & Analysis Branch,  Operational Assessment Division of the CIA. It appears likely that  Hubbard was responsible for the presence  at the workshop of SERE psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce  Jessen, who were instrumental in the construction of the Bush  administration’s "enhanced interrogation" torture program. Hubbard was  also reported  (by Scott Shane of the New York Times) to have brought James Mitchell  to an informal meeting "of professors and law enforcement and  intelligence officers… to brainstorm about Muslim extremism" at the home  of former APA president Martin Seligman in November 2001.
Sometime in the past six months, the APA eliminated all references to  the webpage described above, even going so far as to eliminate linked  references to it on other webpages on its site. While the webpage that  described the workshops has been scrubbed, mirrored images of the site remain  available at well-known web archive sites, as I described in a recent article on  this attempt to rewrite or hide APA’s offensive history. In one sense,  this attempt to hide its history is not surprising, because the kind of  activities discussed in these workshops are exactly like those that  involved CIA and military mind control torture programs going back fifty  years or more, and evidently still operational today.
The Role of Government Psychologist Susan Brandon
In a recent article, Scott Horton  at Harper’s picked up on the unique link between the APA/CIA workshop  and the recent revelations about torture at a hitherto unknown black  site prison at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan. That link was an  individual, Susan Brandon. 
Referenced by Horton as working for the Defense Intelligence Agency’s  (DIA), Defense Counterintelligence and Human Intelligence Center  (DCHC), a recent publication identified  Brandon more fully as Chief for Research in the DCHC’s Behavioral  Science Program. As Horton notes, a  recent column by Marc  Ambinder at The Atlantic described the DCHC as providing  "intelligence operatives and interrogators….. [performing]  interrogations for a sub-unit of Task Force 714, an elite  counter-terrorism brigade." Interrogations at the Afghan black site  reportedly have included use of sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation,  brutality, isolation, relying on the guidelines of the Army Field  Manual, including its Appendix M. Many human rights groups have criticized  Appendix M as including techniques tantamount to torture and/or  cruel, inhumane and degrading and illegal by domestic and international  law.
Back in 2003, according to an APA news  article, Brandon "jointly conceived" the APA/CIA workshops with  Rand Associate Policy Analyst, Scott Gerwehr. At the time, psychologist Susan Brandon was the  Program Officer for Affect and Biobehavioral Regulation at the National  Institute of Mental Health, and worked on the APA/CIA program while also  serving as "Senior Scientist" at the APA.
In the early 2000s, Dr. Brandon served as Behavioral and Social  Science Principal at the Mitre Corporation, a company highly linked to  U.S. Air Defense. Subsequent to her stint as APA’s Senior Scientist, she  went on to work in for the Bush administration as Assistant Director of  Social, Behavioral, and Educational Sciences for the White House Office  of Science & Technology Policy. In addition, she became an  instrumental member of the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences  (SBES) Subcommittee of the National  Science and Technology Council’s Committees on Science and Homeland  and National Security.
Subsequently, as described in an important article by  Stephen Soldz that extends many of the points in this essay, Brandon  joined the Defense Department’s Counterintelligence Field Activity group  (CIFA), which was later disbanded and reformed as part of the DCHC.  Soldz also reminds us that Brandon was "one of the silent observers at  the [APA] PENS [Psychological Ethics and National Security] taskforce described  by dissident taskforce member Jean Maria Arrigo as exerting pressure on  members to adopt a likely pre-approved policy in favor of participation  in Guantánamo, CIA, and other interrogations. According to a  2005 article by Geoff Mumford, APA’s Director of Science Policy, Dr.  Brandon "helped steer much of the association’s scientific outreach  relevant to counter-terrorism after 9/11." 
One example of such outreach would include the June  11, 2002 meeting between Brandon, and other top APA officials with  "two senior staff members in the National Security Council’s (NSC’s)  Office of Combating Terrorism" (OCT). Since Vice Admiral William McRaven  was head of OCT at that time, perhaps Brandon’s acquaintance with the  world of Special Operations dates to that time, as McRaven was to become  Commander of Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC). 
JSOC is the other Defense Department component, besides DIA, that has  been linked  currently with the management of the black site prisons run by the Obama  administration, subsequent to President Obama’s apparent closure of the  CIA black sites. One reputable source has informed me that there are  eight such black site prisons in Afghanistan alone. A recent report by  the BBC  corroborated earlier reports by the New York Times and the Washington  Post. The article by Ambinder further elaborated upon this story.
Why is the Obama Administration Still Involved in Torture?
It is not known if Dr. Brandon has been involved in any of the  reported abuses of prisoners coming out of Bagram’s Tor prison, or  elsewhere. Yet one would think the Obama administration and the Pentagon  has a lot to explain in utilizing as their behavioral chief of research  for an agency involved in intelligence operations, including  interrogation. But then, why is the Obama administration involved in  torture or operating secret prisons at all? President Obama has  manifestly broken his promise to the American people to end torture and  close all secret prisons. Nor has Congress done their due diligence in  investigating these matters. Only when the American people fully  understand the extent to which these activities have occupied the  government and their various collaborators, like the APA, will society  be able to take the necessary steps to end these abuses, and hold those  accountable for what amount to crimes against humanity.
As for psychologists, Dr. Soldz rightly notes, "Psychology as a  profession is at a crossroads." The same holds true for other  professions involved with this abusive and criminal history, including  the activities of anthropologists in the military’s Human Terrain System  teams in Afghanistan, researchers in numerous academic departments  across the country, and the many reports of doctors and other medical  personnel involved in the monitoring of torture activities for the CIA  and Defense Department. The use of torture has suborned U.S. civil  society as a whole in activities that are dark and evil, and the society  as a whole must make a tremendous effort if it is to extirpate such  evil from its midst.
*For an early document referring to Artichoke’s history, see CIA,  Memorandum for the Record, Subject: Project ARTICHOKE, January 31, 1975.  While this MOR downplays Artichoke’s history, it represents the degree  to which the CIA was willing to reveal such operations. The Truthout  article discusses Operation Dormouse, where then Ford administration  officials Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld worked with the CIA to limit  revelations about Artichoke and other CIA torture and assassination  operations.
Hello, I was just wonder what source shows that it was called "operation dormouse" kind of driving me crazy. I think you as well as Albarelli came up with it first in your article so that's why I am asking.
ReplyDeleteHello, I was just wonder what source shows that it was called "operation dormouse" kind of driving me crazy. I think you as well as Albarelli came up with it first in your article so that's why I am asking.
ReplyDeleteThis was alleged to be in a document held by Hank Albarelli. Unfortunately, he never did pass that document on to me. I have trusted him in the past, and he has been reliable. I let the issue of documentation for Dormouse fall through the cracks and will ask him again. Watch this post for further information.
ReplyDelete