That sound you hear -- or in all likelihood didn't hear at all -- is the other shoe dropping in the scandal involving
the secret collaboration between the American Psychological Association
and the Bush administration to justify the CIA's use of Nazi-like torture techniques.
The first shoe dropped in April when a group of dissident health-care professionals and human rights
activists released a scathing report stating that the APA had tossed ethical concerns aside and created an association
ethics
policy on national security interrogations which conveniently comported with
then-classified legal guidance authorizing the CIA torture program in the wake of the 9/11 terror attacks. This
secret deal in turn enabled the Justice Department to
argue in secret legal opinions that the program -- since revealed to be
ineffective, constitutionally dubious, in violation of the Geneva
Conventions and deeply damaging to America's standing abroad -- was legal and did not
constitute torture, since the interrogations were being monitored by
APA-approved health-care professionals to make sure they were safe.
The
APA, the nation's
largest professional organization for psychologists, denied in responding
to the report that it had coordinated its actions with the government,
which was not surprising since the group's hierarchy -- if not
necessarily its rank and
file --had been in denial about its complicity for years.
The second shoe dropped last Friday night when official Washington and much of the press corps had decamped for the weekend. In a scathing report growing out of an investigation by a team led by a former federal prosecutor undertaken at the request of the APA's no-longer-in-denial board, it found that:
*
Some of the APA's top officials, including its ethics director,
cynically "colluded" with Pentagon officials by keeping the
association's ethics policies in line with the Defense Department's
interrogation policies.
* Several prominent outside psychologists aided the CIA's interrogation program and helped
protect it from dissent from professionals inside the agency's own Office of Medical
Services who raised objections over the interrogation techniques, objections that were covered up by the
government.
* Two former APA presidents were on a CIA
advisory committee and one of them gave the agency an
opinion that sleep deprivation did not constitute torture. This individual later
held a small ownership stake in a consulting company founded by two men
who oversaw the agency’s interrogation program.
* The APA
assembled a task force in 2005 to study concerns over the CIA torture
program that was dominated by national security insiders who, of course,
concluded that psychologists could assist in
the brutal interrogations.
The association’s ethics office "prioritized the protection of
psychologists — even those who might have engaged in unethical behavior —
above the protection of the public," the report stated.
"The evidence supports the conclusion that APA officials colluded
with DOD officials to, at the least, adopt and maintain APA ethics
policies that were not more restrictive than the guidelines that key
DOD officials wanted. The APA chose its
ethics policy based on its goals of helping DOD, managing its PR,
and maximizing the growth of the profession."
Some context is helpful:
The
White House, CIA and FBI were unprepared for the 9/11 attacks despite warnings that they were imminent because they failed to take seriously the threat to the homeland that Al Qaeda represented. Intelligence officials, goaded
by Bush administration official who prior to the attacks had been content to continue
fighting the Cold War although the Soviet Union had collapsed a decade earlier, were desperate to head off
new attacks and this spawned the collaboration
between the APA and Pentagon, which was willing to pay big bucks for
experts who could give the new
torture program a veneer of legitimacy.
Both
reports are chockablock with analogies that call to mind the
machinations of
officials in the torture regime of Hitler's
Third Reich to create a veneer of respectability for their vile deeds in
documenting how the Bush administration, in response to
shocking photos of the abuse of prisoners by American military personnel
at Abu
Ghraib prison in Iraq in 2004, sough to salvage the hitherto secret
torture program initiated under the guise of fighting the so-called War
on Terror.
The CIA
program, according to the Senate Intelligence Committee report released
in December, included waterboarding, imprisoning detainees in small
boxes, slapping and punching them, depriving them of sleep for as long
as a week, and sometimes telling them that they would be killed, their
children maimed and their mothers sexually assaulted. Some detainees
were subjected to medically unnecessary "rectal feeding" -- a technique
that the CIA.'s chief of interrogations described as a way to exert
"total control over the detainee." The interrogations were carried out at so-called black site -- prisons
around the world where suspects were held secretly for years.
There is overwhelming evidence that the use of torture was ineffective nor, despite claims to the contrary did it lead to locating and killing Osama bin Laden, mastermind of the 9/11 attacks.
In
response to the second report, former APA President Nadine Kaslow
said in a statement that "The actions, policies and lack of independence
from government
influence described in the report represented a failure to live
up to our core values. We profoundly regret and apologize
for the behavior and the consequences that ensued."
The APA said it was now considering proposals to prohibit
psychologists from participating in interrogations and to modify its
ethics policies.
Physicians for Human Rights called on the Justice Department to begin a criminal investigation into the APA's role.
"As
mental health professionals, our first obligation must be to our
patients," said Dr. Kerry Sulkowicz, a psychiatrist and the vice
chairman of the board of Physicians for Human Rights. "The APA's collusion with the government's national security
apparatus is one of the greatest scandals in U.S. medical history."
The
Obama administration has refused to prosecute the torturers, let alone Bush administration enablers, and only
one CIA official has been prosecuted -- a former employee who in protest went
public with details about the program.
Dr. Clarissa Pinkola
Estés and I discussed the issue of members of
the "healing profession," as she calls it, collaborating in unethical
and unlawful government conduct in 2008. Dr.
E is a psychoanalyst who has been in clinical practice for over 40
years and specializes in post-trauma recovery, often including veterans,
as well as being a poet and bestselling author whose books have been
published in 32 languages.
A reprint of our dialogue is here. An index of eight years of torture-related posts is here.
2 comments:
I hope you cross post this at TMV, it is very important. I went through the Defense Intelligence Agency interrogation school in the late 60s. The first thing they told us on the first day was that torture was illegal and didn't work.
Look for it at TMV on Monday.
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