How to Read the Senate Report on CIA
Torture Alfred W. McCoy
Dec 29, 2014
http://historynewsnetwork.org/article/157950 Dec 21, 2014
History News Network
Introduction:
The recent
Senate Intelligence Committee’s report on CIA torture is arguably the single
most important U.S. government document released to date in this still-young
21st century. Yet even with all its richly revealing detail about the CIA’s
recourse to torture since 9/11, the report’s impact on the ongoing U.S. debate
over impunity is muted by some serious failings. Above all, the committee’s
cursory treatment of Washington’s long, contradictory history with torture
renders this report, in certain critical areas, superficial.
No matter what
its limitations might be, this Senate report is still an historic document that
will be debated for months and analyzed for years. At its most visceral level,
these 534 pages of dense, disconcerting detail takes us into a Dante-like hell of
waterboard vomit, rectal feeding, midnight-dark cells, endless overhead
chaining, and crippling cold. With its mix of capricious cruelty and systemic
abuse, the CIA’s Salt Pit prison in Afghanistan can now join that long list of
iconic cesspits for human suffering—Devils’ Island, Chateau d’If, Con Son
Island, Robben Island, and many, many more. But perhaps most importantly, these
details have purged that awkward euphemism “enhanced interrogation techniques”
from our polite public lexicon. Now everyone, senator and citizen alike, can
just say “torture.”
In its most
important contribution, the Senate report sifts through some six million
classified documents to rebut the CIA’s claim that torture produced important
intelligence. All the agency’s assertions that torture somehow stopped
terrorist plots or led us to Osama Bin Laden were false, and sometimes
knowingly so. Instead of such spurious claims, CIA director John Brennan has
now been forced to admit that any link between torture and actionable intelligence
is “unknowable.”
Of equal
import, the Senate staffers parsed those millions of CIA documents to shatter
the agency’s myth of derring-do infallibility and expose the bumbling
mismanagement of its two main missions in the War on Terror: incarceration and
intelligence. Every profession has its B-team, every bureaucracy has its
bumblers. Instead of sending James Bond, Langley dispatched Mr. Bean and
Maxwell Smart—in the persons of psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen.
In perhaps its single most damning detail, the Senate report revealed that the
CIA paid these two Air Force retirees $81 million to create sophisticated
“enhanced interrogation techniques” after they had spent their careers doing
little more than administering the SERE torture-resistance curriculum—a mundane
job tailor-made for the mediocrities of modern psychology (more on this in a
moment).
Case of Abu
Zubaydah:
For all its
many strengths, the Senate report is not without some serious limitations.
Mired in detail and muffled by opaque pseudonyms, the committee’s analysis of
this rich detail is often cursory or convoluted, obscuring its import for even
the most discerning reader. This limitation is most apparent in the report’s
close case study of Abu Zubaydah, the high-value detainee whose torture at a
Thai black site in 2002 proved seminal, convincing the CIA that its enhanced
techniques worked and giving these psychologists control over the agency’s
program for the next six years. But, says the Senate report, earlier
non-coercive interrogation produced more numerous intelligence reports.
This finding is
good as far as it goes, but let’s see what more extensive analysis might
extract from this critical section of the Senate’s report. Among the countless
thousands of interrogations during the War on Terror, Abu Zubaydah’s has been
cited repeatedly by conservatives to defend the CIA’s methods. In memoirs
published on the tenth anniversary of 9/11, Dick Cheney claimed the CIA’s
methods turned this hardened terrorist into a “fount of information” and thus
saved “thousands of lives.” But just two week later, Ali Soufan, a former FBI
counter-terror agent fluent in Arabic, published his own book claiming he
gained “important actionable intelligence” by using empathetic methods to
interrogate Abu Zubaydah.
If we juxtapose
the many CIA-censored pages of Ali Soufan’s memoir with his earlier,
unexpurgated congressional testimony, this interrogation becomes an
extraordinary four-stage scientific experiment testing the effectiveness of CIA
coercion versus the FBI’s empathy.
Stage One. As soon as Abu Zubaydah was captured in
2002, Ali Soufan flew to Bangkok where he built rapport in Arabic to gain the
first intelligence about "the role of KSM [Khalid Sheikh Mohammed] as the
mastermind of the 9/11 attacks." Angered by the FBI's success, CIA
director George Tenet pounded the table and dispatched psychologist James
Mitchell, who stripped Zubaydah naked and subjected him to "low-level
sleep deprivation."
Stage Two. After the CIA’s harsh methods got
"no information,” the FBI men resumed their empathic questioning of Abu
Zubaydah to learn "the details of Jose Padilla, the so-called 'dirty
bomber.'" Then the CIA team took over and moved up the coercive continuum
to loud noise, temperature manipulation, and forty-eight hours of sleep
deprivation.
Stage Three.
But this tough CIA
approach again failed, so, for a third time, the FBI men were brought back,
using empathetic techniques that produced more details of the Padilla bomb
plot.
Stage Four. When the CIA ratcheted up the abuse to
confinement that was clearly torture, the FBI ordered Ali Soufan home. With the
CIA in sole control, Abu Zubaydah was subjected to weeks of sleep deprivation,
sensory disorientation , nudity, and waterboarding but gave no further information.
Yet in a stunning bit of illogic, Mitchell claimed this negative result was, in
fact, positive since these enhanced techniques showed that the subject had no
more secrets to hide. Amazingly, the CIA bought this bit of flim-flam.
Examined closely,
the results of this ad hoc experiment were blindingly clear: FBI empathy was
effective, while CIA coercion proved consistently counterproductive. But this
fundamental yet fragile truth has been obscured by CIA claims of good
intelligence from the torture of Abu Zubaydah and by censorship of 181 pages in
Ali Soufan’s memoir that reduced his account to a maze of blackened lines that
no regular reader can understand.
Unanswered
Question:
More broadly,
the Senate committee’s report also fails to ask or answer a critical question:
If the intelligence yield from torture was so consistently low, why was the CIA
so determined to persist in these brutal but unproductive practices for so
long? Among the many possibilities the Senate failed to explore is a default
bureaucratic response by a security agency flailing about in fear when
confronted with an unknown threat. “When feelings of insecurity develop within
those holding power,” reported a CIA analysis of the Cold War Kremlin
applicable to the post-9/11 White House, “they become increasingly suspicious
and put great pressures upon the secret police to obtain arrests and
confessions. At such times police officials are inclined to condone anything
which produces a speedy 'confession,' and brutality may become widespread.”
Moreover, the
Senate’s rigorously pseudonymous format strips its report of an element
critical to any historical narrative, the actor, thereby rendering much of its
text incomprehensible. Understanding the power of narrative, the CIA has given
us the Oscar-winning feature film Zero Dark 30 about an heroic female operative
whose single-minded pursuit of the facts, through the most brutal of tortures,
led the Navy SEALs to Osama Bin Laden. While the CIA has destroyed videotapes
of these interrogations and censored Ali Soufan’s critical account,
scriptwriter Mark Boal was given liberal access to classified sources.
Instead of a
photogenic leading lady, the Senate report offers only opaque snippets about an
anonymous female analyst who played a pivotal role in one of the CIA’s biggest
blunders—snatching an innocent German national, Khaled el-Masri, and subjecting
him to four months of abuse in the Salt Pit prison. That same operative later
defended torture by telling the CIA’s own Inspector General that the
waterboarding of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had extracted the name of terrorist
Majid Khan—when, in fact, Khan was already in CIA custody. Hinting at something
badly wrong inside the agency, the author of these derelictions was rewarded
with a high post in the CIA’s Counter-Terrorism Center.
By quickly
filling in the blanks, journalists have shown us the real story about this
operative that the Senate suppressed and Hollywood glorified. This CIA “Torture
Queen,” reports Jane Mayer in the December 18 issue of the New Yorker, “dropped
the ball when the C.I.A. was given information that might very well have
prevented the 9/11 attacks; …gleefully participated in torture sessions
afterward; …misinterpreted intelligence in such a way that it sent the C.I.A.
on an absurd chase for Al Qaeda sleeper cells in Montana. And then she falsely
told congressional overseers that the torture worked.”
After all that,
this agent, whom Glenn Greenwald has identified as Alfreda Bikowsky, has now
been promoted to a top CIA post and rewarded with a high salary that, says an
activist website, recently allowed her to buy a luxury home in Reston, Virginia
for $875,000. In short, adding the name and narrative reveals a consistent
pattern of CIA incompetence, the corrupting influence of intelligence gleaned
from torture, and the agency’s perpetrators as self-aggrandizing incompetents.
Cold War
History:
The Senate
report’s signal failing is its cursory treatment of the sixty-year history of
secrecy that inscribed tolerance for psychological torture into the country’s
intelligence community, political culture, and federal laws. Viewed
historically, the current controversy is the product of a deeply contradictory
U.S. policy toward torture since the start of the Cold War [1]. Publicly, Washington advocated a
strong standard for human rights--manifest in the UN Universal Declaration of
Human Rights of 1948 and the Geneva Conventions of 1949. Simultaneously and
secretly, however, the CIA was developing ingenious new torture techniques in
contravention of these same international conventions.
From 1950 to
1962, the CIA led a secret allied research effort to crack the code of human
consciousness, a veritable Manhattan project of the mind. While its exotic
experiments with LSD led nowhere, CIA-funded behavioral research produced two
key findings—sensory deprivation and self-inflicted pain—that became central to
its new doctrine of psychological torture.
After four
years of mind control research for use against the enemy, President Eisenhower
ordered, in 1955, that all American soldiers at risk of capture be trained to
resist torture. During the Korean War, about thirty captured US airmen were
tortured to make false statements, some on Radio Beijing, that America had used
biological weapons in North Korea. Consequently, the Air Force flipped these
methods from offense to defense to give its pilots so-called SERE training—an
acronym for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape.
After a decade
of mind-control research, in 1963 the CIA codified its findings in a secret
handbook, cited in the current Senate report, called the "KUBARK
Counterintelligence Interrogation" manual with a new method of psychological
torture that was, for the next thirty years, disseminated worldwide and within
the U.S. intelligence community.
But as the Cold
War wound down, Washington abandoned its torture techniques. After a death in
custody, the CIA purged these coercive techniques from its interrogation canon
and even concluded they were counterproductive. After decades of training Latin
American militaries in torture, the Defense Department, under Secretary Dick
Cheney, recalled all copies of extant manuals that detailed these illegal
methods.
Twelve years
later when the Bush administration opted for torture after 9/11, the sole
institutional memory for these psychological methods lay in the military’s SERE
training. Under contract with the CIA, the two psychologists, Mitchell and
Jessen, reverse-engineered this defensive doctrine to produce the agency’s
signature “enhanced interrogation techniques.”
Instead of
outsourcing torture to allies as Washington had done during the Cold War,
Bush’s policies required that CIA agents dirty their own hands with the
tortures detailed in the Senate report—both the harsh physical methods (wall
slamming, facial grab, stomach slap, rectal feeding), and psychological
techniques dating back to the KUBARK manual (sleep deprivation, sensory
disorientation, shackling for enforced standing).
Legal
Protection for Torture:
Not only is the
use of psychological torture embedded in the nation’s security agencies, it has
been sanctioned by U.S. laws designed to prohibit this abuse. The reason for this
contradiction is, once again, found in a troubled history ignored by the Senate
report.
When the Cold
War came to a close, Washington finally ratified the UN Convention Against
Torture that banned the infliction of both psychological and physical pain. On
the surface, the United States had apparently resolved the long-standing
contradiction between its anti-torture principles and its torture practices.
But when
President Clinton sent this UN Convention to Congress for ratification in 1994,
he included language drafted six years earlier by the Reagan administration
with four detailed diplomatic “reservations” focused on just one word in the
treaty’s twenty-six printed pages: “mental.”
Instead of the
UN Convention's broad ban on “severe pain or suffering,” these U.S.
reservations redefined psychological torture as “prolonged mental harm.” Since
“prolonged” was vague (how long is prolonged?) and “harm” was ambiguous (what
constitutes harm?), these reservations created enormous loopholes—just like the
one Bush lawyers later opened by allowing harm up to “organ failure.”
This language
and its loopholes have been repeated, verbatim down to the semicolons, in every
U.S. law enacted to comply with the UN Convention—first in Section 2340 of the
Federal Code; next in the War Crimes Act of 1996; and most recently in the
Military Commissions Act of 2006.
Impunity in
America:
As America now
concludes a decade-long debate over impunity, the Senate report serves as a
powerful corrective to years of CIA disinformation. Since CBS Television
released those photos from Abu Ghraib prison back in 2004, the United States
has been moving, almost imperceptibly, through a five-step process of impunity
over torture quite similar to those experienced earlier by nations such as England,
France, or the Philippines.
Step One—Bad
Apples. For a year after the Abu Ghraib exposé, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld blamed some bad apples by claiming the abuse was "perpetrated “by
a small number of U.S. military."
Step Two—
National Security. In the months following Obama’s inauguration, Republicans
took us deep into the second stage by invoking national security, with Dick
Cheney saying repeatedly the CIA's methods "prevented the violent deaths
of thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of people."
Step
Three—Unity. In April 2009, President Obama brought us to the third stage of
impunity when he visited CIA headquarters and appealed for national unity,
saying : "We've made some mistakes," but it’s time to
"acknowledge them and then move forward."
Step
Four—Exoneration. After the assassination of Osama bin Laden in May 2011,
neo-conservatives formed an a cappella media chorus to claim, without any
factual basis, that torture led us to Bin Laden. Within weeks, Attorney General
Eric Holder ended the investigation of alleged CIA abuse without a criminal
indictment, exonerating both the interrogators and their superiors.
Step
Five—Vindication. Since the tenth anniversary of 9/11 in September 2011, we
have entered the fifth, final, and most fraught step toward impunity:
vindication before the bar of History. Until now, the CIA’s defenders were
winning this political battle—interrogation videos destroyed, books censored,
indictments quashed, lawsuits dismissed, imagined intelligence coups celebrated,
medals awarded, bonuses paid, and promotions secured.
But with the
release of this Senate report and the media’s pursuit of the facts behind its
obfuscations, the full story of abuse, fabrication, and dissimulation inside
the CIA is finally starting to emerge. Instead of steely guardians willing to
break laws, trample treaties, and dedicate their lives in defense of America,
this report reveals these perpetrators as mendacious careerists willing to
twist any truth to win a promotion or secure a lucrative contract.
Conclusion:
Despite its
rich fund of hard-won detail, the Senate report has, at best, produced a
neutral outcome, a draw in this political contest over impunity. Over the past
forty years, there have been a half-dozen similar scandals over torture that
have followed a familiar cycle—revelation, momentary sensation, vigorous
rebuttal, and then oblivion. Unless we inscribe the lessons from this Senate
report deeply into the country’s collective memory, then some future crisis
might prompt another recourse to torture that will do even more damage to this
country’s moral leadership.
Alfred McCoy
is professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the author
of two recent books on this subject—"Torture and
Impunity: The U.S. Doctrine of Coercive Interrogation" [2] (Madison, 2012); and "A Question of
Torture: CIA Interrogation from the Cold War to the War on Terror" [1] (New York, 2006).
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