Psychologists Told CIA Waterboarding Was Safe
Despite Red Flags, CIA Followed Interrogation Program of Bruce Jessen and Jim Mitchell
There is new scrutiny into the role of two psychologists who made an estimated $1,000 a day to oversee and advise the CIA's interrogation of captured terrorists.
Both men, doctors Jim Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, assured the CIA that their methods could 'break' a terrorist and would be safe, according to two former high-ranking CIA officials and a collection of recently declassified Bush administration memos.
The major problem, according to those who knew the two retired military psychologists, was that neither Mitchell nor Jessen had ever conducted a real interrogation, or been involved in an intelligence operation.
When they became involved in interrogations for the CIA, "that was their first step into the world of intelligence," says Air Force Colonel Steve Kleinman, a career military interrogator and former colleague of both Dr. Mitchell and Dr. Jessen. "That was their very first experience with it. Everything else was role-play."Kleinman and two other former colleagues tell ABC News that neither Mitchell nor Jessen had any experience with al Qaeda, Islamic extremists or battlefield interrogations.
And yet, more than anyone else, Mitchell and Jessen, long-time friends and colleagues, shaped the CIA's interrogation program, according to the two former CIA officials.
The debate over the CIA's so called "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" has picked up in recent weeks after the Obama administration released a set of legal memos written during the Bush presidency, and a Senate committee report that details the origins of interrogation policy during the Bush administration.
"If the psychologists told the CIA or the Office of Legal Counsel that these methods wouldn't amount to torture as a matter of science, I think those psychologists were essentially aiding in torture," says Jameel Jaffer, who directed the American Civil Liberties Union's fight to secure the memos' release.
In addition to questions of legality investigations have begun in Congress into the effectiveness of Mitchell and Jessen's program.
According to Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI), chair of the Armed Services Committee, whose report identifies Mitchell and Jessen as important to the creation of interrogation policies, little could have been gained by the harsh methods.
"These tactics are more likely to produce unreliable evidence than they are to produce any reliable information," he told ABC News. "The use of these tactics tends to increase resistance on the part of the detainee to cooperating with us. So they have the exact opposite effect of what [the U.S. would] want."
Declassified Memos Contradict 2007 ABC News Interview with John Kiriakou
The memos also revealed that waterboarding was used "with far greater frequency that initially indicated," according to an excerpt from a report by the CIA Inspector General. Abu Zubaydah was waterboarded at least 83 times and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed 183 times, according to the memos.
The new figures sharply contradict an interview with former CIA intelligence officer John Kiriakou who told ABC News in December, 2007 that Zubaydah had only been waterboarded once and talked freely afterwards.
Kiriakou, who led the capture of Zubaydah and was the first from inside the CIA to publicly confirm the use of waterboarding, now says he, too, was unaware of the many times Zubaydah was waterboarded.
Kiriakou told ABC News, "When I spoke to ABC News in December 2007 I was aware of Abu Zubaydah being waterboarded on one occasion. It was after this one occasion that he revealed information related to a planned terrorist attack. As I said in the original interview, my information was second-hand. I never participated in the use of enhanced techniques on Abu Zubaydah or on any other prisoner, nor did I witness the use of such techniques."
As to the private contractors used by the CIA to create and oversee the 10-step brutal interrogation program, two former high-ranking CIA officials confirm to ABC News that Mitchell and Jessen were the architects of the CIA's interrogation program, and were hired as independent contractors to administer and direct the so-called "high value detainee" interrogation. Based on their suggestions and ideas, submitted by the CIA, the Justice Department approved a set of 10 techniques in August, 2002, that would be used on Abu Zubaydah and subsequent al Qaeda captures.
Both are said to have been present in multiple CIA secret prisons, sources tell ABC News, regulating everything from sleep deprivation and stress positions to forced nudity and placing insects in a "confinement box." Sources tell ABC News that the pair traveled the world for the CIA. For their services, they told friends that they were paid $1,000 per day overseas, tax-free, plus expenses.
Mitchell recently built a dream home in Florida, purchased a Lexus and BMW. And as early as 2002, Mitchell and Jessen opened a consulting business that employed as many as 60 people.
Neither would answer questions posed by ABC News, saying they were upholding confidentiality agreements with the U.S. government.
Colleagues of Mitchell and Jessen Raised Red FlagsAlthough Mitchell and Jessen had been previously identified as being CIA contractors who influenced the CIA's controversial interrogation techniques, the recently released government documents reveal how deeply the pair were involved in developing an interrogation program based on their expertise as psychologists in classified military training regimen intended to help U.S. soldiers and pilots resist coercion and torture in the event of capture, called SERE.
The classified program, which stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape, was a legacy of the Cold War, when U.S. soldiers captured by Communist regimes were brutalized and used as propaganda trophies.
SERE was also designed to cope with the tactics of countries and governments that did not abide by the Geneva Convention, which prohibits torture and governs the rules of war.
An obscure Department of Defense unit, called the Joint Personnel Recovery Agency (JPRA), for which Dr. Jessen served as a psychological expert and trainer, is assigned the task of overseeing all SERE training giving to the various special forces in the U.S. military. Dr. Mitchell, though assigned to the special operations unit of the Air Force, worked closely with Dr. Jessen for nearly two decades at Fairchild Air Force Base in Spokane, WA.
The Senate Armed Services Committee recently released a study of interrogation policies in the military after 9/11. The report describes the influence Dr. Jessen had as chief psychologist of JPRA, and his colleague, Dr. Mitchell on the role of SERE tactics in shaping interrogation policy.
According to the report, Mitchell and Jessen's SERE expertise, "lies in training U.S. military personnel who are at risk for capture, how to respond and resist interrogations (a defensive mission), not in how to conduct interrogations (an offensive mission)."
Despite a flurry of red flags from Mitchell and Jessen's colleagues, senior Pentagon and CIA officials agreed to adopt their program.
Col. Kleinman says Mitchell and Jessen were way out their league advocating and creating an interrogation model.
"What they failed to understand was they were stepping out of their area of expertise," he says. "There was nobody, apparently, at the decision-making level that had enough expertise and experience in the area of interrogation to quickly see the disconnect between the SERE model, a resistance model, and an actual interrogation for intelligence purposes."
CIA: Interrogation Program Guided by Legal Opinions from DOJ
Now, investigators will look to see if the harsh techniques worked and the ACLU and Jameel Jaffer are interested in determining if Mitchell and Jessen misled the U.S. government about the intensity of their interrogation program. Jaffer points out that according to a CIA Inspector General report, the "expertise of the SERE psychologists/interrogators on the waterboard was probably misrepresented." As a result, the IG report continued, there is no reason to believe that the technique was effective, or "medically safe."
So how did it happen that the CIA and the U.S. government came to rely so heavily on two inexperienced interrogators for the nations more important interrogations?
Kleinman is dumbfounded. "The best I can come up with was the people doing the hiring did not even understand the challenge in front of them."
The CIA told ABC News that the "agency's terrorist interrogation program was guided by legal opinions from the Department of Justice."
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16 Comments so far
Show AllScience and scholarship are corrupted by government. Eisenhower warned about that in his last speech as President. Not saying there are not honest folks in these professions, but the funding for research, grants, endowments, etc come from government or institutions that back both parties who have a political agenda.
If you want to get published and have a good career, you follow the consensus that is imposed by the establishment controlling the political agenda. Thats why we see garbage like AGW alarmism and this swine flu hoax, GM foods and vaccines that are untested and/or unsafe, etc. Those who promote fear or support unsafe product, are respected by most because they are "scientists", when in fact they are corrupted by the system which promotes a neo-malthusian non-democratic agenda.
Psychology would not exist to the extent that it does today were it not for the powers that be and the militaries interest in controlling populations (civilian and enemy) thoughts via propaganda and psyops. That said, most psychologists and scientists are not corrupted, it's a minority who have sold their souls and become the public spokesmen for deceipt and fraud.
If there are ever war crime trials, those who are knowingly complicit in these crimes, be it in media or science/education, should be charged as well.
Most scientists and psychologists are not corrupted. Some are. But there is a big middle ground in which the opportunity to earn a living is controlled by pharma, military, advertising, management needs. It isn't corruption per se to work on selling or testing a diet product, or figuring out the best way to fire people, or developing a remote tracking system. The scientists become technicians who have little or no say about the application of their mental work.
The opportunities for idealistic or helpful work are rare. Such work tends to pay too little to support a family sufficiently so that the children can hope to go to college and get a PhD and remain in the same class as their parents. $1000 a day is very attractive in this context.
Joe
Mitchell and Jessen should lose their licenses and be tried for malpractice. Besides the obvious crimes against humanity they have both committed, if for no other reason than practicing outside of their scope of practice, these two should never EVER be allowed to practice again.
I am a mental health professional, have been for 30 years. This is unconscionable behavior.
baruchzed May 2nd, 2009 11:37 am, I have several friends who work in the same field and they are appalled that anyone who calls themselves a psychologist or mental health professional would ever recommend, indulge in, or sanction something as heinous as waterbording, which has been recognized as torture since the days of the Spanish Inquisition, condemned by the Nuremberg Trials as torture, and cited by the Geneva Conventions as torture.
One element left out of this analysis is the notion that Jessen and Mitchell are simply weak, incompetent boobs, 'Monica Goodlings,' just like many of the followers of Bush. As the article quotes Col. Kleinman as saying:
"The best I can come up with was the people doing the hiring did not even understand the challenge in front of them."
Of course they didn't. They were narrow-minded neocon Christopublicans, with their ignorant religiously-inspired tunnel-vision influencing their concept of the world and history, and their incompetence an outgrowth of that addled mind-set.
Rather than working in the field of mental health, they would be better off subjecting themselves to its practice as patients.
This facet of the torture debacle is emblematic of how things were done during the Bush error: cronies without a clue formulating &/or justifying policy that the douches at the top wanted. The more details that emerge, the worse everybody involved looks.
For $1,000.00 per day you could get a lot of people to sanction torture!
Both doctors Jim Mitchell and Bruce Jessen have created a lifetime's work picking up the shattered pieces of broken minds. They should be hanged without benefit of clergy for this travesty.
Jessen and Mitchell, like Yoo, Bybee, Bradbury and Haines are just another couple of What Makes Sammy Runs of The Torture Regime. Need someone to make breaking the law sound like angel food cake? Just ask these slugs.
Mitchell and Jessen declared their torture regime safe, but both are psychologists with no medical credentials whatsoever. The CIA's own medical officers were more cautious, but no less compliant in the torture plan.
Their attestation of safety is the medical equivalent of Bybee's, Yoo's and Flanigan's assessment of legality.
This program consists of massive, systemic and ongoing violation of US law, international law and treaties, and the domestic laws of a number of other nations, in addition to the professional ethics of psychology, medicine, law and the military.
DrBrian
So, you are defending the medical doctors for being "more cautious" when drowning a human being? Your parsing comments are proof positive that both ph.d. and m.d. can be perverted; as you are.
Sioux Rose
In theory a psychologist should own empathy. And don't all those registered in the "helping" professions need to understand the Hippocratic Oath, as in "Do no harm"? To watch persons go under the water treatment, or another perverse protocol would make a 5 year old child recognize that SOMETHING was not right. A normal working conscience would experience a visceral sense of this. Here we have instead paper shufflers trying to use words to excuse their own amorality.
There is no oath that psychologists take. We do not have a Hippocratic oath or anything like it. We do, however, have a code of ethics which does not allow for this kind of action on the part of a psychologist.
Not all mental health practitioners are empathic. Increasingly the field is filled with pill pushers and technicians.
Rose, maybe the guv'mint pays these guys cash money under the table the same way they did some of the Iraqi people when rying to justify their position. Bush vamboozled lawyers into writing 'position statements' too. I would bet we could add bribery to the list of horrors these men perpetrated upon all of us by having to endure their sick beliefs.
Yes, Sioux Rose, you would think that empathy and a desire to help would be important qualities in a psychologist. You would think that high ethical standards would be central to those who have power over human mental health and emotion. How quaint!
Increasingly the process of getting a PhD and achieving professional status can be one that favors "playing the game" over thinking and feeling. Many psychologists now engage in research and / or manipulation on behalf of advertisers, political campaigns and industry.
Psychology is one of those professions, like accounting, in which large sectors have been distorted beyond recognition to serve big money, or as you say, Mammon.
Joe
Rose I have had the same questions since this story broke.Maybe these guys are just P.H.D.s and not real"doctors".They shoud still have thier licenses revoked ,and be charged with providing accessory political cover for torturers!
peace
Aha! two red herrings.
Just last week the "fbi" came out with its EDOP guy, stating the FBI knows how to get info without roughing up the bad guys. Then "major alexander" comes out and says in 2006 he proved you could get info without roughing up the bad guys....
so the focus was going to the CIA....
now CIA comes out and says retired MIL PSYCH said it was good to go, plus State Department. DODs been passing the buck onto CIA for longtime....looks like blowback time....
There's going to be a lot of heads rolling and a lot of people ducking trying to save their ass. Much like when the Army was investigating Pat Tillman's death, there is going to be a epidemic going up the chain of command wiping out everyone's memory... symptoms of the, I-don't-recall virus