EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Dismantling the Master’s House: Psychologists and Torture
Amid disturbing reports that psychologists were involved in the abuse and torture of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere, the American Psychological Association (APA) Task Force on Psychological Ethics and National Security (PENS) met in the summer of 2005. Over two days they considered whether the Bush Administration’s no-holds-barred “enhanced interrogation” policies crossed ethical boundaries for military psychologists. Six of the nine voting Task Force members were on the payroll of the military/intelligence establishment, and several of them worked in the chains of command when and where instances of abuse and torture had reportedly occurred. So we should not be surprised by the Task Force’s conclusion that psychologists play an important role in keeping detainee interrogations “safe, legal, ethical, and effective.” This assessment affirmed, nearly verbatim, the military’s own description of Behavioral Science Consultation Team (BSCT) psychologists -- a description that had been provided to the Task Force in writing before their deliberations even began.
The Coalition for an Ethical Psychology is dedicated to putting psychology on a firm ethical foundation in support of social justice and human rights. The Coalition has been in the lead of efforts to remove psychologists from torture and abusive interrogations. http://ethicalpsychology.org/Professional psychology has made valuable contributions to national security through collaborative efforts with government agencies -- and it will undoubtedly continue to do so. But does anyone truly believe that crucial determinations about psychological ethics should ever be guided by the views and agenda of the Secretary of Defense or the Director of the CIA? The many glaring flaws associated with the PENS Report are especially revealing since the APA is, after all, an organization of psychologists. It’s therefore very unlikely that the Task Force organizers were somehow unaware of the potent psychological influences of power differentials on group dynamics; of authority structures and conformity pressures on independent decision-making; and of self-interest on objective, unbiased analysis. It’s far more likely the organizers knew exactly how to create the conditions that would reliably produce the outcome they sought.
Today, a grassroots campaign is underway calling on the APA to annul the PENS Report. This call for annulment is ultimately inseparable from important issues of accountability and transparency. Audre Lorde’s reminder that "the master's tools will never dismantle the master's house" is helpful in describing the challenge. The key leadership of the APA today includes several high-level staff members who were central figures in the PENS Task Force fiasco. Similarly, two current Board members were also on the Board in 2005 when it approved the PENS Report in an emergency session. At a time when the destructive and corrupting consequences of too much power in too few hands have never been more apparent in corporate boardrooms on Wall Street (and elsewhere), how much different is the situation at APA headquarters?
In the six years since the PENS Report was issued, APA leadership has never encouraged a thorough reconsideration of the Task Force’s deliberations or the Report’s conclusions. And they have never, even in hindsight, expressed regret for any decisions made -- despite the fact that the passage of time has repeatedly brought to light further evidence that psychologists acted as planners, consultants, researchers, and overseers to abusive and torturous detainee interrogations. Sadly, APA instead has relied on stonewalling and obfuscation. Why was the PENS Report put to an “emergency” vote of the Board alone, rather than bringing it before the Council of Representatives which, according to the APA, “has sole authority to set policy”? Why was the head of the Practice Directorate given a lead role in the PENS proceedings even though his spouse had been one of the psychologists at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Center? Were representatives of the military/intelligence sector involved in the actual selection of members for the APA Task Force? Why were the identities of Task Force members not included in the Report itself and not made readily available to the press or to APA’s membership? And so on. Even at this late date, official answers to these and other longstanding questions would be welcome.
It’s crucial to recognize that the PENS Report remains a highly influential and authoritative policy document today. The Report is used by the Department of Defense as guidance for BSCT psychologists; by military psychologists seeking to advance "operational psychology" as an area of specialization that includes aggressive counterintelligence and counterterrorism operations; and by the APA Ethics Committee as a guide to ethical behavior in national security settings. The importance and urgency of annulment are made even clearer by current moves in Congress to restore and legalize the use of torturous interrogation techniques. If these efforts succeed, in all likelihood psychologists will be called upon again to oversee and implement morally repugnant practices.
Meanwhile, the annulment campaign is drawing broad support. To date, 29 psychology and human rights organizations have officially endorsed the call, and almost 1,500 individuals have stepped forward to sign the annulment petition online (www.ethicalpsychology.org/pens). Among the organizational endorsers are Physicians for Human Rights, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, the National Lawyers Guild, Psychologists for Social Responsibility, Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, and the Center for Constitutional Rights. Among the petition signers are psychiatrists such as Robert Jay Lifton (author of The Nazi Doctors) and Stephen Xenakis (retired Brigadier General, U.S. Army), scholar-activists such as Noam Chomsky and Daniel Ellsberg, attorneys who have represented Guantanamo detainees, former members of the intelligence community, and other psychologists, military members, and human rights advocates.
Interested psychologists and non-psychologists alike can join this effort by signing the online annulment petition at www.ethicalpsychology.org/pens. Please consider doing so.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


20 Comments so far
Show Allit isn't surprising that the field of psychology has been pressed into military service or that those in positions of power have been successful in attaching whatever veneer of legitimacy can be extracted from areas of social science.
we all know the ends always justify the means.
"...psychologists acted as planners, consultants, researchers, and overseers to abusive and torturous detainee interrogations."
Those having undergone extensive torture are certainly aware of this. If not during, certainly in retrospect. But, the real problem remains, not psychologists, but the military/need-to-control mindset itself and the process whereby innocent civilians 'of interest' are routinely incarcerated and tortured to expand the growing arsenal of social control technologies.
The military (not just US) has always sought more and more ways to expand control paradigms including how power over a society can be supported by controlling individual minds. Naturally, this interest has funded research into how different personalities will respond under various conditions...
Military secret services also used torture to test 9/11 disinfo scripts many years before the event. No question about it, psychologists and the entire discipline have strong roots in military programs seeking better and better ways to deceive the public, demonize 'undesirables', etc., etc.
"In any case, whether or not we have free will, we may soon face new choices about the ways in which we are willing to influence behavior for the better."
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
very interesting article! i've been trying to figure out the psychological angel for some time. since we know from that experiment "only 23 of 30 rats freed their trapped companions" can we humans, statistically speaking, expect 76% to act the hero? or perhaps our species suffers "crowded rat syndrome"? capitalism, aka "the rat race", has somehow created a shallow materialistic and highly competitive life-style. like living in a pressure cooker bubbling with paranoia and mistrust.
do we have free will or is every action pre-written into the chromosomes? i think each is born with certain predispositions, aptitudes and physical attributes. we don't have much choice in which genes we inherit, but if we do not allow others to define us, we can develop our innate attributes to the nth degree and begin learning things that don't come so naturally--if we so choose.
That pesky science again
I would submit that this is has nothing to do with science and everything to do with a twisted and appalling technology. Which is probably just another way of saying what you're saying.
Quite right there and it is not just in the military, it is everywhere. That being said, there are some good applications as well.
In the famous experiment by Lt. Col. Soloman Asch, a group of ten military psychologists, seated around a table, were asked to state whether they felt that statistical findings from Dr. Stanley Milgram's studies on obedience to authority were real or faked.
The most frequent result for the experimental groups was unanimity that they were =faked=. Mind you, nine of the psychologist subjects at the table were paid confederates of Lt. Col. Soloman Asch.
Trylon
Both APAs are trade unions, not unlike bar associations or the AMA. They wrap themselves in the cloak of professionalism, but their members are largely careerists usually concerned about other people only instrumentally and concerned about general ethical questions not at all.
Which isn't to say that practitioners shouldn't be struck off if they employ their skills in torture and similar. They should be. And imprisoned, along with those who give the orders and those who make the orders possible to give.
I think this sets a new record for stereotypes and misunderstanding.
And that is sad.
Trylon
If I'm wrong, why haven't they acted against these colluders and beat the drum for their being struck off? "Boat-destabilisation Phobia" would be my guess--pity it's not in the DSM.
For that matter, why did it take them ages to de-pathologise homosexuality and dump Cameron? Why is Antisocial Disorder (psychopathy) defined in a studiedly classist way? Why wasn't there more uproar about pathologising teenage rebelliousness (Defiant Disorder) in DSM IV? Why isn't there more uproar about the new pathology-inventions in DSM V? Why is there so little promotion -or even acceptance- of the principle --it's not as tho it's a new idea, fachrissake!-- that "a good adjustment" to the demands of a pathological society does NOT represent psychological health?
I'm sorry if I sound heated --it's not directed at you, but at the profession I wanted -still want- to be proud of.
very well said!
These are the sameold "Fuhrerprinzips", get with the program or KBR has a FEMA camp for you my dear. Gotta passport?
Yes and if people that smoke exhibit self-abusive behavior why isn't there a pathology for the doctors that advertised cigarettes?
"Professional psychology has made valuable contributions to national security through collaborative efforts with government agencies"
No, there hasn't been any such thing as "valuable contributions to national security" for fifty years, in the sense that the author is talking about. National security has had no external threats for fifty years. All the threats have been internal, from the ranks of Merkan elites, the imperialists themselves. Valuable contributions to national security, then, has come from the peaceful sectors of the society, housewives, their children, senior citizens, and public servants of lower ranks, who are generally well-intentioned. The author gives us a clue about the large number of the coordinator (white-collar) class who still prop up the empire. Luckily, many people are now getting a clue about the empire. These are generally NOT coordinators (to review the coordinator class, see M. Albert). More are learning who really builds our security and who destroys it. The coordinator class, the servants of empire, destroy our security.
"Professional psychology has made valuable contributions to national security through collaborative efforts with government agencies". I would like to see a list.
I infer from observation that, beside meditating deeply and designing the boundaries of torture, psychology has been heavily invested in marketing, how to get people to buy a product or candidate, in management consulting about how to control the work force, especially during layoffs, in identifying buzzwords that light up positive or negative reactions in the brain, etc. The profession is probably quite helpful as consultants who advise how to turn nice kids into mindless assassins.
This is to be expected, since just as artists in the Middle ages had to get funding and serve the church with art and music that bolstered religion, professionals and talented people adapt to the financial realities of the time, working where the powerful institutions and money are.
Therefore, I doubly thank those individuals and organization who broke ranks to criticize the use of psychology for unethical purposes.
It's worth remembering that PCP, LSD and methamphetamines were all developed by the US Military seeking effective combat drugs to enhance the combat and order following capability of US Military personnel. These drugs were often tested in civilian psychiatric facilities (frequently Canadian so as to provide a factor of deniability) often on 'mental patients' who were only considered 'crazy' because they opposed war and the military, ie, pacifists.
Nazi's beat us to the amphetamines and proved their combat effectiveness, however it took good ol US knowhow to produce the "Black Beauty" , legendary, time realease d-methamphetamine capsules; if they would just end the failed DrugWar!
Is it true that hashish was used to get assassins in the mood for slaughter?
No, the hashish was used to drug the prospective suicide into a stupor, where he would be 'transported' to a harem of 72 beautiful maidens and all of the sensual pleasures normally forbidden to devout Muslims could be indulged in. When he was re-drugged,he was taken back to his normal quarters and told that what he saw was a vision of the afterlife, and those pleasures were assured him if/when he died in the course of his mission.
Makes for a pretty dedicated killing machine, no?
They funded entire wars with the proceeds from the civilian application of those drugs.