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UNITED STATES,
CANADA, BRITAIN:
PARTNERS IN MIND
CONTROL OPERATIONS
By Armen Victorian
July 1996
DEDICATION: I dedicate
this writing to those innocent victims who have suffered from physical, mental
abuse and torture inflicted upon their mind and bodies by the state --
irrespective of the colour of the flag. To the courageous individuals for
telling the world about their torment. And the institutions that stood by their
side and fought for their human rights. Rights, which are still violated by
states under the disguise of their national security acts. No amount of
compensation would be sufficient for raping or killing the mind.
The notorious Moscow trials of 1937
during Stalin's regime and the speed with which the defendants confessed to
crimes against the state in the People's Court, and in particular Cardinal
Mindszently of Hungary, surprised the governments of the western world.
"Characteristics and manner of the defendants, and formulation and delivery of
the confessions, have been so similar in large number of cases as to suggest
factitious origin."[1] The evident incongruities prompted the CIA's Office of
Scientific Intelligence (OSI) in 1949 to undertake an "analysis of foreign work
in certain unconventional warfare techniques, including behavioral drugs, with
an initial objective of developing a capability to resist or offset the effects
of behavioral drugs. Preliminary phases included to review drug-related work at
institutions such as Mount Sinai Hospital, University of Illinois, University of
Michigan, University of Minnesota, Valley Forge General Hospital, Detroit
Psychopathic Clinic, Mayo Clinic and National Institute of Health (NIH). There
was also extensive review of foreign literature, particularly work in the Soviet
Bloc. This program shortly became Project BLUEBIRD, with the objectives of (a)
discovering means of conditioning personnel to prevent unauthorized extraction
of information from them by known means, (b) investigating the possibility of
obtaining control of an individual by application of special interrogation
techniques, (c) memory enhancement, and (d) establishing defensive means for
preventing hostile control of Agency personnel."[2]
This was evolved to become the blueprint
and bible of mind control programmes and psychological operations adopted by the
west for decades afterwards. The result of the Korean War which started in June
1950, almost a year after the beginning of Project BLUEBIRD, and the return of
POWs encouraged western intelligence to delve even further into their mind
control programmes.
On June 1st, 1951, in the course of a
top secret meeting held in the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Montreal, Canada, Britain
and Canada joined forces with the Central Intelligence Agency to "Research into
the general phenomena indicated by such terms as -- "confessions," "menticide,"
"intervention in the individual mind," together with methods concerned in
psychological coercion, change of opinions and attitudes, etcetra."[3]
The participants that represented senior
and renown ranks from the military, intelligence and scientific communities
were: Dr. Haskins, Dr. Donald Hebb (a Defence Research Board University Advisor
- Canada), Dr. Ormond Solandt (Chairman, Defence Research Board - Canada), Dancy
(MI6), Dr. N.W. Morton (A staff member of Defence Research Board - Canada),
Tyhurst, Commander Williams, and Sir Henry Tizard (Chairman, Advisory Council on
Scientific Policy and Defence Research Policy Committee, Ministry of Defence,
Britain).[4]
This was the beginning of a close
cooperation which lasted throughout the BLUEBIRD, ARTICHOKE and the MKULTRA
projects. Whilst accidental survival of some of the records on these programmes
and in particular MKULTRA establishes the documentary evidence about Canadian
government's involvement in MKULTRA programmes, the information on Britain's
participation or cooperation due to continuous British Government's policy of
secrecy remains sketchy.[5, and 6]
"At the opening of the discussion, there
was an attempt to lay out some of the particular interests with which this group
might concern itself in reference to the general problem described above
[confessions, menticide, intervention in the individual mind - sic]. In this
regard, the following points were noted:
"(i) That the concern with change of
opinion was with reference to individuals primarily, and to groups only insofar
as the change of public opinion as a whole or propaganda might involve concepts
and particular facts that led to increased phenomena of conversion of attitude.
"(ii) The question of permanence of
change of attitude induced.
"(iii) The means of methods; physical,
neurophysiological, psychological or other -- that might be used to induce
change of opinion or conversion of attitude in the individual."[7]
Within the space of three months after
this top secret meeting "in August 1951 Project BLUEBIRD was renamed Project
ARTICHOKE, [and] in 1952 was transferred from OSI to the predecessor
organization of the Office of Security. OSI did retain a responsibility for
evaluation of foreign intelligence aspects of the matter and in 1953 made a
proposal that experiments be made in testing LSD with Agency volunteers."
"Meanwhile, the emphasis given ARTICHOKE in the predecessor organization to the
Office of Security became that of use of material such as sodium pentothel in
connection with interrogation techniques and with polygraph."[8]
In an attempt to conduct "Experimental
Studies of Attitude Changes in Individuals," Sir Henry Tizard, Dr. Ormond
Solandt and the CIA granted contract X-38 to Dr. Donald O. Hebb from the McGill
University in September 1951.[9]
The project focused on the use of
Sensory Deprivation (SD) and isolation for eliciting information in the course
of deep interrogation. Hebb believed that sensory deprivation would induce
dramatic changes in the behaviour and attitude. The first "subjects used were
student group and each was paid $20 per day (24 hours) for as long as he could
continue with the experiment."[10] The experimental conditions and environment
for the volunteer students in comparison to the real victims of SD were markedly
different. Volunteers were provided with an air conditioned room, comfortable
bed and good food during the period of the experiments, as well as a panic
button to use whenever they decided to terminate the experiment. They wore
translucent goggles, forcing them see blurred light. "The subject was not to
talk except when asking to hear the recorded propaganda or when doing minor
tests given to him by the experimenter. In other words the subject was in
perpetual isolation."[11] The volunteers were not subjected to any propaganda
material which would have had adverse effects on their political or religious
beliefs, "it was thought unwise, and for the protection of the individual only
propaganda material used concerning such relatively innocuous topics as ghosts,
poltergeist, extrasensory perception and the Lamarckian theory of
evolution."[12] Despite the concessionary factors several of the volunteers
began to have experiences of unusual visual and auditory hallucinations. Many
found themselves unable to distinguish between the waking and sleep stage.
Another person whose work result was taken into consideration was Dr. Mackworth
of the Applied Psychology Unit of the Medical Research Council at Cambridge,
England. He had produced work on the effect of monotony and boredom during
isolation period on individual. The fact of existence of similar programmes on
the sensory deprivation and isolation, and the cooperation between the three
countries is further confirmed by Dr. Solandt's comments that the fact that
Canadians were making such contribution in this field may be of some advantage
in obtaining information in the same field from the US and the UK.[13]
"Hebb's research to date has given some
indication that significant changes in attitude can be brought about by use of
propaganda under condition of isolation. In addition, [Hebb] has shown that
there is a significant decrease in intellectual efficiency under such
conditions, and a marked increase in susceptibility to hallucination."[14] When
the information concerning the SD tests were leaked out and published in the
Montreal Star, the Gazette and Toronto Star, in 1954. Dr. Solandt tried his best
to conceal the facts; "When earlier this month it became evident that some
information on this project was in the hands of the Press, it was decided that
while it would be injudicious to reveal the original purpose of the project, it
would be equally unwise to refuse to give any information at all. A compromise
was therefore arranged whereby the project was described, but entirely from the
point of view of possible implications for civilian or military operational
situations in which a display had to be watched, a moving vehicle controlled
etc."[15]
Due to Donald Hebb's contribution to
mind control programmes, the CIA afterward funded Ewen Cameron's Psychic Drive
Project through MKULTRA Subproject 68. At the time Hebb was the head of McGill's
Psychology Department, and a close friend and colleague of Cameron. Cameron's
work in the "Psychic Drive" programme left behind a legacy of despair and
numerous victims which sued both the Canadian Government and the CIA years
later.
Dr. John C. Lilly, another psychologist,
studied sensory deprivation in 1956 by immersing volunteers in a tank of
lukewarm water. The subjects had to wear particular type of face mask enabling
them to see only blurred light. Under total silence and lack of any stimulation
the subjects were unable to concentrate, and in some cases developed mental
disturbances. The maximum time a volunteer could tolerate these conditions was
only three hours. The volunteers reported feelings of unreality and tremendous
loss of identification. They did not know where they were, or who they were, or
what was happening to them. Due to this enormous mental pressure most of them
abandoned the experiment.[16]
The concept of experiments in SD soon
proliferated. Donald Hebb was granted further contracts by the US Air Force for
further research and experiments into SD.[17] Biderman and Zimmer (1961) also
conducted extensive research on interrogation techniques using SD, funded by the
US Air Force.[18] Vernon, another researcher in this subject admitted in the
"Acknowledgement" of his book "Inside the Black Room," "The entire project was
made possible by a generous grant-in-aid of research given by the Office of
Surgeon General of the US Army, and by the National Science Foundation."
Unashamedly, he went on to add in his book "While our goal is pure knowledge for
its own sake, we have no objection to someone's use of that knowledge."[19]
There are three aspects in the
development and the use of the Sensory Depravation. First; the requirement for
more experimental studies, researching the basic effects of the SD and sleep
deprivation. Second; the use of these techniques in interrogation. Third; their
utilization in special warfare techniques by specialized troops. It was the
accumulation of that knowledge which gave birth to the modern Psychological
Operations, and subsequently enabled the British Government, on August 9, 1971,
to unleash one of its biggest deep interrogation experiments, using torture and
sensory deprivation, plausibly denied by the Government at the time as a
political exercise against terrorism, on Irish internees. Lord Parker admitted
that the SD methods used on the Irish internees were "techniques developed since
war to deal with a number of situations involving internal security. Some or all
have played an important part in counter insurgency operations in Palestine,
Malaya, Kenya and Cyprus and more recently in the British Cameroon (1960-61),
Bruni (1963), British Guyana (1964), Aden (1965-66), and the Persian Gulf
(1970-71)."[20] Indeed, the first NATO symposium on defence psychology was held
in Paris in 1960, a couple of years after F.H. Lakin, from the Army Operation
Research Establishment in Britain, travelled to Fort Bragg addressing a
conference on human factors in military affairs on British Psychological Warfare
Techniques in Malaya.[21] In 1963 the US Department of Defense held its first
Worldwide Psyops Conference, outlining twenty-eight specific areas, Britain as
on of its main participants.
The Northern Ireland's unprecedented
operations, due to the nature of their severity and repeated breaches of various
Articles of Human Rights Convention, forced Amnesty International, Association
of Legal Justice, Committee on the Administration of Justice (Northern Ireland),
as well as the European Court of Human Rights to intervene, adding their voice
and concern to the plight of the victims.[22] A great number of internees after
undergoing horrendous experiments were subsequently released without any
charges.
Many of the original fourteen victims of
the first phase of these gruesome experiments "were made to sign a paper that
they had no complaints about the treatment during interrogation. Those who
signed the paper implied that they did so because they were frightened, or
because they did not understand the contents."[23] Several of them suffered from
deep psychological scars for years afterwards, and some continue their
suffering. Some died shortly after this experiments. A few attempted suicide
during their captivity and interrogation.[24]
Amnesty International report stated; "As
a result of its investigation, the Commission concludes that the ill-treatment
used in these cases clearly amounted to brutality, and disagree with the Compton
Committee when they state: "Where we have concluded that physical ill-treatment
took place, we are not making a finding of brutality on the part of those who
handled these complaints (paragraph 105)." "The officials who gave evidence to
the Compton Committee also said that one of the purposes of the hooding and
continuous noise [white noise - author] was to increase the sense of isolation,
so it is obvious that the methods used during interrogation in depth were
therefore intended to affect the recipients psychologically."[25]
"In the opinion of the Commission, the
interrogation in depth especially, but also the "special exercises", constitute
violation of Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article
3 of the European Convention for the protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms."[26]
In their memorandum submitted by Amnesty
International to the Parker Committee on Interrogation Procedures, they stated;
"It is because we regard the deliberate destruction of a man's ability to
control his own mind with revulsion that we reserve a special place in our
catalogue of moral crimes for techniques of thought control and brainwashing.
Any interrogation procedure which has the purpose or effect of causing a
malfunction or breakdown of a man's mental processes constitutes as grave as
assault on the inherent dignity of the human person as more traditional
techniques of physical torture."[27]
In 1970, the World Conference on
Religion and Peace, held in Kyoto, Japan, where the representatives of all the
world's religions were present, the conference made the following declaration on
torture and ill-treatment of prisoners; "The torture and ill-treatment of
prisoners which is carried out with the authority of some governments constitute
not only a crime against humanity, but also a crime against the moral law."[28]
Britain is regarded as an expert in
psychological operations, and has regularly been invited to give demonstrations
and hold seminars, notably at Fort Bragg, Carolina; Fort Huachuca, Arizona; Bad
Tolz, Germany. For a time they were also instructing the P.I.D.E. Portuguese
secret police until to their embarrassment, they discovered that since the Army
coup they had for sometime been giving lectures in counter-insurgency and
torture to Latin American guerrillas, whom Communist members of the Portuguese
Army had infiltrated. [29]
Britain holds its main psychological
operation courses at Ashford in Kent, Caterrick in Yorkshire, Bradbury Lines
(The SAS camp in Hereford) and Old Sarum in Wiltshire, where psyops courses for
RAF officers are held. On average 16 men, consisting of Green Jackets, SAS,
Royal Marines and Royal Artillery, together with members from the Ministry of
Defence (MOD) and Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), take part.[30]
The existence of psyop courses which
includes the demonstration and the use of sensory deprivation was kept secret
until Robert Brown, the UK Army Minister was forced to admit in 1976.
Approximately 250 take these courses every year. Frank Kitson,[31] one of the
organizers of psyop courses, had complained about the small number of 18 taking
part in Old Sarum. According to British Government figures up to 1976, 262
civilians and 1858 Army officers had taken these courses.
The SAS training courses in the Bracon
Beacons, also includes sensory deprivation as part of its toughening up policy.
As further experiments Sensory
deprivation was applied through the Control Units in British prisons. The very
nature and existence of these units were kept secret by the British Home Office.
The Control Unit at the Wakefield Prison was one of the first to receive its
first share of inmates in August 1974, to be subjected to SD. The concept was to
break down the troublesome prisoners using modified version of SD. Sunday Times
Insight Team uncovered the existence of these units and the purpose of their
creation, in October 1974. As result of publicity and sever criticism UK
Government was forced to disband its Control Units in Wakefield and Wormwood
Scrubs prisons. The "Treatment" designed for a period of six months was divided
into two parts. Sensory deprivation was the main focal point. In the first 90
days, a strict solitary confinement, with almost no communication was applied to
the inmate. If result proved successful, the victim was allowed to have a
limited amount of communication in the next three months phase. Otherwise, the
entire phase one would have been repeated -- more solitary confinement. No
conversation between the prisoner and the guards were allowed, only gestures
were permitted.
John Masterson was the first inmate
subjected to this "Treatment" in 1974. With no positive results, and more
psychological scars left on the victims, eventually on May 20, 1976, Dr.
Pickering, ex-Director of Prison Medical Service admitted in BBC's "Man Alive"
programme, that "control units were a mistake." It is ironic, since he was in
charge when John Masterson was subjected to this mental torture.
Roy Jenkins, the Home Secretary at the
time expressed his satisfaction about these units and their operations. "I am
satisfied that the safeguard and procedures are such that the trained staff of
Wakefield are able to maintain a careful and caring watch on the progress and
condition of prisoners in the control unit."[32]
A year after he was still adamant that;
"I am satisfied that allegations, which have received considerable publicity, of
sensory deprivation, cruelty and brutality in the unit, are completely unfounded
and that the Governor and staff have conducted themselves in a commendably
professional manner."[33] Yes, but what about the fate of the victims?
What started in Ritz Carlton Hotel in
1951, came to full fruition in 1971, throughout the ordeal of Ulster guinea
pigs. As Professor Robert Daly[34] stressed; "The whole SD process in Northern
Ireland was a package deal. Being awaken in the middle of the night, being
beaten, confused as to your whereabouts, lied to and insulted, was all part of
the 'unfreezing process' through which your psychological defences were broken
down, and terror and humiliation were induced. Hence, the photographing in the
nude, being forced to urinate while running, refusal to allow toilet visits, the
sadism and abuse. Meanwhile the psychological functions of the body were being
disturbed by the very low or non-existent intake of calories, high temperature
caused by sweating which could lead to dehydration, coupled with the cold at
night, sleep deprivation and loss of sense of touch. The whole experience was a
package. Whether you want to call it interrogation in depth or brain washing is
academic. The aim of the treatment was to cause temporary psychosis, temporary
insanity, which was a severe psychological injury liable to having lasting
consequences."[35]
Like the CIA, Britain too, as part of
its mind control operation applied hallucinogenic drugs -- LSD, on unwitting
subjects, including the Irish internees;
"Mr. Murphy alleges; He was given tea
and says that after drinking he saw images on the wall."[36]
"Mr. Bradley alleges; He suffered from
hallucination after drinking a cup of tea."[37]
Despite Article 22 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights which guarantees "the free development of
...personality," and "in spite of the various United Nations provisions
concerning the personal integrity of individuals, no state is expressly
precluded from altering the mental processes of its nationals."[38]
"The price of freedom is eternal
vigilance," said Albert Camus. Nowhere is this more clear than in the protection
of freedom of the mind, our most precious human right.[39]
Armen Victorian
June 1996.
REFERENCES:
1. CIA memorandum "An Analysis of
Confession in Russian Trials," 1950. Also see "Are the Cominform Countries Using
Hypnotic Techniques to Elicit Confession in Public Trials?" By; Irving L. Janis;
US Air Force Project Rand Memorandum, April 25, 1971.
2. "Behavior Drugs, and Testing," Feb.
5, 1975. CIA document.
3. Documents from the collection of the
Manuscript Division, Library of Congress.
4. Tizard, Sir Henry Thomas, born 23
August 1885, GCB, AFC, FRS, LLD, DSc, ScD, and holder of other titles (see Who
is Who 1951, and Who is Who 1951-1960).
5. op. cit. 3.
6. In 1973 several key documents on the
CIA's mind control programmes were destroyed on the order of Richard Helms, the
CIA Director.
7. op. cit. 3.
8. op. cit. 2.
9. "Confidential" letter, Dr. Solandt,
August 3, 1954.
10. ibid.
11. ibid.
12. ibid.
13. ibid., and Dr. Solandt's
conversation with author 1989.
14. Letter to "The Minister", Ormond
Solandt, Jan. 25, 1954.
15. ibid.
16. John C. Lilly, "Mental Effects of
Reduction of Ordinary Levels of Physical Stimuli on Intact Healthy Persons,"
Psychological Research Report 5, 1966, pp. 1-9. Also see Bexton et al., "The
Effects of Decreased Variation in the Sensory Environment," Canadian Journal of
Psychology, vol. 8, 1954, pp. 70-76.
17. National Defence Headquarters
[Canada] letter to author, dated April 18, 1994. Also see D.O. Hebb et al., "The
Effects of Isolation Upon Attitudes, Motivation and Thought," 4th Symposium,
Military Medicine I, Defence Research Board, Canada, Dec. 1952 (Secret), and;
D.O. Hebb and W. Heron, "Effects of Radical Isolation Upon Intellectual
Functions and The Manipulation of Attitudes," 4th Symposium, Military Medicine
I, Defence Research Board, Canada, Dec. 1952 (Secret).
18. Biderman, Zimmer, "The Manipulation
of Human Behaviour," Wiley, New York, 1961.
19. J. Vernon, "Inside the Black Room:
Studies of Sensory Deprivation," Penguin 1966.
20. Parker Report, Cmnd. 4901 (HMSO),
para 10.
21. F.H. Lakin from Army Operational
Research Establishment (AORE), Britain, described the British Psychological
Warfare research in Malaya between 1952-55. He was in charge of a nine man
research team responsible to AORE, and the Research Division of the Director
General of the Information Services [then the Federation of Malaya]. For six
months two men from the Operational Research Office of John Hopkins University,
Maryland, worked closely with his team, plus an Australian army psychologist.
22. Also see; 1. "Repression Trade -
(UK) Limited," How the UK Makes Torture and Death its Business. By Amnesty
International, British Section 1992. 2. "Submission to the United Nations
Committee Against Torture," for consideration during the Committee's scrutiny of
UK Government's Report. Committee on the Administration of Justice (Affiliated
of the International Federation of Human Rights), Nov. 13, 1993. 3. "A
Submission to; the United Nation's Human Rights Committee," Containing Comments
on the Forth Periodic Report by the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland to the Human Rights Committee under Article 40 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. By; Committee on the Administration of
Justice, June 1995.
23. "Report Of An Enquiry Into
Allegation of Ill-Treatment in Northern Ireland," Amnesty International, p.26.
24. For a more detailed account of the
fate of the internees see "The Guineapigs," John McGuffin.
25. op. cit. 23, p.36.
26. ibid.
27. op. cit. 23, p.38.
28. Findings of The World Conference on
Religion and Peace, p. 31.
29. In answer to a Parliamentary
Question, Archie Hamilton, the British Minister of State for Defence listed 100
countries to which UK provides military training of various nature including
Portugal, and other countries with notorious track records in violation of Human
Rights, e.g. China, Chile, Iraq, Uganda, South Korea, Egypt, Turkey. He fails to
add Cambodia to the list -- See John Pilger's "Cambodia: Year Ten."
30. "Precis 6: Psyop unit - General,"
Training Report, Senior Officers' Psyop Course, Royal Air Force, Old Sarum,
Salisbury, Wiltshire, UK February 14/18, 1972. A British document devoted to the
organization and equipment of psyops unit, both at headquarters, and broken down
into subsections; Consolidation Psyops; Counter-Insurgency uses and their use in
peacetime, as well as details of deployment of psyop units in UK. Also,
"Technical Report of the Senior Officers' Psyop Course Held at RAF Old Sarum,
14-18, Feb. 1972." This course clarifies the parallel nature of the British
psyops with that of US Army's. Amongst people that have addressed these courses
are; Keith Belbin, of Coleman, Prentice and Valery [Advertising Agency] on
recruitment. Peter Bartlett on target analysis with reference to the Chinese use
in Hong Kong. R.M. Farr [a psychologist from British Psychological Society] on
attitude change, and B.R. Johnston on information policy in low intensity
operations, mainly in Northern Ireland.
31. Now Sir Frank Kitson, Commander of
the 39th Infantry Brigade Northern Ireland between 1970-72. Author of "Low
Intensity Operation: Subversion," London, Faber and Faber; and "Insurgency
Peace-Keeping," London, Faber and Faber 1971. Also, see "The Technology of
Political Control," by; Ackroyd, Margolis, Rosenhead and Shalice. Pluto Press
1980, and "The Silent Conspiracy," Stephen Dorril (William Heineman Ltd.), 1993.
32. House of Commons, [British
Parliament] November 14, 1974.
33. House of Commons, October 24, 1975.
34. Professor Robert Daly, expert in
Sensory deprivation. A graduate from Dublin University. Instructor in psychiatry
at the University of North Carolina. Later a lecturer at Edinburgh University
before taking post at the University College, Cork.
35. Robert Daly; "Psychiatric
After-effects of Irish Prisoners Subjected to Ill-Treatment and Torture," New
Scientist, August 5, 1976.
36. op. cit. 23, p. 14.
37. op. cit. 23, p. 23.
38. Garland E. Burrell, Jr., "Mental
Privacy: An International Safeguard to Governmental Intrusion into the Mental
Processes," 6 California Western International Law Journal.
39. Alan Scheflin, "Freedom of The Mind
As An International Human Rights Issue," Human Rights Law Journal, Vol. 3, 1982.
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