
(White House photo by Pete Souza)
For quite some time, I have strongly suggested that the progressive community take up the centrality of abusive interrogations, as enumerated in the Army Field Manual, most particularly, in the latter’s “Appendix M.” The failure to do so, I’ve argued, would have serious repercussions for civil liberties, not to mention the struggle for accountability over past use of torture. In my last two articles, we’ve looked at the contemporaneous use of abusive Appendix M interrogations at Guantanamo, and the issue as to whether these kinds of coercive interrogations will now be brought, with the planned transfer of prisoners from Guantanamo, to the U.S., itself.
As torture proper moves from offshore U.S. military and CIA/Special Operations prisons to the territory of the U.S. “homeland,” civil liberties activists and commentators must make their protest against the use of torture techniques in the Army Field Manual heard in the White House. The truth about the use of cruel, inhumane, and degrading interrogation techniques must drown out the obfuscatory fear-mongering from the Cheneyesque right-wing, who babble about how the AFM is inadequate for use by intelligence agencies in the “Terrorist War.”
I believe some progress has been made in the past year on this issue, and was heartened to see Stephen Rickard’s article at Huffington Post late last August. Rickard is Director at the Washington Office of the Open Society Institute. He noted that the new AFM never explicitly banned the use of the “enhanced interrogation” techniques of the old Bush administration.
It strains credulity to think this was an accident. Language in the old [1992 Army Field] Manual clearly banned wall standing and other stress positions. It was deleted [in the 2006 Manual]. The old Manual called sleep deprivation “torture.” That was deleted. Rather than banning the use of cold, the 2006 Manual only prohibits causing “hypothermia” consistent with OLC limits on using cold. The 2006 Manual prohibits “beatings … or other forms of physical pain.” But it doesn’t flatly ban assaults, which is critical because the OLC memos argue at great length that the authorized physical assaults — slapping, grabbing, walling and others — were intended to cause shock and not “pain.” The 2006 Manual does not ban using water or cramped confinement.
It strains my credulity to think that the use of torture techniques in the current Army Field Manual has not become a bigger issue than it has. But there has been a plethora of issues and leftover crises from the Bush years, such that it’s not surprising that some important causes have not yet broken through into public consciousness.
Last August, the Obama administration unveiled its new studied policy on interrogations, proclaiming that “the Army Field Manual provides appropriate guidance on interrogation for military interrogators and that no additional or different guidance was necessary for other agencies.”
But the Washington Post story by Anne Kornblut that reported on the new policy continued the legacy media’s practice of lying about what’s in the AFM:
Using the Army Field Manual means certain techniques in the gray zone between torture and legal questioning — such as playing loud music or depriving prisoners of sleep — will not be allowed. Which tactics are acceptable was an issue “looked at thoroughly,” one senior official said. Obama had already banned certain severe measures that the Bush administration had permitted, such as waterboarding.
Kornblut did reveal one telling piece of information about where all this interrogation business is headed:
Still, the Obama task force advised that the group develop a “scientific research program for interrogation” to develop new techniques and study existing ones to see whether they work.
How would such a “scientific research program” operate? Who would run it? How would such a program ethically study such questions as the efficacy of interrogations? Up until now, no one is discussing these matters, as societal disinterest or disinclination to take up these vital questions — questions made more salient because of the violent history of torture over the past nine years — prevents the issue from gaining traction in the competition for public evaluation. In addition, the inclusion of a “scientific research program for interrogation” conjures up memories of the decades-long U.S. military/CIA research program into mind control, hypnotism, use of LSD and other drugs in interrogation, and other dire practices associated with programs such as the CIA’s Artichoke and MK-ULTRA. (On January 27, author H. P. Albarelli will be the guest for FDL’s Book Salon, and available from 5 to 7pm to “converse” about these past issues. Albarelli is the author of the latest book exploring the intel world’s most famous suicide-cum-murder, A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA’s Secret Cold War Experiments.)
The fight to remove Appendix M and other offending policies from the Army Field Manual goes right to the heart of the struggle against militarism. Making the problems with the AFM known is part of the campaign to secure accountability for torture; that is, we can start by stopping torture from taking place now. Progressives should demand a rescission of Appendix M and other offending portions of the Army Field Manual, as well as a complete moratorium on the use of renditions for interrogation, another policy Obama has carried over from the Bush years.



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Keep bringing this issue up for more sunlight. I’m ashamed that ObamaRahma has ignored all calls to pull back from all of the dreadful Bushite policies regarding our problems with world terrorists….and those who may only resemble them on tv.
Amen! we can never let this slide away
Most Americans approve of torture.
Perhaps you should consider this:
America is too stupid to survive.
Jeff, sorry for the hit ‘n run, and not reading your post thoroughly, but keep up the good work. I for one, think O gets his rocks off from torture just as much as W, except O is more careful how he speaks about it in public.
Torture is my Great U.S. Shame.
Obama never served in war. Point 1.
Obama is a product of the Establishment (1960′s term). Point 2.
Obama is, well may I say, a worthless president. Point 3.
I never believe anything Obama says about anything and I didn’t believe him when he said he banned waterboarding and other forms of torture. Every goddamn experiment anyone could conjure up to get inside a person’s head to find out what’s there and then turn what’s left into a useless husk has been attempted many times in the name “science.” For Obama to suggest revisiting that hell only confirms my opinion of what a disgusting and despicable low life he is.
I thought we were just supposed to pay our taxes and be quiet. Are you suggesting that citizenship goes beyond voting, Jeff?
In reverse order . . .
(3) It wouldn’t. You can’t run an ethical study that uses human subjects who cannot refuse to participate, who cannot stop the experiment in mid-stream, etc. I’m trying to imagine the reaction of a research committee that screens the protocols for human subject experimentation of a proposal like this, and all I hear is hoots of laughter. “This is a joke, right?”
(2) Who? Ethically-challenged individuals. See #3 above. Researchers with strong ethics would run to the nearest whistleblower reporting station they could find and shout from the rooftops. Researchers with merely decent ethics would say “no thanks, that’s not for me.”
(1) Badly. They don’t really want researchers to test this stuff; they want researchers to look over the shoulders of interrogators. Their primary interest is in getting information on terror plots and such, not on interrogation techniques, and if having a researcher “doing a study” in the room watching and measuring everything will give the whole mess a patina of respectability, then that’s what they’ll do. If the interrogator says “I want to do X” and the researcher says “no, that’s not on the scientific protocol for this study,” who do you think will win that argument?
This whole thing reminds me of Count Rugen in The Princess Bride, when he has Westley strapped to a table in the Pit of Despair:
Do we really want Count Rugen running our detainee interrogation program?
How revolutionary of you, Loo Hoo. Please stay within range of the camera. :)
Thanks for the great post Jeff. Never thought I’d see the day when this topic is even being discussed at all in Western nations.
Sadly, yes they do. If the Dems ran on opposing torture in 2010, with no other subjects (jobs, economy, etc) they would lose. It’s that simple. Americans approve of this stuff. The ONLY time Bush was popular was when this type of crap was broadcast in the media. We’ve turned into a nation of greedy, bloodthirsty, resource wasting idiots.
Yes!
He already is ;-)
Really, I just wanted to answer your question, since you did such a good job in answering the ones I posed in the article. I couldn’t have put it better myself. The only addition to #2 would be to add that there’s plenty of ex-presidents of the American Psychological Association hanging around, and that’s a job right up their alley. Or one could do no better than hiring Stephen Behnke, Ethics Director at APA, who oversaw the APA’s PENS ethics panel on psychology and national security, stacked it with military types, including one bona fide interrogator who’d been caught out in involvement with abusive interrogations, and then helped ram it through the organization outside of normal protocols.
James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen are just too busy for the job…
I’m telling ya, the AFM is small potatoes in scale as to the breadth and width that Darth and Rummy’s insidious tentacles have grasped the entire MIC… Seriously, I’ve seen it happen under my 20 yr stint… Private Contractors have taken over 50% of the delivery of ‘beans and bullets’… 95% of the Intel Apparatchik (DOD,DHS,NSC,ad nauseum…) is sub-contracted out…!!! WTF…?
Of the names that hover around this story, Mitchell and Jessen are at the top of the list of people I’d love to see receive invitations from a prosecutor to come in for a chat.
“Nothing serious, gentlemen. We’d just like you to take a seat in this cozy grand jury room and answer a few questions. You know all about asking and answering questions, right?”
It’s not true that most Americans approve of torture. Consider the latest polling studies done by WorldPublicOpinion.org:
I’m having computer problems, so having trouble posting now….
I wanted to make the point that World Public Opinion is a major league outfit.
Their director is Steven Kull, who plays a central role in the BBC World Service Poll. They post their methodology and dataset with their results. Their board of adviser is a distinguished group of academics and professionals.
My point is, don’t listen to the propaganda about what Americans believe spewed out by the daily newspapers. This country is no more “stupid” than any other country. All human beings have their dark side, but humanity as a whole chooses affiliation and cooperation over violence and suppression. Most violence is born of terrific fear. The real evil people are those who manipulate that fear for the sake of power and wealth.
The goal of torture is torture.
I think that quote is attributed to George Orwell.
Torture can be motivated by anger, or vengefulness, or fear, or (in the case of Cheney) cruelty and evil.
We have a country that is better than the use of torture.
State of the Union would be an ideal time to rededicate America to the principles of the Founders, including the adoption of the ban on cruel and unusual punishments.
Americans may not approve of the term “torture,” but they do not disapprove torture.
Otherwise, they would have held Bush & Cheney accountable.
Same with Obama.
“Look forward, not backward” is tacit approval.
Dangit, that’s two evenings in a row that I’ve missed a terrific post from you, Jeff. The “scientific research program for interrogation” needs to be shouted from the rooftops. As you and Peterr point out, such “research” is as reprehensible as it gets. How can our country not have learned the lessons of MK-ULTRA?
Thanks for pointing this out. I’m firmly convinced that the US has no more morally bankrupt people than any other nation on earth. Which is not exactly a ringing endorsement in itself. The problem, as is generally the case in many other countries as well, is that we have some leaders who are more interested in power than ethical conduct. One of the reasons, all those years ago, that FDR said the only thing to fear is fear itself was to give people the confidence to do what was right. Sadly that kind of leadership is fairly rare these days as politicians triangulate their positions.
Jeff, who’s in jail for torturing? Anyone? Remember Abu Gharib (sp)? Who ended up getting punished for that? Any big brass? Who from the former administration is going to trial for their part in torture? NONE. If this is a nation where a majority are against torture, something would have been done long ago. Instead, you hear crickets.
well, the heart of the ‘struggle against militarism’ is not to be found on Democratic Party online outreach blogs, so sorry that your credulity got strained.
(D) followers will gesture against militarism as a wedge strategy against Republicans, but they are not really opposed to American Exceptionalism and wasting more money on the MIC than the rest of the world combined, otherwise they would not be (D) followers!
a little (acknowledged) torture, even back in Illinois, is not going to change that.
Agreed. But the problem is the leadership, not the people. The options given them politically stink.
What agenda would you suggest (or JackLint)? Join the crickets?
It is truly depressing to think that great crimes can be accomplished with no accountability. The sad fact is it’s not that unusual in history. However, even great crimes sometimes get their historic comeuppance, although the result is often bloody. (Consider the U.S. Civil War.)
I don’t know how this will all end. I, however, will only continue speaking up for what I know is right. If I can win over a few influential adherents, perhaps we can still win the day. People don’t want to live in an evil regime. They are afraid. They don’t know how to change things. And the drumbeat of rightwing and centrist propaganda, and the never-ending prattle of circus-like trivia (passing for news), doesn’t help things.
If a majority were for torture, I believe we would still have to be vocally against it.
As for Abu Ghraib… consider Obama’s flipflop on the torture photos release. He and his advisers know how revolted U.S. citizens would be if they came out, just as they were by Abu Ghraib. If Americans were really pro-torture, a bunch of Jack Bauers, then they’d release them to great acclaim. But that’s not what’s happening, nu?
I get no kick preaching to the converted. But your point is well-taken. Although, I’d note, that the contradiction between an ostensible democracy and a nation-state that tortures is not tenable. That fact should be known to any holding honest political interests.
How odd that tonight I should mostly suffer attacks from the left (the other day it was the right). My own predilections aren’t hard to fathom, and are certainly coming from the left. Hence I understand the pessimism and despair as we live in times of great reaction. Yet I don’t believe one can abstain from the political fray.
Certainly also some of my passion on this issue comes from working with the tortured. I owe them something.
Jeff – sorry to have missed this, it is a great post, and needs to be hammered home again and again. These are sad days indeed, this tacit approval of torture by our leaders, behind the thinnest veneer of Orwellian language. You are to be commended for your work. I am against torture, as are no doubt millions of others. How to get people up and out of their seats, and into the streets – that is the question. Not excuses – reality.
Eisenhower warned us of the Military Industrial Complex way back when. He was a military man for gods sake. Those that enabled the MIC to thrive have done so for profit and they have done it on purpose. Getting business out of the military business will be very hard. We need leaders of courage. I am so very disappointed that Obama is not that person. I am sick to my stomach that I voted for him. His politics are the politics of the weak. He is going with the flow instead of rocking the boat. Can’t think of anthing much that has changed. We needed change so bad and we got more of the same. WOW.
Well, welcome. Better late than never!
Citizen Loo Hoo:
Great and complementary diary by Ondelette over at the Seminal: Another Major Loss for Civil Liberties
your writing is valuable – my point is, most Democrats are not converted to your point of view, otherwise they would have, at the very least, great challenges remaining Democrats.
As with Siun, you bring a valuable perspective into a site that is still rather infatuated with (D) electoralism, and not terribly concerned with the consequences on victims in the Gulag or in the crosshairs of the military.
I don’t disagree with you. But I, like I imagine Siun, intend to keep plugging away. If I waited for humanity in general, much less the general mass of Democrats, to get off their ass on these issues, or even be “converted” to fighting them, then I’d become the Rip van Winkle of American politics.
Wow. Hiding in plain sight. Another Orwellian nightmare. The AFM *never* allowed toture and was a dependable tool for *right* fighting. And then the Bushies RE-WROTE it to bring it in line with their torture policies. We chased after the memos and missed the fact that the AFM had been re-written? And then Obama comes along and rolls the whole mess back to the dependable and righteous AFM.
Just. One. Fucking. Problem.
The AFM Obama rolled back to (already) includes TORTURE. That is some fine magic.
Oh, yes, and let us complete our transformation and now do Research. The complicity of psychologists and doctors in all of this is undermining my own treatment more than it already was.
Slapping is for *shock* and not for pain. That is just what my good old-fashioned American bullying father said too. I am appauled at my own American upbringing. And how many American fathers out there see no problem with this IF it will save American lives. More for the slapping I guess. This runs so deep I doubt we can control it.
And you say 60% of Americans are against torture of terrorists? Well, 60% polling does not get you proper health care of Americans either. Spit.
We would as soon torture ourselves as our enemies. And we do.
I think that recent court cases have pushed the fight to the experts. It will no longer be possible for the lawyers to shoulder the full burden of trying to get torture exposed and properly outlawed, the courts are too willing to agree to arguments that give torturers a wide latitude. It therefore falls to the experts to convince the American public not to stand for such treatment. Experts like Jeff Kaye, Stephen Soldz, and Stuart Grassian need to just keep hammering on how nightmarish the treatment is behind it’s placid, no fingernails pulled no bones broken, exterior. It doesn’t look as bad as it really is, and the public is far from understanding that.
Charles Dickens started describing the hell of extreme isolation in the 1840s. And still it hasn’t sunk in. I don’t know what kind of outreach works best, but I do know that seminars and films open to the public which lay out the problem and allow plenty of question and answer time leave a nearly permanent impression on the audience. No one comes out unchanged when people who have worked with torture victims speak to them in frank terms from the heart. At least that’s been my experience.
And the rest of us need to keep hammering on the fact that people who desire perfect safety are the root cause of this abomination.