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As Yanquee as Apple Pie
Torture as Normalcy
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
and JEFFREY ST. CLAIR
Torture's back in the news, courtesy of those lurid pictures of
exultant soldiers laughing as they torture their Iraqi captives in
Abu Ghraib prison run by the US military outside Baghdad. Apparently
it takes electrodes and naked bodies piled in a simulated orgy to
tickle yanquee's moral nerve ends. Kids maimed by cluster bombs just
don't do it any more. But torture's nothing new. One of the darkest
threads in postwar US imperial history has been the CIA's
involvement with torture, as instructor, practitioner or contractor.
Since its inception the CIA has taken a keen interest in torture,
avidly studying Nazi techniques and protecting their exponents such
as Klaus Barbie. The CIA's official line is that torture is wrong
and is ineffective. It is indeed wrong. On countless occasions it
has been appallingly effective.
Remember Dan Mitrione, kidnapped and killed by Uruguay's Tupamaros
and portrayed by Yves Montand in Costa-Gavras's film State of Siege?
In the late 1960s Mitrione worked for the US Office of Public
Safety, part of the Agency for International Development. In Brazil,
so A.J. Langguth (a former New York Times bureau chief in Saigon)
related in his book Hidden Terrors, Mitrione was among the US
advisers teaching Brazilian police how much electric shock to apply
to prisoners without killing them. In Uruguay, according to the
former chief of police intelligence, Mitrione helped
"professionalize" torture as a routine measure and advised
on psychological techniques such as playing tapes of women and
children screaming that the prisoner's family was being tortured.
In the months after the 9/11/01 attacks on the World Trade Center
and Pentagon, "truth drugs" were hailed by some columnists
such as Newsweek's Jonathan Alter for use in the war against Al
Qaeda. This was an enthusiasm shared by the US Navy after the war
against Hitler, when its intelligence officers got on the trail of
Dr. Kurt Plotner's research into "truth serums" at Dachau.
Plotner gave Jewish and Russian prisoners high doses of mescaline
and then observed their behavior, in which they expressed hatred for
their guards and made confessional statements about their own
psychological makeup.
As part of its larger MK-ULTRA project the CIA gave money to Dr.
Ewen Cameron, at McGill University. Cameron was a pioneer in the
sensory-deprivation techniques. Cameron once locked up a woman in a
small white box for thirty-five days, deprived of light, smell and
sound. The CIA doctors were amazed at this dose, knowing that their
own experiments with a sensory-deprivation tank in 1955 had induced
severe psychological reactions in less than forty hours. Start
torturing, and it's easy to get carried away.
Torture destroys the tortured and corrupts the society that
sanctions it. Just like the FBI after 9/11/01 the CIA in 1968 got
frustrated by its inability to break suspected leaders of Vietnam's
National Liberation Front by its usual methods of interrogation and
torture. So the agency began more advanced experiments, in one of
which it anesthetized three prisoners, opened their skulls and
planted electrodes in their brains. They were revived, put in a room
and given knives. The CIA psychologists then activated the
electrodes, hoping the prisoners would attack one another. They
didn't. The electrodes were removed, the prisoners shot and their
bodies burned. You can read about it in our book, Whiteout.
In recent years the United States has been charged by the UN and
also by human rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International with tolerating torture in US prisons, by
methods ranging from solitary, twenty-three-hour-a-day confinement
in concrete boxes for years on end, to activating 50,000-volt shocks
through a mandatory belt worn by prisoners? Many of the Military
Police guards now under investigation for abuse of Iraqis earned
their stripes working as guards in federal and state prisons, where
official abuse is a daily occurrence. Indeed, Charles Granier, one
of the abusers at Abu Ghraib and the lover of Linndie England the
Trailer Park Torturer, worked as a guard at Pennsylvania's notorious
Greene Correctional Unit and has since gone back to work there.
And as a practical matter torture is far from unknown in the
interrogation rooms of U.S. law enforcement, with Abner Louima,
sodomized by a cop using a stick one notorious recent example. The
most infamous disclosure of consistent torture by a police
department in recent years concerned cops in Chicago in the mid-70s
through early 80s who used electroshock, oxygen deprivation, hanging
on hooks, the bastinado and beatings of the testicles. The torturers
were white and their victims black or brown. A prisoner in
California's Pelican Bay State Prison was thrown into boiling water.
Others get 50,000-volt shocks from stun guns.
Many states have so-called "secure housing units" where
prisoners are kept in solitary in tiny concrete cells for years on
end, many of them going mad in the process. Amnesty International
has denounced U.S. police forces for "a pattern of unchecked
excessive force amounting to torture."
In 2000 the UN delivered a severe public rebuke to the United States
for its record on preventing torture and degrading punishment. A
10-strong panel of experts highlighted what it said were
Washington's breaches of the agreement ratified by the United States
in 1994. The UN Committee Against Torture, which monitors
international compliance with the UN Convention Against Torture, has
called for the abolition of electric-shock stun belts (1000 in use
in the U.S.) and restraint chairs on prisoners, as well as an end to
holding children in adult jails.
It also said female detainees are "very often held in
humiliating and degrading circumstances" and expressed concern
over alleged cases of sexual assault by police and prison officers.
The panel criticized the excessively harsh regime in maximum
security prisons, the use of chain gangs in which prisoners perform
manual labor while shackled together, and the number of cases of
police brutality against racial minorities.
So far as rape is concerned, because of the rape factories more
conventionally known as the U.S. prison system, there are estimates
that twice as many men as women are raped in the U.S. each year. A
Human Rights Watch report in April of 2001 cited a December 2000
Prison Journal study based on a survey of inmates in seven men's
prison facilities in four states. The results showed that 21 percent
of the inmates had experienced at least one episode of pressured or
forced sexual contact since being incarcerated, and at least 7
percent had been raped in their facilities.
A 1996 study of the Nebraska prison system produced similar
findings, with 22 percent of male inmates reporting that they had
been pressured or forced to have sexual contact against their will
while incarcerated. Of these, more than 50 percent had submitted to
forced anal sex at least once. Extrapolating these findings to the
national level gives a total of at least 140,000 inmates who have
been raped.
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