As part of a new investigative story, Truthout has published documents written by the former psychologist for SERE, and later CIA contract interrogator for the Bush torture program, Bruce Jessen. Before going to work for the CIA with his former SERE partner, psychologist James Mitchell, Jessen authored a 2002 “draft exploitation plan” for military use, based on his experiences as a SERE instructor. The newly-discovered documents, provided to Truthout by former SERE Air Force Captain Michael Kearns, were written back in 1989 when Jessen was transferred from his clinical role elsewhere in SERE to help staff a new survival training course for Special Mission Units undertaking dangerous assignments for Special Operations forces abroad.
Jason Leopold and I co-authored the new story, which includes a video interview with Captain Kearns, who helped hire Jessen back in 1989 for his new SERE role helping put together the class titled SV-91. The documents include notes for a portion of that class, known as “Psychological Aspects of Detention.” The other document is a paper by Jessen, “Psychological Advances in Training to Survive Captivity, Interrogation and Torture,” which was prepared for a symposium at that time: “Advances in Clinical Psychological Support of National Security Affairs, Operational Problems in the Behavioral Sciences Course.”
Jessen’s notes, in particular, demonstrate that this course material, which was “reverse-engineered” to provide a blueprint for the interrogation and detention policies of the Bush administration — some of which remain in use today — emphasized not just the ways to coercively interrogate an individual for intelligence purposes, but to “exploit” the detainee for a number of uses. As Jessen wrote (and those following the Bradley Manning torture case will find this quite chilling, I suspect):
“From the moment you are detained (if some kind of exploitation is your Detainer’s goal) everything your Detainer does will be contrived to bring about these factors: CONTROL, DEPENDENCY, COMPLIANCE AND COOPERATION,” Jessen wrote. “Your detainer will work to take away your sense of control. This will be done mostly by removing external control (i.e., sleep, food, communication, personal routines etc. )…Your detainer wants you to feel ‘EVERYTHING’ is dependent on him, from the smallest detail, (food, sleep, human interaction), to your release or your very life … Your detainer wants you to comply with everything he wishes. He will attempt to make everything from personal comfort to your release unavoidably connected to compliance in your mind.”
Jessen wrote that cooperation is the “end goal” of the detainer, who wants the detainee “to see that [the detainer] has ‘total’ control of you because you are completely dependent on him, and thus you must comply with his wishes. Therefore, it is absolutely inevitable that you must cooperate with him in some way (propaganda, special favors, confession, etc.).”
What is “Exploitation”?
If one were to search for the term “exploitation” in the Senate Armed Services Committee report on detainee abuse, published with numerous redactions in late 2009 (PDF), you would find numerous mentions of the term. While at times the word “exploitation” appears to be used as a synonym for the “breaking down” of prisoners, it doesn’t usually explain for what purpose. Indeed, many have noted that such “breaking down” is antithetical to the production of information from an interrogation suspect. Jessen says as much in his notes. But there are other reasons to break someone down.
For instance, the SASC report notes that “The ‘Al Qaeda Resistance Contingency Training’ presentation described methods used by al Qaeda to resist interrogation and exploitation…” (p. 39 of the PDF). “The presentation on detainee “exploitation” described phases of exploitation and included instruction on initial capture and handling, conducting interrogations, and long-term exploitation.” “Another slide describing captor motives states: establish absolute control, induce dependence to meet needs, elicit compliance, shape cooperation…. techniques designed to achieve these goals include isolation or solitary confinement, induced physical weakness and exhaustion, degradation, conditioning, sensory deprivation, sensory overload, disruption of sleep and biorhythms, and manipulation of diet” (p. 40 of the PDF). When intelligence is the aim of the “exploitation process”, it is specifically called “intelligence exploitation” in the report.
One of the primary reasons exploitation is used on prisoners is to produce false confessions. Indeed, it was the torture of Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi that was used to provide the false intelligence about Saddam Hussein seeking nuclear materials that was to provide a major casus belli for the United States for their war with Iraq.
Other examples of exploitation include the recruitment of prisoners as intelligence assets, i.e., as snitches and spies. Indeed, the Truthout article notes a number of cases of attempting just such recruitment of former Guantanamo detainees, while they were still incarcerated. Another long-standing example of such exploitation is the use of prisoners in show trials, which have been used in a number of countries as a means of squashing dissent and offering a faux-legitimate function to governmental security forces. This was the case in the famous 1949 show trial of Cardinal Mindzenty of Hungary by the Stalinist government there.
It was also the case more recently in the military commissions show trial of former “child soldier” Omar Khadr, who was tortured, held in solitary for years, then forced to sign a confession and endure a military show trial which sentenced him to 40 years in prison (while a backroom deal supposedly has reduced that to 8 years and release from Guantanamo to Canada sometime next year).
Show Trials, False Confessions, Spying, Medical Experimentation
In a little remarked aspect of the Khadr case, his brother, Abdurahman, who was also held as a prisoner at Guantanamo while also working as a spy for the CIA, trying to get intelligence from prisoners there, testified under oath in 2004 that Omar had agreed to collaborate with the FBI, but was returned to onerous torture conditions after he changed his mind. We don’t know the kind of collaboration he was ready to provide, though it’s noteworthy that his brother had already been working for a few years as a CIA asset.
A. My brother Omar cooperated with the FBI and he was ready, they were being ready to release him and then he was in his cellblock and people saw that he was being ready to be released so they told him: “Oh, you told everything. You are going to hell. So if you don’t change you are going to go to hell.” So the next time he went to interrogation he denied everything so they took away everything from him and he is still there till now.
Q. Because he decided not to continue the collaboration?
A. Not to continue the cooperation.
Perhaps one of the most heart-rending accounts of a prisoner being broken and used for false confessions is in the autobiography of David Hicks. Hicks also discussed his torture in an interview recently with Jason Leopold at Truthout, describing his experience of solitary confinement, beatings, stress positions, being drugged, and having “every aspect of our lives” controlled by the Guantanamo authorities. In particular, he describes another aspect of exploitation of prisoners I haven’t mentioned thus far, medical experimentation, as he was constantly given different pills, injections, blood tests. His sense of being an experimental guinea pig has been echoed by a number of other former detainees, most recently the German-born ethnic Turk, Murat Kurnaz.
The following is from Mr. Hicks’ book, Guantanamo: My Journey. It could be used as a teaching text on the meaning of “exploitation,” and what the U.S. government implemented at Guantanamo. But we cannot forget that an innocent human being was the subject of this evil.
As time passed, the threat of ‘special treatment’ and psychological conditioning took its toll. The interrogators wore me down so that when they said, ‘So when you attended the al-Qaeda training camp…’ I would answer the question without denial or protest. I became too exhausted to argue. I allowed the interrogators to frame my words and say anything they wanted….
The interrogator’s associate, who had remained quiet until now, said they had a proposal for me: they would place me next to the various English-speaking detainees over a period of time, and I was to milk each one for information and report it back to the interrogators. If I agreed to do this, I would be allowed fifteen minutes with a lady from the Philippines. I instantly refused and requested to be sent back to my cage….
A goal of interrogation is to repeatedly break you and then put you back together until the parts can be manipulated. You become the interrogators’ creation…. The memory of what I have described depresses me deeply to this day. It does something to the soul; it felt like something had died inside me….
My end of the bargain was that I had to verbally repeat my story, agreeing with anything they added, even when they dictated my thoughts, beliefs and actions incorrectly. They also fed me things to say about other detainees as well. I did so obediently, even though I knew they were all lies. I struggled terribly with this and hated every minute of it, especially when they brought up other detainees. I searched desperately for the courage to resist and renege on the deal. I had no recourse. I had crumbled and was fully theirs.
Up until now, the primary narrative surrounding the torture scandal has been about the purported efficacy of using torture to produce intelligence in the “war on terror.” But the new Jessen material demonstrates that the program used as the basis for the “reverse-engineering” of the SERE torture techniques was a full-blown exploitation program, whose aims went far beyond the mere elicitation of information, but included the physical and psychological pressures to produce absolute compliance in prisoners for the purpose of false confessions, show trials, recruitment of spies, and medical experimentation.
As Capt. Kearns is quoted in the Truthout article, “The Jessen notes clearly state the totality of what was being reverse-engineered – not just ‘enhanced interrogation techniques,’ but an entire program of exploitation of prisoners using torture as a central pillar.”
It will be up to the press and the blogosphere to make the full reality of the Bush-era torture program fully understood to the population at large, to weave the kinds of information provided here into the narrative of events. Only when the full extent of this program is revealed, can we begin to take steps to end such heinous activities, and bring to justice those who sought a number of nefarious ends through means almost too awful to recount.



48 Comments

I don’t think I mentioned that David Hicks’ book is not available for purchase in the United States. It’s unbelievable that no U.S. publisher has seen fit to publish the book here. It can be purchased from Australian booksellers online, however, and I highly recommend this fascinating work.
There are other books by former detainees that one can purchase in the U.S. — by Moazzam Begg, Murat Kurnaz, and Mamdouh Habib — and the stories they tell largely reproduce what is in the article above.
How come untrained captors can accomplish the same thing (complete dependency) in days, often with no torture to speak of, aka Stockholm Syndrome.
Nope. My opinion: pure malicious sadism.
Hick’s book is available from amazon in kindle format.
http://www.amazon.com/Guantanamo-My-Journey-Kindle-ebook/dp/B004774YQ8/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1300835344&sr=1-1
Thank you, Jeff, for revealing this.
It makes me want to throw up.
How can human beings do this to eachother?
I know Bush was bad, but this is almost unbelievable
And to know I helped elect O, and that he continues these policies makes me feel dirty.
To know PFC Manning is undergoing these heinous crimes perpetrated by Obama makes me want a brain bleach.
How can my country have sionked soooo low?
Induced Stockholm Syndrome… just what the US needs.
Of course, by now most Americans have it anyway, esp if they listen to Faux
That explains Bradley Manning.
“false confessions, show trials, recruitment of spies, and medical experimentation.”
SOP torture goals for all of human history. One that is missing from the list is revenge.
Given all this effort, it’s pretty amazing how few false confessions they’ve been able to extract. I’d be willing to bet that if you offered them enough money, and witness protection (in Albuquerque, it’s always in Albuquerque) they would have a lot more success in false confessions.
Very nice work.
Thanks to Jeff and Jason, and also
many thanks to Air Force Captain Michael Kearns,
for coming forward with this information.
ooops, this was meant to be just a reply to the author. sorry.
One of the avenues for SERE research Jessen mentions in one of the papers we published was “Relation of the Stockholm syndrome to PW [Prisoner of War] environment”.
These guys live and breathe this stuff, so expect them to have already thought of such things.
No, it’s not. Go to that Amazon kindle page to which you link, and you will see a message in the upper right hand corner: “This title is not available for customers from:
United States”.
Thanks for continuing to investigate this.
As someone unfamiliar with professional psychological studies, are most of them illustrated with a diagram as simple-minded as that of Bruce Jessen?
The main difference from Stockholm syndrome is that besides holding one hostage, there is not much that the captor is trying to get from the hostage. Also, the hostage appears to genuinely like or admire the captor.
In the form of SERE exploitation, it is immaterial if the prisoner admire the captor. Fear is just fine. Also, the aim is to break down the person’s personality. The captor who invokes Stockholm syndrome, classically, is not aware they are doing it.
However, I’d note that when Mike Gelles complained of using SERE techniques on al-Qahtani at GTMO, he argued instead for a longer period of isolation for the prisoner, in part to induce a Stockholm syndrome, or trying to.
So you are right to emphasize the closeness of these two topics (“exploitation” and Stockholm syndrome).
Many of us here knew this. It’s sure lovely to have the proof. If the word lovely can be used anywhere near this subject. Thank you so much, Jeff, for keeping after this. Recommended.
Have you read this? “Secret Experimental Prisons Subject Inmates to Drastic Isolation” (Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute, by Alia Malek, Mar. 16, 2011)
Yep. Obviously haven’t gotten a false confession out of him yet. Not even enough to blackmail him into a .plea bargain.
This program is a miserable failure, except for the sheer sadism aspect.
I found Jessen’s diagram to accurately describe a point he was trying to make about the conflicting pressures to comply that bear down upon the prisoner. One is peer pressure and the wish to follow one’s Code of Conduct; the other is to comply with the pressures of the captor and end one’s punishments. If you do the latter, you incur the displeasure of your peers and invoke self-contempt; if you do the former, you may get the admiration of peers and feel better about holding out, but will suffer grievously more torments from your captor. This kind of dynamic in and of itself breaks a person down.
It’s not that Jessen was wrong (if over-simplifying to make a point), but that this dynamic was turned on its head to break down prisoners held by the Americans.
Yes. It’s an important article, and I saw it when originally published in The Nation. It’s about the Communications Management Units or CMUs being used to imprison Muslims and Arab Americans and some others under extremely harsh conditions within the penal system.
It exactly goes with this kind of material, as the mechanisms of extremely harsh repression are brought to bear increasingly in this country.
The “exploitation process” and the harshness of the Supermax prisons and CMUs are ominous developments for our society.
Who knew appearances were so important.
Reverse engineered:
I guess Manning’s sarcastic retort was a “mistake” in this scenario.
I agree. It’s nice to see the seed of all of this.
Jeff, you probably know this, but Andy Worthington has been doing a series about this topic.
This makes me wonder if there’s any meaning to the intersection of Hicks’ description of his treatment and the “Recovered Memory” movement.
Looks like an extension of the black sites right in front of our noses. So in full view they’ve been doing these things for how long and the watch dogs did not bark?
Hi harpie,
No, I didn’t know about the Andy Worthington stories. I’ve been so buried in this story the past few days, I had time for little else. I’ll definitely go read them. Thanks.
For readers, here’s the link to part one:
http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/03/20/guantanamo-in-america-part-one-npr-explains-how-muslims-are-deprived-of-fundamental-rights-in-secretive-prison-units/
Yes, the emphasis on “appearing convincing” is a tell. Why would one have to appear convincing? Why, to make your false confession appear sincere. How simple in theory, and how sinister in execution.
I believed it when the government told me the purpose of Gitmo and its detention practices was to keep us safe from the “worst of the worst” – those posing an immediate threat to our national security and the lives of our friends, neighbors and families. (Not.)
It didn’t mention that it’s primary purposes was to recruit new spies, to induce knowingly false confessions for use against the confessor or others in public show trials or merely to support their continued detention, to punish the merely uncooperative and to keep silent the detained but knowingly innocent. It didn’t mention that it’s primary purpose was to punish to the nth degree as a way of virtually slapping it’s “manhood” on the table and screaming that it was bigger than anyone else’s, so don’t FWM.
Yep, George and Dick brought the adults back to Washington.
Thanks. I reread the diary and noticed that this was from a course. The simplification now makes sense.
This sounds exactly what (b)Nazi(b)Germany did .
Soon I expect you to report these clowns have a dog eared reference autographed, by the god father of medical experimentation, Josef Mengele.
Looking at the Jack booted thugs, truly military madman,tamp down any dissent at the gates of Quantico even claiming exclusivity of our military torture base and the road that in fact was public was meant to show the rest of the country to shut up, if you know what’s good for your empire.
Inside the torture is turned up and a little clearer for us to see. And that was the end game in the end, the 9-11 crime that was totally solved in 24 hours, with massive wreckage to dig through was to suspend our credulity. The whole program is to torture us into submission and for the most part it has.
Like Saddam , under daily bombing for ten years not counting the sanctions, developed Nuclear weapons right under our noses it was to strain credulity and expose the few free thinkers.
Was wasn’t there any 9-11 trial because they wanted us to know, the citizens of this great country, that by cleansing the military of all but the lowest IQ in the ranks there was now a goon squad that would do anything without question, things beyond the pale of any shred of humanity.
Pat Tillman was assassinated to show us even an Patriotic American Icon, who was played like a fiddle to sell the , when he was coming home to spill the beans, damn friendly fire again strains credulity beyond belief.
Who’s next you and me and anyone else that questions the “official” storyline. And people will hear little snippets of how we’re crumbling under the semi-public torture, just to keep up the effect.
Where we wind up from here ………
Do not forget Vance and Ertle. Heroes tortured.
http://zeroanthropology.net/2010/11/05/torturing-the-whistle-blowers-the-case-of-vance-and-ertel-in-iraq-substantiated-by-wikileaks-iraq-war-logs/
An overview:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Vance
“…they were “indefinitely detained without due process of law in a United States military compound located on foreign soil. They were not charged with any crime, nor had they committed any crime” (p. 1). They were denied access to an attorney and were subjected to abuse. They specifically point to Donald Rumsfeld for instituting a series of unconstitutional policies that would deprive anyone deemed to be an “enemy combatant,” even if American, any of the rights inherent to due process…”
How many false confessions extracted that had effect on anything? How many show trails have there been? How many useful spies have been recruited? How much useful experimentation has been performed?
The answer to all these is: next to nothing. They are all pretexts dreamt up to assign some purpose to the torture program, whereas the program had only one purpose — to give credence to the phony “war on terror” which was rolled out to mask the monstrous crimes of the Bush/Cheney administration.
Agree with ecahn above that malicious sadism was part of it, but that was merely icing on the cake to indulge the blood lust of the psycopathic few at the very top.
Thankfully, Vance and Ertle are still alive, although one fears for the life of the judge who is letting the suit against Donald Rumsfeld proceed.
Modern touchless torture is a lot harder to explain to the skeptical than are the medieval rack and screw.
This is an invaluable contribution, Jeff.
My thanks to everyone here at FDL for taking the time to read this report. Jeff and I worked on this story for five months and it was somewhat grueling trying to turn these notes into a narrative.
Capt. Kearns is to be commended for having the courage to come forward and speak openly and honestly.
1. What was the purpose of eliciting false confessions?
2. What was the purpose of the medical experimentation?
Recruiting spies and putting on show trials are self explanatory, but what did (do) the torturers want to document as “fact”? Is the medical experimentation actually medical experimentation or is it another form of intimidation to get the false confession?
There is absolutely no doubt that the use of solitary in the case of Bradley Manning is to elicit false confessions. If they had any evidence they would not need them.
Those in power get false confessions all the time. That isn’t new. That is a strategy that was developed long before Bruce Jessen.
And the private confesses and everyone else gets promoted.
What you and Jeff have done is beyond words and any thanks we could offer up.
This stuff is like uranium acid and I worry about the both of you being exposed to this crap, so please take care and take breaks here and there ,we need you both.
Bless you both and be well.
As someone who spent the last 20 years working with domestic violence survivors and people who are violent, the theme that stands out to me is “invalidation”. The perpetrators of power and control “undo” who you are. They invalidate the personality to such a degree that decision making and identity are altered. This is the foundation for why battered folks go back as many as seven times. There are other factors that contribute but the biggest one of all is that power and control invalidates the abused experience. It negates the episodes, it makes the victim question reality.
The escalation of power and control is such that unless you completely “break” the identity, values, and personality of the victim, the natural reaction to power and control is to fight back. There is no other alternative when power and control is used. Some personalities quickly submit to the control, others must be broken or they just become better perpetrators. Our prison system is a perfect example of this. For those who do not end up “broken” many end up better perps, having internalized power and control as a way of life. If you are going to use power and control, where terrorism is concerned you would have to do it “all the way”, because anything less would leave the fighter a better and more energized expert in power and control. The is the nature of the power and control paradigm.
We used invalidation on the American Indians, slaves, women and children.
Minimize, Deny and Blame. The only true reality is that of the perpetrator.
The truth that humans must accept if we are to ever change this paradigm, is that ultimately all who use it are destroyed eventually. We all go down in this paradigm. We tend to one polar or another either internalizing the victim or the perpetrator. Every perp needs a victim, and every victim a perpetrator. We are locked into this paradigm if we do not learn another. In even the lowest levels of abuse, the nature of power and control is to invalidate the experiences of another.
It’s all on a continuum from spankings to child abuse, to domestic violence, to military training, and finally war.
We can only kill those who we have invalidated. The solution to this paradigm is available to us, it is awareness of other. It is making the other present (Buber). It is finding validity instead of negating the validity of others.
When I hear invalidation of others, I know it was learned, and I know to be wary.
Great work…fascinating reading. But once again, makes me wonder if the human race is viable in it’s current state. I suspect we are not, unless we shift this paradigm.
So how did the Bush people become aware of Mitchell and Jessen? Through Dick Cheney? Did he know either of them?
The treatment of detainees is all part of the cover-up for 9/11.
“In this range you would experience “Loss of Reality”. Again this would not serve his purpose. It would be obvious to a neutral observer that your behavior was psychologically compromised. Again, in that sense you would be safe. ”
If you had an innoent person being tortured and abused and manipulated by someone who was acting on behalf of a government that did not want to be embarassed over what it had done, that loss of reality might suit some purposes. It’s hard to be an effective witness later when you have been kept in a state where reality has no meaning. Whatever her state resulted from, Aafia Siddiqui comes to mind. No one is going to believe her or what she says given her overall state.
It’s like a destruction of evidence. A destruction of a person’s hold on reality.
Thanks and that should be a stand alone diary, just as it is.
Legitimizing dehumanization is what it is.
What happens on an individual level gets replicated on the collective level which means nations can exhibit Stockholm syndrome symptoms. That’s what’s happening in the US. One would expect outrage but even here with the dry exposition of what is happening there is no talk of stopping it. Collectively we feel as helpless as the individual in Guantanamo. Too bad.
In Aafia Siddiqui’s case, her mental state should have implicated the government. It in itself should have been evidence, even as it was destroying evidence by destroying her credibility.
But in her case, the court record shows the FBI agent actually answering a question that directly implies torture in court under oath, and nobody raising a issue about it. Special Agent Angela Sercer was asked by Elaine Sharp, “What did she tell you about her children?”,…,”She told you they were dead, didn’t she?” to which Sercer replied, “Yes.” Which is torture, by Sercer and Kamerman, plain and by the book.
So it doesn’t matter what the state of the witness is in court. The loss of reality signs and symptoms in court should indicate the use of a procedure calculated to profoundly disrupt the senses or the personality, implicating the government in a heinous crime. But just like with Agent Sercer, if it doesn’t stop the court proceeding dead in its tracks, which it doesn’t, then why would torture really be illegal?
It isn’t clear that her treatment would have derived from Mitchell and Jessen. The U.S. overseers of her captivity from the newer information at the IJN site, appear to have been the FBI, not the military or CIA (although her daughter was held by contractors), and it isn’t clear whether she was at a black site, or at Bagram, or at an ISI/FBI site within Afghanistan, or even someplace else.
yes, but even bigger than that…because by preventing the “fight back” we have distorted reality. Not only for the victim, but for the abuser too. It enables violence…it enables it to continue. By invalidating it’s consequences we are destined to continue using it. And the outcome of course, is complete destruction because these uses of violence are based on a lie. A distortion. There can only be one end when we base our course, our direction, on a distortion. violence has long term consequences to both perpetrator and victim. This is the truth and it is a truth we ignore at our own peril.
1. False confessions to buttress supposed info on Iraq nuclear plans, to make the case for war, as they did via torture of al-Libi, who famously recanted his tortured confession re Hussein. Also to build a case for a widespread jihad that would need extraordinary measures to defend against.
2. Medical experiments to discover ways to understand effects of “uncontrolled stress” and measure it, possibly develop treatments. Also how to fine-tune torture techniques. Possible also as guinea pigs for things like testing the side-effects of experimental drugs or controversial drugs (which is what I think they were possibly doing with the mefloquine).
Well, that’s a crucial question. Aldrich, their boss, was per the NYT “legendary.” All CIA and JSOC covert operators go through SERE. Kleinman said the JSOC people “remembered” their time in SERE and thought of those techniques. The SASC report names one of the SERE contractors who was “requested” by Camp Nama personnel when JPRA sent their training team there.
Since this was, I believe, a CIA operation in its inception, I’d say that CIA knew about SERE because they’d been studying them for years. They’d probably already had reason to use Mitchell and Jessen as mock-interrogators in some of their research studies. I’ve written on all this before. No time to get the links. Google “Charles Morgan” “CIA” “uncontrollable stress” and my name. PHR also listed all of Morgan’s research in an appendix to their white paper on CIA experiments in torture.
Key words in Mary’s Jessen quote: “to a neutral observer”.
The kept or cowed U.S. press, and the court in the Siddiqui case were not “neutral” but acting as agent for perpetuation of the “war on terror” mobilization.
Sometimes, and I did not write of this here, one of the goals of the exploitation process includes what is known politely with CIA as “the disposal problem.” It’s discussed by the CIA IG in his reports on MKULTRA, I believe. And really, Jessen is only following in the footsteps of the earlier CIA/DoD research into these matters going back to the late 1940s.
Sometimes, as in the “Kelly” case which Albarelli and I wrote about sometime back — the work of Operation Artichoke — the end goal is the destruction of a mind, to render the person not credible by destroying their mind, inducing serious mental illness.
You are right, ondelette, that the court had evidence of torture, and as in so many other cases of late, deliberately chose to ignore it.
As for FBI, they know about all of this. They are not above use of “black psychology”, consider Operation Lighting Strike. (and damn, the reference appears to be scrubbed! here’s the link to cache)
Amen. It dawned on me today that Manning’s torture could actually be designed to eliminate his 5th Amendment right not to incriminate himself — without appearing to. It’s quite clever.
If a person is physically tortured into a confession, or tortured into a confession by threat of, oh, say, being drilled with an electric drill, or the murder of a family member, the person could still have the capacity to recant, perhaps even in court and while under oath, and explain how the false confession was coerced.
But let’s supposed that the person’s mind and body have been broken by an “exploitation” program such as that to which Manning is obviously being subjected.
The person then wants only to please the captors. Then it’s safe, for the government, to let him or her testify: the person will not recant a false confession, or attribute it to torture. The torture has become invisible to its victim. Good-bye, 5th Amendment.
We’ve got to spring Manning from solitary now. Given the newly-available evidence of the Jessen documents, O civil practitioners, isn’t there ammunition for a federal district court injunction against the Marines’ imposition of Manning’s supposed “Prevention of Injury” solitary confinement regime, on the ground that it’s designed to deprive him of his 5th Amendment right against self-incrimination?
What kind of case will the Army have against Manning without a confession?