June 10, 2006
In
April 2004, the world was momentarily shocked by televised photographs
from Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison showing hooded Iraqis stripped naked,
posed in contorted positions, and visibly suffering humiliating abuse
while amused American soldiers stood by. Responsibility for these acts
of psychological torture has largely been confined to the lowest ranks
and kept close to Abu Ghraib itself. Official statements attributed the
practice to a temporarybreakdown in "military discipline", thus
diverting any suspicion that the evidence of psychological torture as
paraded before our eyes in the Abu Ghraib snapshots is most likely the
product of intelligence policies shaped in design and application over
a long period of time.
The Abu Ghraib scandal did,
however, open a floodgate of news and information leaks about the
existence of a mini-gulag of prisons the CIA and US Army Intelligence
had set up in Afghanistan, on aircraft carriers, in remote places like
the Indian Ocean Island of Diego Garcia, and in the prisons of
torture-friendly allies.(1) An official inquiry disclosed that the US
Army specifically allowed the CIA to house "ghost detainees" who were
unidentified and unaccounted for in Abu Ghraib, thus encouraging
violations of reporting and monitoring requirements under the Geneva
Conventions.(2)
What the official inquiry
studiously avoided telling us were the actual reasons why such
obsessive secrecy was deemed necessary in the first place. But clearly,
such facilities are placed outside the rule of law. They are not
subject to review of the manner in which they function, the
interrogation methods used, and the general conditions prevailing
there. Representatives of the International Red Cross, are denied
access to the facilities; nobody knows how many detainees are held
there, who the detainees are, where they come from, which authority was
responsible for their capture or arrest, who conducted the
interrogations, or whether the interrogators were authorised to do so.
It is reasonable to assume
that, once a prisoner of war is captured, the captor’s immediate
objective would be to obtain from the prisoner quick information for
tactical operations such as strikes, counter-strikes or further
arrests. The infliction of physical pain is probably the quickest
method of obtaining information, the usefulness of which is usually
short-lived due to the changing and changeable nature of battlefield
conditions. So why then the purpose of protracted psychological
torture, which is comparatively slower at producing results and
seemingly more benign than physical methods?
The obsessive veil of secrecy
surrounding such methods means that military personnel are themselves
largely unaware of how their individual actions fit into the overall
picture. Others know exactly what they are doing, but keep quiet
because they also know that what they are doing is criminal. The
Official Secrets Act also ensures that lips remain tightly sealed.
Above all, a perceived need to protect "the national interest" combines
with censorship to retain a wall of silence around the subject.
A notable exception occurred,
however, several years ago during the mammoth trial in South Africa of
alleged war criminal Brigadier Wouter Basson, a South African Army
chemical and biological warfare specialist.(3) The trial provided rare
glimpses into the horrors that can and did evidently occur in
circumstances of extreme secrecy and geographical isolation no less
pervasive and extreme as those prevailing currently in America’s gulag
of secret prisons.
Evidence presented at Basson’s
trial lifted the lid on some bizarre events taking place in the 1970s
and 1980s at an airfield and forward military base named Fort Rev,
situated at Ondangwa in the former South West Africa, (now Namibia).
Fort Rev was used by 5 Reconnaissance Regiment and the other special
forces regiments as an operational base for launching
counter-insurgency operations into Angola and areas of Owamboland.
Inside the base, immediately adjacent to the airfield, was a secret
torture and interrogation centre where attempts, not always successful,
were made to "turn" or "convert" captured guerrillas into so-named
"pseudo operators" for deployment in highly sensitive, covert deception
operations. Hence the name Fort Rev, meaning "reversal".
Neurophysiologists and behavioural scientists have another phrase for
it: transmarginal inhibition or TMI — a state of behavioral collapse
induced by physical and emotional stress prior to inducing new patterns
of actions and beliefs. Successful application of this technique,
sometimes referred to pejoratively as "brain washing", requires
psychological torturers to have total control of the environment.
Existing mental programming can then be replaced with new patterns of
thinking and behavior. The same results can be obtained in contemporary
psychiatric treatment by electric shock treatments and even by
purposely lowering a patient’s blood sugar level with insulin
injections. (4)
The Namibian deception
operations, under the tutelage of battle hardened former Rhodesian
special forces operators, had to be kept secret at any cost. If the
operations were successful, pseudo gangs consisting of turned
guerrillas posing as genuine freedom fighters would be infiltrated back
into the field of operations where they would in turn capture more
insurgents. Some of these so-called "high value targets", would then
also be turned at Fort Rev, others being useful only as a source of
information. But, having served that purpose, or having resisted
turning, they then presented a major security risk, because they would
have picked up at least some insight into the manner and methods of
pseudo operations, and this could immediately compromise the secrecy of
the entire pseudo operations programme. So they could not be processed
through normal channels and imprisoned in a central holding facility
from which word might leak to the outside world.
The torturers and interrogators
at Fort Rev got around this small problem by simply killing off
survivors of interrogation. "Redundant" prisoners were disposed of
without trace after being drugged and their bodies dumped into the
Atlantic Ocean from an aircraft. The doomed prisoners, before being
loaded onto an aircraft and dumped 100 miles out to sea, were first
injected with powerful muscle relaxants which had the effect of
paralysing the victim whilst leaving his mind fully conscious. An
anaesthetic drug was also used, having the effect of causing
hallucinations. (5)
The practise of dropping
prisoners’ bodies from aircraft, according to evidence presented at the
trial of Brigadier Basson, was developed in the late 1970s during joint
operations between Rhodesian and South African special forces. One
witness, a former French Foreign Legionnaire and member of the
Rhodesian counter-insurgency unit known as the Selous Scouts, also
described how Basson allegedly injected captured freedom fighters with
poison during a flight over Mozambique territory. He said these
captives were then thrown alive from an airplane in 1979. The victims
were five guerrillas believed to have been from the Zimbabwe African
National Liberation Army (ZANLA). According to the witness, who could
not be named for reasons of personal safety, said that before the
poisoned, unconscious men were thrown from the plane, they were dressed
in camouflage uniforms and supplied with guns and false papers. They
were then sprinkled with an unknown powdery substance, which he
believed was poison or some kind of lethal chemical agent. He believed
the powdery agent was meant to contaminate other freedom fighters or
sympathisers who might happen upon the bodies.
The modus operandi of
the Selous Scouts was exemplified in a separate incident in February
1980, when political campaigning was approaching a climax in
Zimbabwe-Rhodesia’s first free election. Several churches became the
targets of terrorist bombs. A well-orchestrated Press campaign swiftly
attributed the bombings to "communist atheists" -- an apparent
reference to the national liberation movement. Then, in what turned out
to be the last in a series of explosions, somebody blew himself up when
the bomb he was planting exploded prematurely. Papers found on his body
identified him as a highly decorated member of the Selous Scouts. The
Rhodesians are also suspected to have used pseudo operators to murder
more than 30 missionaries in remote districts, were many freedom
fighters had been educated at mission stations. The murders were
attributed falsely to the liberation movement. But Catholic Bishop
Donald Lamont, before he was imprisoned for a year, stripped of his
Rhodesian citizenship and finally expelled from the country, had no
doubts about who was really responsible for the killings. "If it were
the objective of the guerrillas to kill missionaries, there would not
be one of us left alive."(6)
The Rhodesians had extensive
experience in counter-insurgency doctrine dating back to 1956 when
British Commonwealth forces in Malaya had included the Rhodesian
African Rifles, and the Rhodesians had also modelled their "pseudo
gangs" along the lines of the British counter-insurgency strategy
during the 1950s Mau Mau uprising in Kenya. The Americans, for their
part, later adapted their own version of this doctrine in Vietnam.(7)
Such methods bore a striking
resemblance to the ideas of the Organisation de l'Armee Secrete (OAS)
which operated in Algeria during the late 1950s. The OAS was made up of
embittered right-wing French army officers and fanatical Algerians of
European descent trying to retain Algeria under French colonial
control. In their ranks were covert action specialists working for the
French army's 5th (Psychological Action) Bureau, and officers
commanding French Foreign Legion and paratroop units in Algeria.
Communist guerrilla warfare, according to them, did not have the
objective of capturing strategic territory as in conventional warfare,
but created an extended military battlefield that included all aspects
of civil society, especially the psychological and ideological spheres.
Having "identified" the enemy's techniques, the proponents of
"counter-terrorism" then sought to neutralise the enemy by adopting the
enemy's "own" methods and turning them against the enemy. Hence the
coming into being of a ruthless and sophisticated ensemble of
psychological techniques. The objective was to create a climate of
tension, anxiety and insecurity, thereby conditioning the masses to
accept State authority while alienating the masses from the Algerian
liberation movement.(8)
The collapse of the OAS came
about after a failed 1958 military revolt in Algiers and a "general's
putsch" in April 1961 which brought down the French government and
threatened the political survival of its Gaullist successor, the Fifth
Republic. Having failed to secure the "moral regeneration" of France
many of its members were forced to flee abroad, notably to Argentina
and also to Portugal where Lisbon became their strategic centre with
official encouragement from the Portuguese secret police. In exchange
for asylum and other incentives, they helped train foreign
counter-insurgency and parallel police units forming the embryo of
future "counter-terrorist" groups deployed around the world under the
tutelage of OAS fugitives. (9)
By 1984 one French veteran of
Indo-China and many African campaigns, the notorious Bob Denard,
virtually controlled the Comoros islands together with a band of French
mercenaries. The Comoros rapidly became a secret staging post
funnelling arms from South Africa to the rebel Renamo movement in
Mozambique. Denard also made it possible for South Africa to build and
operate a sophisticated electronic eavesdropping facility at Itsandra
on Grande Comore island. From here Pretoria could monitor both maritime
movements in the Mozambique Channel and ANC radio communications in
neighbouring Tanzania. (10)
From Lisbon former OAS members
plotted to destabilise and destroy national liberation movements
throughout Africa and their exploits galvanised rightwing extremists
everywhere. An internal report written by one former OAS member was
captured in the mid-1970s by leftist officers of the Armed Forces
Movement in Lisbon. The captured document, shown to journalists,
endorsed bluntly a "strategy of tension" that would "work on public
opinion and promote chaos in order to later raise up a defender of the
citizens against the disintegration provoked by subversion and
terrorism". As one seasoned cold warrior put it: "When you've got the
masses by the balls, their hearts and minds follow."
In 1994, such ideas found
resonance in the run-up to South Africa's first democratic elections.
The former apartheid regime -- then part of a transitional government
-- made much of wooing black voters on a platform proclaiming "black
leaders have failed to halt the continuing violence", which was blamed
by white politicians on "warring black factions". The gunmen involved
in many of the violent clashes taking place at the time, used
Soviet-made AK-47 rifles and Makarov pistols to create the impression
that liberation movement "terrorists" were responsible, and police
reports always blamed the ANC.
As amnesty applicants would
later confess to the South African Truth Commission, the SA Police
diverted taxpayers' money to a police-run strategic deception unit
called Stratcom. Former Stratcom unit head Vic McPherson disclosed to
the Truth Commission that more than 40 undercover police agents, paid
informers, unwitting "sources" and "friendly" journalists throughout
the South African mainstream media had participated in Stratcom
projects during the late 1980s. According to former security police
death-squad commander Colonel Eugene de Kock, presently serving a life
sentence for multiple murders, his activities in Stratcom during the
1980s included violent attacks on white people by "turned" freedom
fighters, which were then falsely attributed by elements of the Press
to left-wing activists. The intention was to manipulate South African
public opinion to accept that only elements of the former regime, if
reinstated, could defend the masses from chaos, anarchy and
terrorism.(11)
In the absence of digital
imaging technology of the kind evidenced at Abu Gharieb, one can only
speculate about the full extent to which brainwashing or the "turning"
of prisoners was practised for many years in South Africa, or during
France’s battle for Algiers in the 1950s, Britain’s suppression of
independence movements in Kenya and Malaya in the 1960s, Argentina’s
dirty war, Britain’s Northern Ireland conflict in the 1970 and 1980s,
and countless other regional conflicts. Whatever happened then, and
whatever the true activities currently taking place in America’s gulag
of secret prisons, it is certainly the case that extreme secrecy
provides an ideal environment for the application of psychological
torture techniques aimed at "converting" prisoners of war into pseudo
operators.
There remains wide public
ignorance and a studied avoidance of this unsettling subject. Few
people have been able to fit together the fragments of history and
grasp the larger picture. Others simply don’t want to know. The
practice of psychological torture, never fully acknowledged, is thus
allowed to persist inside the secret services as the product of
intelligence strategies that have probably been standard practice for
at least half-a-century or more. Abu Ghraib may be just the tip of an
iceberg.
South African-based
journalist Stan Winer is author of the book Between the Lies: Rise of
the media-military-industrial complex, London: Southern Universities
Press, 2004. Free PDF download available at http://www.coldtype.net/archives.html )
NOTES & REFERENCES:
(1) For a list of US detention sites see http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/media/2004_alerts/0617.htm
(2) For many years the Israeli
secret services took this one step further by actually operating a
"ghost prison" for political detainees. Code-named Facility 1391, this
secret prison intended for "special cases" operated in Israel for many
years within the walls of a secret army base, distant from the eyes of
the Press and the public, and without being declared a detention
facility, as required by statute. See http://www.icj-sweden.org/Facility1391.pdf
(3) The complete trial record of Wouter Basson is available at http://ccrweb.ccr.uct.ac.za/archive/cbw/cbw_index.html
All charges against Basson were
eventually withdrawn by the State after a marathon 30-month trial in
the Pretoria High Court three years ago. The court ruled that it had no
jurisdiction in respect of crimes committed in South West Africa — or
Namibia as it is now named. An appeal court later overturned the
decision on the basis that South West Africa was in fact a South
African colony during the apartheid era. It was illegally occupied and
administered by the former South African regime. The Directorate of
Public Prosecutions then decided last year not to reopen the case
against of Basson because of the legal principle of double jeopardy,
which means in effect that an alleged perpetrator cannot be tried twice
on the same charges. For subsequent developments see Stan Winer essay
at http://www.coldtype.net/Assets.06/Essays.06/0506.Reader5.pdf
(4) The technique was
discovered by Russian scientist Ivan Pavlov (see bibliography below)
who identified TMI in the early 1900’s. His work with animals is said
to have opened the door to further investigations with humans. The ways
to achieve conversion through TMI are many and varied, but the usual
first step in brainwashing is to work on the emotions of an individual
or group until they reach an abnormal level of anger, fear, excitement
or nervous tension. The progressive result of this mental condition is
to impair judgement and increase suggestibility. The more this
condition can be maintained or intensified, the more it compounds,
leading to total behavioural conversion.
(5) Basson trial record
(6) David Martin & Phyllis Johnson, The Struggle for Zimbabwe, London: Faber 1981, p.283 Martin and Johnson)
(7) On Rhodesian pseudo-gangs see: Martin & Johnson, op cit, pp.110-11; Ken Flower, Serving Secretly: An intelligence chief on record, London: John Murray 1987, pp.114-5. On the Rhodesians in Malaya see Christopher Owen, The Rhodesian African Rifles, London: Leo Cooper, 1970. On the origin of "pseudo gangs" in Kenya see Frank Kitson, Gangs and Counter-gangs, London: Barrie and Rockliff, 1960.On British counter-insurgency doctrine generally see Frank Kitson, Low Intensity Operations: Subversion, Insurgency and Peacekeeping, London: Faber, 1971. On Vietnam see Larry Cable, Conflict of Myths: The Development of American Counter-Insurgency Doctrine and the Vietnam War, New York: New York University Press 1986, p.82
(8) Interviews conducted by the
author with officers of the Armed Forces Movement (AFM) in Lisbon after
the 1975 socialist military coup in Portugal. Many incriminating
documents, viewed by the author, were seized by the AFM from OAS
fugitives operating in Lisbon.
(9) Ibid.,
(10) See D Kendo, "Comores: L’Ordre Mercenaire", Jeune Afrique, nos 1511/1512, December 1989; Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), Madagascar, Comoros, Country Profile, 1989-90, London 1990, pp 32-36; EIU, Madagascar, Mauritius, Seychelles, Comoros: Country Report No. 1, London 1990.
(11) The strategy was
apparently revived three years ago when 22 seditious South African
conspirators including three senior army officers who plotted to
establish a rebel army of about 4 500 to overthrow the South African
government and replace it with a military regime run entirely by white
supremacists. The conspirators, currently on trial for murder, treason
and terrorism, allegedly planned to unleash chaos in the country to
cover the rebel army’s movements while a 50-man death squad would
eliminate "traitors" and blame the actions on black people. The rebel
army, to "restore order", would then contrive a 10-day electricity
blackout under cover of which airports would be closed, aircraft
grounded, and arms depots and combat vehicles seized. A final stage
would be the inauguration of a right-wing military government.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Eysenck HJ The biological basis of personality, Springfield, IL: Thomas, (1967)
Pavlov, IP Lectures on Conditional Reflexes: The higher nervous activity (Behaviour) of animals, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1928
Sargant, W The Battle for the Mind, London: Wm Heinemann, 1957