CIA AND INTERROGATIONS-TODAY'S DEBATE AND THE HISTORICAL DISCUSSION

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Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SETZET Intelligence in Public Literature CIA and Interrogations �Today's Debate and the Historical Discussion (U) Courting Disaster: How the CIA Kept America Safe and How Barack Obama is Inviting the Next Attack by Mark Thiessen (Washington: Regnery, 2010). 388 pp, appendices and notes. Nicholas Dujmovic The use of coercion in interrogation is an unsettling subject that has been the topic of numerous emotionally laden treatments. Though not without its flaws, Mark Thiessen's valuable book provides a structured and pointed contribution to much of the debate about CIA's "enhanced interrogation tech- niques" (EITs), particularly on two key points: first, whether application of these techniques ultimately resulted in useful intelligence that saved lives, and second, the often too-casual equation of the techniques with torture �which exposes CIA officers involved in the program to criminal investigation and poten- tial prosecution. (U) Courting Disaster is both descriptive and polemical, and the division is reflected in the lengthy subtitle. Thiessen's account of the harsh interrogation methods that were part of the Agency's Detention and Interrogation Pro- gram is intended, he says, to illuminate an important, successful, but grossly misrepre- sented and misunderstood intelligence activity. His narrative�based on an array of knowl- edgeable sources and publicly available docu- ments 1�in fact, is an apologia (in the old meaning of a reasoned defense) of CIA officers in the program who applied enhanced tech- niques and thereby "kept America safe" by stopping the next 9/11. They are not torturers, Thiessen says, but heroes. (U) The polemics are the other side of the coin, for Thiessen essentially accuses the current administration of malfeasance by stopping the Detention and Interrogation Program, accus- ing CIA officers who participated in harsh interrogations of engaging in torture, and rais- ing the possibility of criminal prosecutions. That side of the book will not be treated here. (U) In broad outline, the history of the EITs, according to Thiessen's account and media reports, runs between August 2002�after the Justice Department authorized, albeit orally, certain coercive interrogation techniques that CIA then used on Abu Zubaydah�and Septem- ber 2006�when President George W. Bush publicly acknowledged the Detention and Interrogation Program after a media expose.2 During those years, CIA itself suspended the use of the harsh techniques at least twice because Agency leaders were concerned that using them would leave CIA officers vulnera- ble to prosecution. In both cases, the methods were resumed after CIA received written Jus- Thiessen, who had been a speechwriter for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfled and President George W. Bush, writes that his sources included CIA officers who conducted the interrogations, past and present CIA leaders and senior government officials, and documentary evidence such as the Justice Department's released memoranda on authorized interrogation techniques and a redact- ed report on the program in 2004 by the CIA inspector general. (U) 2 Thiessen says he wrote the president's statement after receiving detailed briefings on the program. (U) All statements of fact, opinion, or analysis expressed in this article are those of the author Nothing in the article should be construed as asserting or implying US government endorsement of its factual statements and interpre- tations. Studies in Intelligence Vol._55, No. 1 (March 2011) S.elfET 55 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SE916 Courting Disaster tice Department reassurances that they were legal. (U) An internal report on the Detention and Interrogation Program by CIA's Office of the Inspector General (OIG) in 2004 alleged cer- tain abuses, leading to abandonment of the most controversial technique, waterboarding. Director Porter Goss suspended the use of EITs a final time in late 2005 with the expected pas- sage of the McCain Amendment to the Defense Appropriation Bill for FY 2006, which prohib- ited any "cruel, inhuman, or degrading punish- ment or treatment"�a development that Goss said "wholly fails to protect CIA officers and contractors" involved.3 (UHFOU0) One of President Obama's first acts in Janu- ary 2009 was to cancel the Detention and Interrogation Program permanently; terror suspects held at the time were transferred to military detention at Guantanamo. In August 2009, the redacted version of the OIG report that Thiessen often cites in this book was released. (U) The most notorious technique, waterboard- ing, was applied to only three detainees. A larger set were subjected to other methods that included will-diminishing techniques such as sleep deprivation or prolonged standing, as well as physical methods designed to produce the impression that far worse was coming, such as slamming the detainee into a false (and therefore somewhat elastic) wall or slapping the detainee's abdomen. (UHFOU0) Vocal opponents of these methods�includ- ing members of Congress, the American Civil Liberties Union, human rights and other activ- ists, and journalists�insist that all these approaches, or even any one of them, never produced good intelligence, constituted tor- ture, and therefore were not only unjustifiable but must be prosecuted. Thiessen, however, basing his case on the testimony of his sources, argues that the techniques were not torture, that they were conducted responsibly in the overall detention program, and that they yielded invaluable intelligence. (U) The debate has intensified since the publica- tion of Courting Disaster, with the two sides represented by Thiessen on the one hand and journalist Jane Mayer on the other. Mayer is famous for her powerful critique of the Bush administration's prosecution of the war on ter- ror, The Dark Side (2008).4 Mayer's response to Thiessen's book was a lengthy book review in the New Yorker (29 March 2010), to which Thiessen replied with a point-by-point rebuttal (NationalReview.com, 14 April 2010). So who is right? (U) CIA officers presumably will want to side with Thiessen for the same reason most wanted to believe that Tim Weiner's so-called history of CIA was flawed, because doing other- wise would call into question the nature of the organization they work for.5 Getting past insti- tutional bias and self-interest in wanting to believe Thiessen, it helps that his arguments about the interrogation methods and the deten- tion program generally are well-reasoned (again, notwithstanding the polemics against the current administration). Even those who are not persuaded will be challenged by points that deserve consideration. (U) Thiessen says it is a fundamental misconcep- tion that the use of the methods contravened the Geneva Conventions. Human rights activists charged the Bush administration with "trying to redefine the Geneva Conventions."6 Thiessen points out that the conventions were intended to shield civilian populations by offering certain protections to combatants who followed the laws of war and by denying those protections to those who did not. (29) Giving terrorists Geneva pro- tections, Thiessen asserts, actually undermines the purpose of the conventions. (U) 3 Goss memorandum for the Director of National Intelligence, 16 December 2005 (U) 'Jane Mayer, The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals (New York: Double- day, 2008). (U) Weiner's book was seriously flawed: see my review in Studies in Intelligence 51, no. 3 (September 2007). (U) 6 Evan Thomas, -24' Versus the Real World," Newsweek, 20 September 2006. (U) 56 S,IRET Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SipeT Courting isaster Another misconception unfortunately comes from the fact that the harsh approaches to inter- rogation were called interrogation techniques. According to Thiessen, the methods themselves were never intended to elicit information but rather to overcome the detainee's resistance and to bring him to the point at which he would will- ingly cooperate. Once the detainee was willing to talk, Thiessen reports (45-48), the team employing the methods would leave and a com- pletely different people would begin questioning or "debriefing." From that point on coercive methods were not employed�unless the detainee stopped talking. (U) A third misconception is that no good intelli- gence resulted because detainees would say anything to stop the techniques, and therefore use of the techniques was completely unjusti- fied. Thiessen makes a compelling case against those who hold this position. He offers the case of Abu Zubaydah (83). At first, thinking CIA knew more than it did, Zubaydah freely gave information that led to the capture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), the 9/11 strategist. Some coercive techniques were applied when Zubaydah resisted giving up more, and he was brought to a state of cooperation in which he provided information that led to Jose Padilla and his plot to blow up apartment buildings on KSM's orders as well as information on future al-Qa`ida targets in the United States. Zubay- dah then again stopped talking, so waterboard- ing was applied, resulting in information that led to Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who had been plan- ning to hijack airliners to be crashed into Heathrow Airport and London. (U) Even more productive, Thiessen shows, was the application of coercive methods, especially waterboarding, to KSM (89-90). When cap- tured in 2003, KSM refused to talk, asked for his lawyer, and responded to questions about planned attacks by saying, "Soon you will know." Once his cooperation was achieved, KSM gave critical intelligence that led to the capture of other major terrorists and to the dis- ruption of plots, for example, to fly an airliner into the Library Tower in Los Angeles and to bomb the US consulate and Western resi- dences in Karachi. (U) Thiessen also cites or quotes (10-11) from many senior intelligence authorities�career and appointed, from both political par- ties�who have stated that the use of harsh techniques provided valuable intelligence: CIA Directors George Tenet, Porter Goss, Michael Hayden, and Leon Panetta; and Directors of National Intelligence John Negroponte, Mike McConnell, and Dennis Blair. Even John Bren- nan, the former senior CIA official who serves as this administration's top intelligence adviser, said the United States would be "hand- icapped" without these techniques. Thiessen also cites the OIG report (111-13) as affirming the value of the intelligence received from those to whom EITs were applied, including the three detainees who were waterboarded. (U) Director Goss in 2005 requested an indepen- dent review of the Detention and Interrogation Program's effectiveness from two non-Agency national security experts, former Deputy Defense Secretary John Hamre and congressio- nal staffer Gardner Peckham. Both men inde- pendently concluded that the program provided valuable intelligence and was well regulated (114-16). Peckham praised the program for operating under "strict guidelines" in a "care- fully choreographed" approach that yielded more than half the HUMINT collected against al-Qa`ida and that disrupted numerous plots. "In short," Peckham told Thiessen, "the absence of this program would be a setback of disas- trous proportions in the war on terrorism." (U) When the Detention and Interrogation Pro- gram was canceled in January 2009, Hayden (still the CIA director for a few days) called the White House and said, "You didn't ask, but this is the CIA officially non-concurring." Even though the most aggressive (and controversial) interrogation technique, waterboarding, had 7 The Peckham and Hamre reports to DCI Goss This documentary evidence is con- sistent with Thiessen's account of the reports, which he apparently had not seen, and his interview with Peckham. Hamre declined to be interviewed for the book. (U//FOU0) Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) SEXET 57 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SZRET Courting Disaster not been conducted for more than three years before Hayden had become director, he consid- ered the overall program valuable and did not want it cancelled. Hayden has since clarified his view on the efficacy of the program's inter- rogation techniques in these pages.8 The point I would make to folks who say, "I don't want you doing this, and it doesn't work anyway" [is] "Whoa. Stop. The front half of that sentence, you can say, "I don't want you doing that. But the back half of that sen- tence is not yours. That's mine. And the fact is it did work. Hayden has made this point in several opinion articles and in interviews since stepping down as CIA director. After Thiessen's book appeared, he wrote that Thiessen should not have been able to write it "for reasons of secu- rity and classification.... But I'm glad he did." Hayden praised the book as a factual "must read" that illuminates that "this program was carried out by real people, acting out of duty, not enthusiasm." 9 (U) Thiessen includes declassified CIA analyses in a lengthy appendix (409-37) to underscore the value of the intelligence gained through the use of EITs. (U) No matter how efficacious the Detention and Interrogation Program might have been, the morality of the methods it used matters, and not just for political purposes or institutional viability. CIA officers want to know�and I think need to know�that we are the "good guys," that our overall cause is just, and that our mission and methods generally are moral, notwithstanding the occasional lapses in our history (e.g., drug testing on unwitting individ- uals). (U) To answer critics of the techniques who com- pare CIA officers to inquisitors of the Spanish Inquisition, the Khmer Rouge, and the Japa- nese military during World War II, Thiessen shows that the waterboarding conducted by CIA was a completely different activity than the true water torture inflicted by those other groups, the descriptions of which make for unpleasant reading (chapter four passim).10 Here Thiessen raises the question about what "real" torture is. People with some historical knowledge, may well consider torture some- thing quite beyond physical discomfort or even moderate pain, the province of the medieval iron maiden, the rack, the wheel, the branding iron, the Judas chair, thumbscrews, rectal pears, breast rippers, and other mutilating and horrific devices." More recently, an al-Qa`ida interrogation and torture manual found in Iraq in 2007 shows how to use blow torches, electric drills, head vises, and meat cleavers allegedly to elicit information but, one suspects, simply to torture and kill people.12 When one contem- plates the horror of such acts, it simply might be the case that CIA officers considered the prospect of getting a detainee to talk using far less drastic methods quite tame. (U) Thiessen relates the story of journalist Christopher Hitchens, who in 2008 asked to be waterboarded by Army Special Forces so he could see what it was like before writing about it. The waterboarding was duly conducted by specialists in SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resis- tance, and Escape) training�the model used by CIA. Hitchens found the experience panic- inducing and proclaimed it "torture." Interest- ingly, because in his own mind he had not lasted long enough, he asked to be water- boarded again to see whether he could improve his record. Thiessen asks, What kind of person requests to be tortured and then asks for it again? His answer is that Hitchens actually demonstrated that the procedure cannot be considered torture. (U) � Thiessen also cites Department of Justice's figures that 26,829 US military personnel were Mark Mansfield, "A Conversation with Former CIA Director Michael Hayden," Studies in Intelligence 54, no 2. (June 2010): 67. (U) 9 Michael Hayden on DailyCaller.com, 15 February 2010. (U) i� A typical equation of CIA's program with 20th-century war crimes is the Boston Globes editorial, "The CIA's criminal admission," 7 February 2008. (U) " See Robert Held, Inquisition: Torture Instruments from the Middle Ages to the Industrial Era (Florence: Qua d'Arno, 1985). (U) 12 http://thesmokinggun.com/documents/crime/torture-al-qaeda-style (U) 58 SE ET Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 ET Courting Disaster waterboarded as part of SERE training from 1992 to 2001 and asks, Can it be contemplated that we torture our own troops? There is, he points out, no "training exemption" for torture in US law. Legal experts say torture requires intent to cause severe pain or suffering, a point made by Attorney General Holder in 2009 when asked to explain why waterboarding US troops in training was not torture (164). Thies- sen concludes that�as a matter of law, experi- ence, and common sense�waterboarding as conducted by US Special Forces or CIA does not constitute torture. Tough, Thiessen says, definitely "tough, but not torture." (U) Thiessen also wonders (216-27) why, if waterboarding were torture, Congress would not have outlawed it. He suspects Congress is afraid of taking a stand for which it would be blamed after another devastating terrorist attack. He also disputes that the Obama administration has made a moral progression in preferring to kill or repatriate terrorists rather than interrogate them, and he argues against the idea that waterboarding and other harsh techniques serve to help al-Qa`ida's recruiting, pointing out that CIA's Detention and Interrogation Program came after 9/11, the embassy bombings in Africa, the USS Cole attack, and the first World Trade Center bomb- ing. The evidence indicates that successful ter- rorist attacks, not waterboarding, win recruits for al-Qa`ida. (U) Were there abuses? Yes. According to CIA Inspector General John Helgerson, one detainee was threatened inappropriately by a CIA debriefer (i.e. not an individual responsi- ble for EITs). That abuse was reported, investi- gated, and referred to the Department of Justice, which declined to prosecute; the indi- vidual was administratively disciplined and resigned from the Agency. An even more egre- gious incident�a CIA contractor's beating of a detainee who later died�happened outside the Detention and Interrogation Program, which contained controls and procedures designed specifically to prevent such abuses.13 Nonethe- less, there was a third case of the inadvertent freezing to death of a detainee in Afghanistan (Thiessen errs here in saying this case occurred outside the Detention and Interrogation Pro- gram, though it was very early in the program and the result of negligence). Investigation of a fourth case, involving the death of an Iraqi detainee who had been beaten in US military custody, found no CIA culpability. These four are tragic cases, to be sure, but three were out- side the program and cannot be used, as many do, to disparage that program, and the other, the unfortunate result of inattention to deten- tion conditions, was an anomaly. (U) Thiessen also rejects the charge that CIA "excessively" waterboarded Khalid Sheikh Mohammed by subjecting him to the proce- dure 183 times, the OIG report defined a waterboard application to constitute "each dis- crete instance in which water was applied for any period of time during a session." Since each waterboarding session would involve as many as six applications of water lasting from 20 to 40 seconds, a more accurate count of KSM's waterboarding session would be in the 30s. Thiessen notes that KSM, the mastermind of 9/11 and the butcherer of Daniel Pearl, was very tough and that he could shut off the waterboarding at any time just by talking, which he eventually did after a total, in all those sessions, of just 12 minutes of water application. (U) The value of Thiessen's book is that it brings facts and an understanding of the challenges and pressures faced by CIA officers to the dis- cussion. Even so, there are problems with Thiessen's account that prevent an uncritical embrace of all its findings and that suggest reasons to be less than confident that he has the full story. When I read the 2004 IG report" (the redacted version, since the original remains compartmented), I found some trou- bling aspects of the program that Thiessen doesn't mention or downplays. (UHFOU0) '3 This case was also referred to the Justice Department and the individual involved was prosecuted, convicted, and jailed. (U) 14 The redacted version of the CIA Inspector General's 2004 report is available on many websites like this one: http://washington- independent.com/56175/the-2004-cia-inspector-generals-report-on-torture (U) Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) SET 59 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SEp4T Courting Disaster Thiessen's portrayal of CIA officers who applied EITs to detainees is favorably one- sided�implying they all supported all aspects of the Detention and Interrogation Pro- gram�but the CIA inspector general under- took the investigation that led to the May 2004 report as a result of a request from the National Clandestine Service, together with expressions of concern by employees involved in the program as early as January 2003 that the interrogation techniques were going too far. After interviewing more than 100 persons and reviewing more than 38,000 documents, the OIG concluded that "there were few instances of deviations from approved procedures" but that early in the program "there were instances of improvisation and other undocu- mented interrogation techniques." CIA interro- gators were new and untrained�the Agency's established cadre of professional interrogators had left after the Vietnam War�and CIA did not begin training the new ones until Novem- ber 2002. 15 (UHFOU0) With regard to waterboarding, the OIG con- cluded�after its review of the famous video- tapes that are now destroyed�that CIA interrogators in one location, contrary to what Thiessen asserts (129), used more water than that used by SERE instructors. The OIG also , found that waterboarding was conducted in a frequency of applications inconsistent with Justice Department guidelines that repetition of EITs "not be substantial"�a conclusion with which CIA's Office of General Counsel dis- agreed. The OIG report also documents unau- thorized techniques, like the use of a stiff brush to produce abrasions and the use of pressure points to induce unconsciousness, although these appear to have been isolated incidents. 16 One can doubt whether these abuses individu- ally or even collectively rise to the level of tor- Interrogation in CIA's History (U) After CIA's use of enhanced interrogation 15 OIG report, 5-6, 25 (U) i6 Ibid. 37, 44, 69-70. (U) 60 SET ture�and could argue that they are the sort of anomalies that almost always occur in com- plex programs carried out in wartime�but the question cannot be ducked. (UHFOU0) Herein lies a cautionary tale for all CIA employees. CIA personnel throughout the Agency's history have often found themselves doing things they believed were right and were told were right in the pursuit of national secu- rity but for which they later found themselves criticized�if not in a court of law, then in the court of public opinion. The conclusion of Gard- ner Peckham's investigatory report to Porter Goss in 2005 spells out the dilemma for CIA officers: One gets the sense that there is great pride felt by those who built and participate in the program. They know they are doing impor- tant work that is producing enormously useful results. It is clear that in some respects, it is grim work, and no one with whom we met seems to take joy in it. In fact...eagerness to participate in EITs by applicants for [these] jobs is an immediate disqualifier But, there is also a deep concern expressed...that as the events of 9111 recede into the past, they may be held accountable to a changing stan- dard of behavior As memories of thousands of innocent lives being snuffed out by terror- ists grows dimmer with time, they wonder how the future will judge them and their actions. (UHF OU0) For the present, the facts presented by Thiessen's book and other evidence like the OIG report suggest the judgment of history will be that those involved in the Detention and Interrogation Program, even those few who applied enhanced interrogation techniques, were not torturers�and if not heroes, then at least honorable defenders of our country. (U) techniques was revealed in 2006, numerous writers asserted the Agency had never dealt with coercive interrogation before and there- Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SE,PRET Courting Disaster fore didn't know what it was doing. Jane Mayer writing in the New Yorker said: "What you need to know is that the CIA had no experience really in interrogating prisoners. They had never really held prisoners before. And so, they really had no idea how to go about getting information out of people." 17 (U) Some commentators�bloggers, mostly �assumed in the absence of evidence that CIA was unrestrained in its conduct of such tech- niques and even gleeful about it. Even Evan Thomas of Newsweek said the Agency had lit- tle experience but was "gung ho" for coercive interrogations.18 CIA, in other words, was por- trayed as a small child tasting ice cream for the first time�not knowing what it was but liking it very much. (U) This was a caricature, more revealing of anti-Agency bias than reflective of history. The actual Agency experience regarding interroga- tion goes back more than 50 years, and that record makes clear two things: first, that coer- cive methods have always been considered effective to some degree; second, that they have to be used carefully and not devolve into tor- ture. (U) In CIA's infancy, little thought was given to the issue of coercive methods in interrogation, other than to assume that such methods would work. New officers in 1951, for example, were assured during their operational training that, if they were to fall into the hands of commu- nist forces, they would eventually talk.19 Like- wise, an medical study on interrogation from 1953 found that, though "high morale and firm discipline" are the best defenses against coercive interrogation, "every- one has his breaking point." 20 Among the tech- niques thought to work to bring the individual to this "breaking point" were exhaustion and sleep deprivation, the administration of pain or drugs, and creation of a feeling of isolation or abandonment�all considered part of the eper- tory of communist security services.21 To validate agents or to collect information from less-than-willing subjects, CIA in its first decade found itself in the interrogation busi- ness and thinking and writing about it in sophisticated ways. 22 A 1958 Studies in Intelli- gence article that purported to reflect the col- lective state of the art said "An interrogation yields the highest intelligence dividend when the interrogee [sic] finally becomes an ally, actively cooperating with the interrogator to produce the information desired." Torture must not be used, the article said, not only for moral and legal reasons but because it risks produc- ing bad information and rendering the subject unfit for further use. But the article also made it clear that "intensive" interrogation occasion- ally was needed, a "softening up process" intended to "break" the detainee's will, but not by crossing the line into physical abuse or tor- ture. "The recalcitrant subject of an intelli- gence interrogation must be 'broken,' but broken for use like a riding horse, not smashed in the search for a single golden egg." 23 Jane Meyer interview on the Democracy Now! program, 18 July 2008, at http://www.democracynbw.org/2008/7/18/ the_dark_side_jane_mayer_on (U) IS Evan Thomas. (U) Is This is the testimony of paramilitary officers John Downey and Richard Fecteau, who were captured by the Chinese communists in 1952. See Nicholas Dujmovic, "Extraordinary Fidelity: Two CIA Prisoners in China, 1952-1973," Studies in Intelligence 50, no. 4 (2006): 21-36. (U) 20 Report of Ad Hoc Medical Study Group, 15 January 1953 Declassified Docitmenrs Reference System IrMRS1 nn CK3100398426. (U) icate a efficacy of coercive methods include "Interrogation Guide for Indi- the Soviets or Their Satellites," 29_M (b)(3) (b)(3) (b)(3) Because the use of drugs, hypnosis, and the (b)(3) polygraph in interrogations constitute a parallel but separate history from the use of physical and mental coercion, they are not addressed here. (U) (b)(1 22 CIA's reflection on interrogation mirrored a parallel public treatment of the subject�no doubt sparked by interest in interrogative s methods in the aftermath of the Korean War and communist show trials�in specialized journals; see for example, The Bulletin of (b)(3) the New York Academy of Medicine 33 (September 1957). (U) 23 Don Compos tpseucil, "The Interrogation of Suspects Under Arrest," Studies in Intelligence 2, no. 3 (Summer 1958): 51-61. (U) Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) SydT 61 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SZRET Courting Disaster CIA's leading interrogators, with their prac- tical experience, agreed in subsequent Studies articles, writing in 1960 on the interrogation of defectors, emphasized the need, when conducting an "unfriendly interro- gation," to use the gamut of methods "from mildly unpleasant ones to measures just short of violence"�but not to cross that line. Approved "psychological pressures" included isolation, irregular sleep schedules, uncomfort- able temperatures, minimal sustenance, and "jostling without actual nhvsical harm." Career interrogator writing just a few years later, acknowledged the occasional need for threats and confrontation under strict con- trols in a contrived, almost theatrical setting, but recommended against violence, which "cor- rectly applied, often gets crude results quickly" because it "lowers the moral caliber of the orga- nization employing it and soon corrupts the interrogation staff." 24 The evidence suggests CIA took this admoni- tion against physical abuse seriously. In 1960, a CIA employee beat a Soviet bloc defector undergoing interrogation, and DCI Allen Dulles summarily dismissed him.25 When coer- cive methods needed to be used, the strictest control was the norm. In 1963, the Counterin- telligence Staff prepared an interrogation man- ual to provide guidelines, particularly for "resistant sources," that included a section on coercive methods that is not very specific about what procedures work but rather provides an almost academic discussion of the pros and cons of their use in general. Most of the discus- sion concerns psychological stresses, such as the arrest itself, with only a short general dis- cussion on the infliction of pain that empha- sizes its potential to be counterproductive. Most interesting is the warning that no CIA interrogator can unilaterally use any form of coercion and that prior approval mu t be obtained from the CIA director.28 During the Agency's experience in Vietnam, CIA officers repudiated physical coercion in interrogation on practical and moral grounds. South Vietnamese authorities, aware of the Americans' antipathy to mistreatment or tor- ture, strove to hide from them what was an endemic practice that included electric shock, beatings, and starvation. Vietnamese commu- nists who went from South Vietnamese to CIA custody went from brutal to noncoercive, but nonetheless skillful, interrogators who often extracted better information.28 24 Stanley Farndon [pseud.] "The Interrogation of Defectors," Studies in Intelligence 4 (Summer 1960): 9-30. C.N. Geschwind [pseud], "Counterintelligence Interrogation," Studies in Intelligence 9, no. 1 (Winter 1965): 23-38. (U) 25 This incident was related to the Rockefeller Commission by former Director Richard Helms in 1975: E.H. Knoche memorandum for Director William Colby, cogf 26 "KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation," July 1963, more Sun through the Freedom of Information Act in 1997. (11) 27 This manual was obtained by the Balti- 28 Thomas Ahern, CIA and Rural Pacification in South Vietnam (Washington: CIA History Staff, 2001), 283-85. Merle Pribbenow, "Limits to Interrogation: The Man in the Snow White Cell," Studies in Intelligence 48, no. 1 (2004): 59-69. (U) 62 SE2AT Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430 SET Courting Disaster Soviet defector Yuri Nosenko was on the receiving end of coercive techniques while in extrajudicial CIA solitary confinement between April 1964 and October 1967. CIA personnel hoped to "break" Nosenko to reveal that he was a dispatched agent, not a genuine defector. Most of the effort to "break" Nosenko manifested itself in his spartan living conditions�he was isolated, subjected to temperature extremes and constant light, and denied basic comforts, reading materi- als, and cigarettes. Nosenko lost between 20 and 30 pounds on a severely reduced diet. Question- ing was intense but involved solely psychologi- cal pressure: the interrogators verbally assaulted Nosenko, yelling at him, calling him a liar, ridiculing him, and threatening him with unending imprisonment. The interrogations also were sporadic. One coercive technique, oddly enough, was not to interrogate him for long stretches of time, even months. Contrary to the fictional portrayal of Nosenko's interrogation in the 2006 film The Good Shepherd, no physical methods were used, nor were drugs adminis- tered.29 In the end, Nosenko remained "unbr ken," and CIA came to believe his story.39 When CIA officers John Downey and Rich- ard Fecteau were finally released from two decades of Chinese captivity in the early 1970s, CIA at last learned from their debriefings what they had experienced in the early years of their incarceration: solitary confinement with sen- sory deprivation, lack of sleep, and repeated, often threatening interrogations.3' Both men had talked as a result of these coercive meth- ods, and their experience was subsequently used in Agency training courses. (U) What is interesting in the internal CIA docu- mentation about Downey and Fecteau is that, though the Agency described their treatment as "harsh," not once was it described as "tor- ture." One may conclude, albeit from an absence of evidence, that these coercive meth- ods simply did not qualify, in the minds of CIA officers, as torture. This is consistent with an early CIA "interrogation guide" for questioning individuals who had been in communist captiv- ity, in which a distinction is made between "tor- ture" (defined as physical abuse) on the one hand, and the enduring of loud or continuous sounds, constant bright light, dietary manipu- lation, sleep deprivation, prolonged standing, or extreme hot or cold temperatures on the other.32 (U) But that does not mean that all methods short of physical abuse would be approved in CIA's ex erience. So, contrary to Jane Mayer, Evan Thomas, and others, at the time of the 9/11 attacks CIA actually had a great deal of institutional expe- rience with coercive methods, considered coer- cion efficacious in producing reliable information, recognized and enforced limits beyond which interrogators should not go, and imposed accountability for violations. (U) Historical knowledge is hardly ever harm- ful. This context might have been useful for CIA interrogators after 9/11 who, because of the threat of imminent follow-on attacks, sought methods that not only produced reli- able information but did so quickly. It might also have comforted them to know they were not the first to face the challenges. 29 See the CIA History Staff critique of the film in Studies in Intelligence 51, no. 1 (March 2007). (U) 39 A detailed but lurid account of the Nosenko affair is Tom Mangold, Cold Warrior (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991), chapters 12 and 13. Nosenko's interrogation records and results 31 Dujmovic, "Extraordinary Fidelity" (U) 32 See "Interrogation Guide." (U) 33 Studies in Intelligence Vol. 55, No. 1 (March 2011) SR(11- 63 Approved for Release: 2018/08/28 C05711430