A 10-year Timeline “Psychology, Torture, and the APA”

A 10-year Timeline “Psychology, Torture, and the APA” is posted on the website of the Coalition for Ethical Psychology documenting the active participation of psychologists, and the American Psychological Association (APA) with the CIA and pentagon in devising and testing torture techniques on suspected Al Qaeda detainees; and helping the government to…

Feb. 2007: Report of the International Committee of the Red Cross

The “strictly confidential” International Red Cross (ICRC) Report on the Treatment of Fourteen “High Value Detainees” in CIA Custody follows several other reports: Nov. 2004 and April 2006. The detainees had been transferred in 2006 from undisclosed CIA detention facilities to DoD Guantanamo prison where the ICRC was granted access…

May 2008: Judge Susan Crawford, Military “Convening Authority” for Guantanamo

Judge Susan Crawford, the Convening Authority for GTMO Military Commissions (Feb. 2007 – Jan. 2010), ordered the war-crimes charges against Mohammed al-Qahtani dropped but did not state publicly that the harsh interrogations were the reason. In June 2005, Time magazine obtained 83 pages of Qahtani’s interrogation log and published excerpts…

Nov. 2008: Senate Armed Services Committee Report

The comprehensive review by the Senate Armed Services Committee Report (hereinafter Armed Services Report, released April, 2009) reveals that in Nov./Dec. 2001, after Administration officials suspended U.S. adherence to the Geneva Conventions, they actively sought information about “enhanced interrogation” methods and detainee “exploitation.” “The abuse of detainees in U.S. custody…

CIA Inspector General Report (May, 2004) redacted versions released 2008 & 2009

The highly critical CIA Inspector General’s Report about the CIA’s interrogation tactics was withheld from the public. In 2008, a highly redacted version was released only after a lawsuit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union. A slightly less redacted version was released (Aug., 2009). The IG report is…

May 2008: Detainees Allege Being Drugged During Interrogations 

The use of “mind-altering substances” on prisoners was banned for decades in the U.S. But in April 2008, two reports alleged that psychotropic drugs were being used as an “enhancement” for interrogations. Jeff Stein reported in Congressional Quartely: “There can be little doubt now that the government has used drugs…

2009: “Aiding Torture: Health Professionals’ Ethics & Human Rights Violations”

Physicians for Human Rights Report, Aiding Torture: Health Professionals’ Ethics and Human Rights Violations (2009), is a medical analysis of the CIA – Inspector General Report findings (2004, partly declassified in 2008; 2009). noted the central role that health professionals played in the CIA’s torture program.  The IG report reveals a level of…

2009: The National Security Archive announced online Torture Archive

More than 83,000 pages of primary source documents (and thousands more to come) related to the detention and interrogation of individuals by the United States, in connection with the conduct of hostilities in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as in the broader context of the “global war on terror.” Among the…

Jan. 2009: President Obama declares no prosecution for torturers

President Obama issued an executive order indicating that any legal interpretation of the law governing torture and interrogation of detainees in U.S. custody issued by the Department of Justice between Sept. 11, 2001 and Jan. 20, 2009 were unreliable. (DOJ Office of Professional Responsibility Report, July, 2009) President Obama also…