The Search for the Manchurian Candidate
John Marks
8. Brainwashing
In September 1950, the Miami News published an article
by Edward Hunter titled " 'Brain-Washing' Tactics Force Chinese into Ranks of
Communist Party." It was the first printed use in any language of the term
"brainwashing," which quickly became a stock phrase in Cold War headlines.
Hunter, a CIA propaganda operator who worked under cover as a journalist, turned
out a steady stream of books and articles on the subject. He made up his coined
word from the Chinese hsi-nao—"to cleanse the mind"—which had no
political meaning in Chinese.
American public opinion reacted
strongly to Hunter's ideas, no doubt because of the hostility that prevailed
toward communist foes, whose ways were perceived as mysterious and alien. Most
Americans knew something about the famous trial of the Hungarian Josef Cardinal
Mindszenty, at which the Cardinal appeared zombie-like, as though drugged or
hypnotized. Other defendants at Soviet "show trials" had displayed similar
symptoms as they recited unbelievable confessions in dull, cliché-ridden
monotones. Americans were familiar with the idea that the communists had ways to
control hapless people, and Hunter's new word helped pull together the
unsettling evidence into one sharp fear. The brainwashing controversy
intensified during the heavy 1952 fighting in Korea, when the Chinese government
launched a propaganda offensive that featured recorded statements by captured
U.S. pilots, who "confessed" to a variety of war crimes including the use of
germ warfare.
The official American position on prisoner
confessions was that they were false and forced. As expressed in an Air Force
Headquarters document, "Confessions can be of truthful details.... For purposes
of this section, 'confessions' are considered as being the forced admission to a
lie." But if the military had understandable reasons to gloss over the truth or
falsity of the confessions, this still did not address the fact that confessions
had been made at all. Nor did it lay to rest the fears of those like Edward
Hunter who saw the confessions as proof that the communists now had techniques
"to put a man's mind into a fog so that he will mistake what is true for what is
untrue, what is right for what is wrong, and come to believe what did not happen
actually had happened, until he ultimately becomes a robot for the Communist
manipulator."
By the end of the Korean War, 70 percent of the
7,190 U.S. prisoners held in China had either made confessions or signed
petitions calling for an end to the American war effort in Asia. Fifteen percent
collaborated fully with the Chinese, and only 5 percent steadfastly resisted.
The American performance contrasted poorly with that of the British, Australian,
Turkish, and other United Nations prisoners—among whom collaboration was rare,
even though studies showed they were treated about as badly as the Americans.
Worse, an alarming number of the prisoners stuck by their confessions after
returning to the United States. They did not, as expected, recant as soon as
they stepped on U.S. soil. Puzzled and dismayed by this wholesale collapse of
morale among the POWs, American opinion leaders settled in on Edward Hunter's
explanation: The Chinese had somehow brainwashed our boys.
But
how? At the height of the brainwashing furor, conservative spokesmen often
seized upon the very mystery of it all to give a religious cast to the political
debate. All communists have been, by definition, brainwashed through satanic
forces, they argued—thereby making the enemy seem like robots completely devoid
of ordinary human feelings and motivation. Liberals favored a more scientific
view of the problem. Given the incontrovertible evidence that the Russians and
the Chinese could, in a very short time and often under difficult circumstances,
alter the basic belief and behavior patterns of both domestic and foreign
captives, liberals argued that there must be a technique involved that would
yield its secrets under objective investigation.
CIA Director
Allen Dulles favored the scientific approach, although he naturally encouraged
his propaganda experts to exploit the more emotional interpretations of
brainwashing. Dulles and the heads of the other American security agencies
became almost frantic in their efforts to find out more about the Soviet and
Chinese successes in mind control. Under pressure for answers, Dulles turned to
Dr. Harold Wolff, a world-famous neurologist with whom he had developed an
intensely personal relationship. Wolff was then treating Dulles' own son for
brain damage suffered from a Korean War head wound. Together they shared the
trauma of the younger Dulles' fits and mental lapses. Wolff, a skinny little
doctor with an overpowering personality, became fast friends with the tall,
patrician CIA Director. Dulles may have seen brainwashing as an induced form of
brain damage or mental illness. In any case, in late 1953, he asked Wolff to
conduct an official study of communist brainwashing techniques for the CIA.
Wolff, who had become fascinated by the Director's tales of the clandestine
world, eagerly accepted.
Harold Wolff was known primarily as
an expert on migraine headaches and pain, but he had served on enough military
and intelligence advisory panels that he knew how to pick up Dulles' mandate and
expand on it. He formed a working partnership with Lawrence Hinkle, his
colleague at Cornell University Medical College in New York City. Hinkle handled
the administrative part of the study and shared in the substance. Before going
ahead, the two doctors made sure they had the approval of Cornell's president,
Deane W. Malott and other high university officials who checked with their
contacts in Washington to make sure the project did indeed have the great
importance that Allen Dulles stated. Hinkle recalls a key White House aide
urging Cornell to cooperate. The university administration agreed, and soon
Wolff and Hinkle were poring over the Agency's classified files on brainwashing.
CIA officials also helped arrange interviews with former communist interrogators
and prisoners alike. "It was done with great secrecy," recalls Hinkle. "We went
through a great deal of hoop-de-do and signed secrecy agreements, which everyone
took very seriously."
The team of Wolff and Hinkle became the chief brainwashing
studiers for the U.S. government, although the Air Force and Army ran parallel
programs.[1] Their
secret report to Allen Dulles, later published in a declassified version, was
considered the definitive U.S. Government work on the subject. In fact, if
allowances are made for the Cold War rhetoric of the fifties, the Wolff-Hinkle
report still remains one of the better accounts of the massive political
re-education programs in China and the Soviet Union. It stated flatly that
neither the Soviets nor the Chinese had any magical weapons—no drugs, exotic
mental ray-guns, or other fanciful machines. Instead, the report pictured
communist interrogation methods resting on skillful, if brutal, application of
police methods. Its portrait of the Soviet system anticipates, in dry and
scholarly form, the work of novelist Alexander Solzhenitzyn in The Gulag
Archipelago. Hinkle and Wolff showed that the Soviet technique rested on the
cumulative weight of intense psychological pressure and human weakness, and this
thesis alone earned the two Cornell doctors the enmity of the more right-wing
CIA officials such as Edward Hunter. Several of his former acquaintances
remember that Hunter was fond of saying that the Soviets brainwashed people the
way Pavlov had conditioned dogs.
In spite of some dissenters
like Hunter, the Wolff-Hinkle model became, with later refinements, the best
available description of extreme forms of political indoctrination. According to
the general consensus, the Soviets started a new prisoner off by putting him in
solitary confinement. A rotating corps of guards watched him constantly,
humiliating and demeaning him at every opportunity and making it clear he was
totally cut off from all outside support. The guards ordered him to stand for
long periods, let him sit, told him exactly the position he could take to lie
down, and woke him if he moved in the slightest while sleeping. They banned all
outside stimuli—books, conversation, or news of the world.
After four to six weeks of this mind-deadening routine, the prisoner usually
found the stress unbearable and broke down. "He weeps, he mutters, and prays
aloud in his cell," wrote Hinkle and Wolff. When the prisoner reached this
stage, the interrogation began. Night after night, the guards brought him into a
special room to face the interrogator. Far from confronting his captive with
specific misdeeds, the interrogator told him that he knew his own crimes—all too
well. In the most harrowing Kafkaesque way, the prisoner tried to prove his
innocence to he knew not what. Together the interrogator and prisoner reviewed
the prisoner's life in detail. The interrogator seized on any inconsistency—no
matter how minute—as further evidence of guilt, and he laughed at the prisoner's
efforts to justify himself. But at least the prisoner was getting a response of
some sort. The long weeks of isolation and uncertainty had made him grateful for
human contact even grateful that his case was moving toward resolution. True, it
moved only as fast as he was willing to incriminate himself, but . . .
Gradually, he came to see that he and his interrogator were working toward the
same goal of wrapping up his case. In tandem, they ransacked his soul. The
interrogator would periodically let up the pressure. He offered a cigarette, had
a friendly chat, explained he had a job to do—making it all the more
disappointing the next time he had to tell the prisoner that his confession was
unsatisfactory .
As the charges against him began to take
shape, the prisoner realized that he could end his ordeal only with a full
confession. Otherwise the grueling sessions would go on forever. "The regimen of
pressure has created an overall discomfort which is well nigh intolerable,"
wrote Hinkle and Wolff. "The prisoner invariably feels that 'something must be
done to end this.' He must find a way out." A former KGB officer, one of many
former interrogators and prisoners interviewed for the CIA study, said that more
than 99 percent of all prisoners signed a confession at this stage.
In the Soviet system under Stalin, these confessions were the final step
of the interrogation process, and the prisoners usually were shot or sent to a
labor camp after sentencing. Today, Russian leaders seem much less insistent on
exacting confessions before jailing their foes, but they still use the penal
(and mental health) system to remove from the population classes of people
hostile to their rule.
The Chinese took on the more ambitious
task of re-educating their prisoners. For them, confession was only the
beginning. Next, the Chinese authorities moved the prisoner into a group cell
where his indoctrination began. From morning to night, he and his fellow
prisoners studied Marx and Mao, listened to lectures, and engaged in
self-criticism. Since the progress of each member depended on that of his
cellmates, the group pounced on the slightest misconduct as an indication of
backsliding. Prisoners demonstrated the zeal of their commitment by ferociously
attacking deviations. Constant intimacy with people who reviled him pushed the
resistant prisoner to the limits of his emotional endurance. Hinkle and Wolff
found that "The prisoner must conform to the demands of the group sooner or
later." As the prisoner developed genuine changes of attitude, pressure on him
relaxed. His cellmates rewarded him with increasing acceptance and esteem. Their
acceptance, in turn, reinforced his commitment to the Party, for he learned that
only this commitment allowed him to live successfully in the cell. In many
cases, this process produced an exultant sense of mission in the prisoner—a
feeling of having finally straightened out his life and come to the truth. To be
sure, this experience, which was not so different from religious conversion, did
not occur in all cases or always last after the prisoner returned to a social
group that did not reinforce it.
From the first preliminary
studies of Wolff and Hinkle, the U.S. intelligence community moved toward the
conclusion that neither the Chinese nor the Russians made appreciable use of
drugs or hypnosis, and they certainly did not possess the brainwashing
equivalent of the atomic bomb (as many feared). Most of their techniques were
rooted in age-old methods, and CIA brainwashing researchers like psychologist
John Gittinger found themselves poring over ancient documents on the Spanish
Inquisition. Furthermore, the communists used no psychiatrists or other
behavioral scientists to devise their interrogation system. The differences
between the Soviet and Chinese systems seemed to grow out of their respective
national cultures. The Soviet brainwashing system resembled a heavy-handed cop
whose job was to isolate, break, and then subdue all the troublemakers in the
neighborhood. The Chinese system was more like thousands of skilled
acupuncturists, working on each other and relying on group pressure, ideology,
and repetition. To understand further the Soviet or Chinese control systems, one
had to plunge into the subtle mysteries of national and individual character.
While CIA researchers looked into those questions, the main
thrust of the Agency's brainwashing studies veered off in a different direction.
The logic behind the switch was familiar in the intelligence business. Just
because the Soviets and the Chinese had not invented a brainwashing machine,
officials reasoned, there was no reason to assume that the task was impossible.
If such a machine were even remotely feasible, one had to assume the communists
might discover it. And in that case, national security required that the United
States invent the machine first. Therefore, the CIA built up its own elaborate
brainwashing program, which, like the Soviet and Chinese versions, took its own
special twist from our national character. It was a tiny replica of the
Manhattan Project, grounded in the conviction that the keys to brainwashing lay
in technology. Agency officials hoped to use old-fashioned American know-how to
produce shortcuts and scientific breakthroughs. Instead of turning to tough
cops, whose methods repelled American sensibilities, or the gurus of mass
motivation, whose ideology Americans lacked, the Agency's brainwashing experts
gravitated to people more in the mold of the brilliant—and sometimes
mad—scientist, obsessed by the wonders of the brain.
In 1953
CIA Director Allen Dulles made a rare public statement on communist
brainwashing: "We in the West are somewhat handicapped in getting all the
details," Dulles declared. "There are few survivors, and we have no human guinea
pigs to try these extraordinary techniques." Even as Dulles spoke, however, CIA
officials acting under his orders had begun to find the scientists and the
guinea pigs. Some of their experiments would wander so far across the ethical
borders of experimental psychiatry (which are hazy in their own right) that
Agency officials thought it prudent to have much of the work done outside the
United States.
Call her Lauren G. For 19 years, her mind has been blank about
her experience. She remembers her husband's driving her up to the old gray stone
mansion that housed the hospital, Allan Memorial Institute, and putting her in
the care of its director, Dr. D. Ewen Cameron. The next thing she recalls
happened three weeks later:
They gave me a dressing gown. It was way too big, and I was
tripping all over it. I was mad. I asked why did I have to go round in this
sloppy thing. I could hardly move because I was pretty weak. I remember trying
to walk along the hall, and the walls were all slanted. It was then that I
said, "Holy Smokes, what a ghastly thing." I remember running out the door and
going up the mountain in my long dressing gown.
The mountain, named Mont Royal, loomed high above Montreal. She stumbled
and staggered as she tried to climb higher and higher. Hospital staff members
had no trouble catching her and dragging her back to the Institute. In short
order, they shot her full of sedatives, attached electrodes to her temples, and
gave her a dose of electroshock. Soon she slept like a baby.
Gradually, over the next few weeks, Lauren G. began to function like a normal
person again. She took basket-weaving therapy and played bridge with her fellow
patients. The hospital released her, and she returned to her husband in another
Canadian city.
Before her mental collapse in 1959, Lauren G.
seemed to have everything going for her. A refined, glamorous horsewoman of 30,
whom people often said looked like Elizabeth Taylor, she had auditioned for the
lead in National Velvet at 13 and married the rich boy next door at 20.
But she had never loved her husband and had let her domineering mother push her
into his arms. He drank heavily. "I was really unhappy," she recalls. "I had a
horrible marriage, and finally I had a nervous breakdown. It was a combination
of my trying to lose weight, sleep loss, and my nerves."
The
family doctor recommended that her husband send her to Dr. Cameron, which seemed
like a logical thing to do, considering his wide fame as a psychiatrist. He had
headed Allan Memorial since 1943, when the Rockefeller Foundation had donated
funds to set up a psychiatric facility at McGill University. With continuing
help from the Rockefellers, McGill had built a hospital known far beyond
Canada's borders as innovative and exciting. Cameron was elected president of
the American Psychiatric Association in 1953, and he became the first president
of the World Psychiatric Association. His friends joked that they had run out of
honors to give him.
Cameron's passion lay in the more
"objective" forms of therapy, with which he could more easily and swiftly bring
about improvements in patients than with the notoriously slow Freudian methods.
An impatient man, he dreamed of finding a cure for schizophrenia. No one could
tell him he was not on the right track. Cameron's supporter at the Rockefeller
Foundation, Robert Morrison, recorded in his private papers that he found the
psychiatrist tense and ill-at-ease, and Morrison ventured that this may account
for "his lack of interest and effectiveness in psychotherapy and failure to
establish warm personal relations with faculty members, both of which were
mentioned repeatedly when I visited Montreal." Another Rockefeller observer
noted that Cameron "appears to suffer from deep insecurity and has a need for
power which he nourishes by maintaining an extraordinary aloofness from his
associates."
When Lauren G.'s husband delivered her to
Cameron, the psychiatrist told him she would receive some electroshock, a
standard treatment at the time. Besides that, states her husband, "Cameron was
not very communicative, but I didn't think she was getting anything out of the
ordinary." The husband had no way of knowing that Cameron would use an unproved
experimental technique on his wife—much less that the psychiatrist intended to
"depattern" her. Nor did he realize that the CIA was supporting this work with
about $19,000 a year in secret funds.[2]
Cameron defined "depatterning" as breaking up existing patterns of
behavior, both the normal and the schizophrenic, by means of particularly
intensive electroshocks, usually combined with prolonged, drug-induced sleep.
Here was a psychiatrist willing—indeed, eager—to wipe the human mind totally
clean. Back in 1951, ARTICHOKE's Morse Allen had likened the process to
"creation of a vegetable." Cameron justified this tabula rasa approach
because he had a theory of "differential amnesia," for which he provided no
statistical evidence when he published it. He postulated that after he produced
"complete amnesia" in a subject, the person would eventually recover memory of
his normal but not his schizophrenic behavior. Thus, Cameron claimed he could
generate "differential amnesia." Creating such a state in which a man who knew
too much could be made to forget had long been a prime objective of the
ARTICHOKE and MKULTRA programs.
Needless to say, Lauren G.
does not recall a thing today about those weeks when Cameron depatterned her.
Afterward, unlike over half of the psychiatrist's depatterning patients, Lauren
G. gradually recovered full recall of her life before the treatment, but then,
she remembered her mental problems, too.[3] Her husband
says she came out of the hospital much improved. She declares the treatment had
no effect one way or another on her mental condition, which she believes
resulted directly from her miserable marriage. She stopped seeing Cameron after
about a month of outpatient electroshock treatments, which she despised. Her
relationship with her husband further deteriorated, and two years later she
walked out on him. "I just got up on my own hind legs," she states. "I said the
hell with it. I'm going to do what I want and take charge of my own life. I left
and started over." Now divorced and remarried, she feels she has been happy ever
since.
Cameron's depatterning, of which Lauren G. had a
comparatively mild version, normally started with 15 to 30 days of "sleep
therapy." As the name implies, the patient slept almost the whole day and night.
According to a doctor at the hospital who used to administer what he calls the
"sleep cocktail," a staff member woke up the patient three times a day for
medication that consisted of a combination of 100 mg. Thorazine, 100 mg.
Nembutal, 100 mg. Seconal, 150 mg. Veronal, and 10 mg. Phenergan. Another staff
doctor would also awaken the patient two or sometimes three times daily for
electroshock treatments.[4] This doctor
and his assistant wheeled a portable machine into the "sleep room" and gave the
subject a local anesthetic and muscle relaxant, so as not to cause damage with
the convulsions that were to come. After attaching electrodes soaked in saline
solution, the attendant held the patient down and the doctor turned on the
current. In standard, professional electroshock, doctors gave the subject a
single dose of 110 volts, lasting a fraction of a second, once a day or every
other day. By contrast, Cameron used a form 20 to 40 times more intense, two or
three times daily, with the power turned up to 150 volts. Named the
"Page-Russell" method after its British originators, this technique featured an
initial one-second shock, which caused a major convulsion, and then five to nine
additional shocks in the middle of the primary and follow-on convulsions. Even
Drs. Page and Russell limited their treatment to once a day, and they always
stopped as soon as their patient showed "pronounced confusion" and became
"faulty in habits." Cameron, however, welcomed this kind of impairment as a sign
the treatment was taking effect and plowed ahead through his routine.
The frequent screams of patients that echoed through the hospital did not
deter Cameron or most of his associates in their attempts to "depattern" their
subjects completely. Other hospital patients report being petrified by the
"sleep rooms," where the treatment took place, and they would usually creep down
the opposite side of the hall.
Cameron described this combined
sleep-electroshock treatment as lasting between 15 to 30 days, with some
subjects staying in up to 65 days (in which case, he reported, he awakened them
for three days in the middle). Sometimes, as in the case of Lauren G., patients
would try to escape when the sedatives wore thin, and the staff would have to
chase after them. "It was a tremendous nursing job just to keep these people
going during the treatment," recalls a doctor intimately familiar with Cameron's
operation. This doctor paints a picture of dazed patients, incapable of taking
care of themselves, often groping their way around the hospital and urinating on
the floor.
Cameron wrote that his typical depatterning
patient—usually a woman—moved through three distinct stages. In the first, the
subject lost much of her memory. Yet she still knew where she was, why she was
there, and who the people were who treated her. In the second phase, she lost
her "space-time image," but still wanted to remember. In fact, not being able to
answer questions like, "Where am I?" and "How did I get here?" caused her
considerable anxiety. In the third stage, all that anxiety disappeared. Cameron
described the state as "an extremely interesting constriction of the range of
recollections which one ordinarily brings in to modify and enrich one's
statements. Hence, what the patient talks about are only his sensations of the
moment, and he talks about them almost exclusively in highly concrete terms. His
remarks are entirely uninfluenced by previous recollections—nor are they
governed in any way by his forward anticipations. He lives in the immediate
present. All schizophrenic symptoms have disappeared. There is complete amnesia
for all events in his life."
Lauren G. and 52 other subjects
at Allan Memorial received this level of depatterning in 1958 and 1959. Cameron
had already developed the technique when the CIA funding started. The Agency
sent the psychiatrist research money to take the treatment beyond this
point. Agency officials wanted to know if, once Cameron had produced the blank
mind, he could then program in new patterns of behavior, as he claimed he could.
As early as 1953—the year he headed the American Psychiatric Association—Cameron
conceived a technique he called "psychic driving," by which he would bombard the
subject with repeated verbal messages. From tape recordings based on interviews
with the patient, he selected emotionally loaded "cue statements"—first negative
ones to get rid of unwanted behavior and then positive to condition in desired
personality traits. On the negative side, for example, the patient would hear
this message as she lay in a stupor:
Madeleine, you let your mother and father treat you as a child all
through your single life. You let your mother check you up sexually after
every date you had with a boy. You hadn't enough determination to tell her to
stop it. You never stood up for yourself against your mother or father but
would run away from trouble.... They used to call you "crying Madeleine." Now
that you have two children, you don't seem to be able to manage them and keep
a good relationship with your husband. You are drifting apart. You don't go
out together. You have not been able to keep him interested sexually.
Leonard Rubenstein, Cameron's principal
assistant, whose entire salary was paid from CIA-front funds, put the message on
a continuous tape loop and played it for 16 hours every day for several weeks.
An electronics technician, with no medical or psychological background,
Rubenstein, an electrical whiz, designed a giant tape recorder that could play 8
loops for 8 patients at the same time. Cameron had the speakers installed
literally under the pillows in the "sleep rooms." "We made sure they heard it,"
says a doctor who worked with Cameron. With some patients, Cameron intensified
the negative effect by running wires to their legs and shocking them at the end
of the message.
When Cameron thought the negative "psychic
driving" had gone far enough, he switched the patient over to 2 to 5 weeks of
positive tapes:
You mean to get well. To do this you must let your feelings come
out. It is all right to express your anger.... You want to stop your mother
bossing you around. Begin to assert yourself first in little things and soon
you will be able to meet her on an equal basis. You will then be free to be a
wife and mother just like other women.
Cameron
wrote that psychic driving provided a way to make "direct, controlled changes in
personality," without having to resolve the subject's conflicts or make her
relive past experiences. As far as is known, no present-day psychologist or
psychiatrist accepts this view. Dr. Donald Hebb, who headed McGill's psychology
department at the time Cameron was in charge of psychiatry, minces no words when
asked specifically about psychic driving: "That was an awful set of ideas
Cameron was working with. It called for no intellectual respect. If you actually
look at what he was doing and what he wrote, it would make you laugh. If I had a
graduate student who talked like that, I'd throw him out." Warming to his
subject, Hebb continues: "Look, Cameron was no good as a researcher.... He was
eminent because of politics." Nobody said such things at the time, however.
Cameron was a very powerful man.
The Scottish-born
psychiatrist, who never lost the burr in his voice, kept searching for ways to
perfect depatterning and psychic driving. He held out to the CIA front—the
Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology—that he could find more rapid and
less damaging ways to break down behavior. He sent the Society a proposal that
combined his two techniques with sensory deprivation and strong drugs. His
smorgasbord approach brought together virtually all possible techniques of mind
control, which he tested individually and together. When his Agency grant came
through in 1957, Cameron began work on sensory deprivation.
For several years, Agency officials had been interested in the interrogation
possibilities of this technique that Hebb himself had pioneered at McGill with
Canadian defense and Rockefeller money. It consisted of putting a subject in a
sealed environment—a small room or even a large box—and depriving him of all
sensory input: eyes covered with goggles, ears either covered with muffs or
exposed to a constant, monotonous sound, padding to prevent touching, no
smells—with this empty regime interrupted only by meal and bathroom breaks. In
1955 Morse Allen of ARTICHOKE made contact at the National Institutes of Health
with Dr. Maitland Baldwin who had done a rather gruesome experiment in which an
Army volunteer had stayed in the "box" for 40 hours until he kicked his way out
after, in Baldwin's words, "an hour of crying loudly and sobbing in a most
heartrending fashion." The experiment convinced Baldwin that the isolation
technique could break any man, no matter how intelligent or strong-willed. Hebb,
who unlike Baldwin released his subjects when they wanted, had never left anyone
in "the box" for more than six days. Baldwin told Morse Allen that beyond that
sensory deprivation would almost certainly cause irreparable damage.
Nevertheless, Baldwin agreed that if the Agency could provide the cover and the
subjects, he would do, according to Allen's report, "terminal type" experiments.
After numerous meetings inside the CIA on how and where to fund Baldwin, an
Agency medical officer finally shot down the project as being "immoral and
inhuman," suggesting that those pushing the experiments might want to "volunteer
their heads for use in Dr. Baldwin's 'noble' project."
With
Cameron, Agency officials not only had a doctor willing to perform terminal
experiments in sensory deprivation, but one with his own source of subjects. As
part of his CIA-funded research, he had a "box" built in the converted stables
behind the hospital that housed Leonard Rubenstein and his behavioral
laboratory. Undaunted by the limits set in Hebb's work, Cameron left one woman
in for 35 days, although he had so scrambled her mind with his other techniques
that one cannot say, as Baldwin predicted to the Agency, if the prolonged
deprivation did specific damage. This subject's name was Mary C., and, try as he
might, Cameron could not get through to her. As the aloof psychiatrist wrote in
his notes: "Although the patient was prepared by both prolonged sensory
isolation (35 days) and by repeated depatterning, and although she received 101
days of positive driving, no favorable results were obtained."[5] Before
prescribing this treatment, Cameron had diagnosed the 52-year-old Mary C.:
"Conversion reaction in a woman of the involutional age with mental anxiety;
hypochondriatic." In other words, Mary C. was going through menopause.
In his proposal to the CIA front, Cameron also said he would
test curare, the South American arrow poison which, when liberally applied,
kills by paralyzing internal body functions. In nonlethal doses, curare causes a
limited paralysis which blocks but does not stop these functions. According to
his papers, some of which wound up in the archives of the American Psychiatric
Association, Cameron injected subjects with curare in conjunction with sensory
deprivation, presumably to immobilize them further.
Cameron
also tested LSD in combination with psychic driving and other techniques. In
late 1956 and early 1957, one of his subjects was Val Orlikow, whose husband
David has become a member of the Canadian parliament. Suffering from what she
calls a "character neurosis that started with postpartum depression," she
entered Allan Memorial as one of Cameron's personal patients. He soon put her
under his version of LSD therapy. One to four times a week, he or another doctor
would come into her room and give her a shot of LSD, mixed with either a
stimulant or a depressant and then leave her alone with a tape recorder that
played excerpts from her last session with him. As far as is known, no other LSD
researcher ever subjected his patients to unsupervised trips—certainly not over
the course of two months when her hospital records show she was given LSD 14
times. "It was terrifying," Mrs. Orlikow recalls. "You're afraid you've gone off
somewhere and can't come back." She was supposed to write down on a pad whatever
came into her head while listening to the tapes, but often she became so
frightened that she could not write at all. "You become very small," she says,
as her voice quickens and starts to reflect some of her horror. "You're going to
fall off the step, and God, you're going down into hell because it's so far, and
you are so little. Like Alice, where is the pill that makes you big, and you're
a squirrel, and you can't get out of the cage, and somebody's going to kill
you." Then, suddenly, Mrs. Orlikow pulls out of it and lucidly states, "Some
very weird things happened."
Mrs. Orlikow hated the LSD
treatment. Several times she told Cameron she would take no more, and the
psychiatrist would put his arm around her and ask, "Lassie," which he called all
his women patients, "don't you want to get well, so you can go home and see your
husband?" She remembers feeling guilty about not following the doctor's orders,
and the thought of disappointing Cameron, whom she idolized, crushed her.
Finally, after Cameron talked her out of quitting the treatment several times,
she had to end it. She left the hospital but stayed under his private care. In
1963 he put her back in the hospital for more intensive psychic driving. "I
thought he was God," she states. "I don't know how I could have been so
stupid.... A lot of us were naive. We thought psychiatrists had the answers.
Here was the greatest in the world, with all these titles."
In
defense of Cameron, a former associate says the man truly cared about the
welfare of his patients. He wanted to make them well. As his former staff
psychologist wrote:
He abhorred the waste of human potential, seen most dramatically
in the young people whose minds were distorted by what was then considered to
be schizophrenia. He felt equally strongly about the loss of wisdom in the
aged through memory malfunction. For him, the end justified the means, and
when one is dealing with the waste of human potential, it is easy to adopt
this stance.
Cameron retired abruptly in 1964,
for unexplained reasons. His successor, Dr. Robert Cleghorn, made a virtually
unprecedented move in the academic world of mutual back-scratching and praise.
He commissioned a psychiatrist and a psychologist, unconnected to Cameron, to
study his electroshock work. They found that 60 percent of Cameron's depatterned
patients complained they still had amnesia for the period 6 months to 10 years
before the therapy.[6] They could
find no clinical proof that showed the treatment to be any more or less
effective than other approaches. They concluded that "the incidence of physical
complications and the anxiety generated in the patient because of real or
imagined memory difficulty argue against" future use of the technique.
The study-team members couched their report in densely
academic jargon, but one of them speaks more clearly now. He talks bitterly of
one of Cameron's former patients who needs to keep a list of her simplest
household chores to remember how to do them. Then he repeats several times how
powerful a man Cameron was, how he was "the godfather of Canadian psychiatry."
He continues, "I probably shouldn't talk about this, but Cameron—for him to do
what he did—he was a very schizophrenic guy, who totally detached himself from
the human implications of his work . . . God, we talk about concentration camps.
I don't want to make this comparison, but God, you talk about 'we didn't know it
was happening,' and it was—right in our back yard."
Cameron
died in 1967, at age 66, while climbing a mountain. The American Journal of
Psychiatry published a long and glowing obituary with a full-page picture of
his not-unpleasant face.
D. Ewen Cameron did not need the CIA
to corrupt him. He clearly had his mind set on doing unorthodox research long
before the Agency front started to fund him. With his own hospital and source of
subjects, he could have found elsewhere encouragement and money to replace the
CIA's contribution which never exceeded $20,000 a year. However, Agency
officials knew exactly what they were paying for. They traveled periodically to
Montreal to observe his work, and his proposal was chillingly explicit. In
Cameron, they had a doctor, conveniently outside the United States, willing to
do terminal experiments in electroshock, sensory deprivation, drug testing, and
all of the above combined. By literally wiping the minds of his subjects clean
by depatterning and then trying to program in new behavior, Cameron carried the
process known as "brainwashing" to its logical extreme.
It
cannot be said how many—if any—other Agency brainwashing projects reached the
extremes of Cameron's work. Details are scarce, since many of the principal
witnesses have died, will not talk about what went on, or lie about it. In what
ways the CIA applied work like Cameron's is not known. What is known, however,
is that the intelligence community, including the CIA, changed the face of the
scientific community during the 1950s and early 1960s by its interest in such
experiments. Nearly every scientist on the frontiers of brain research found men
from the secret agencies looking over his shoulders, impinging on the research.
The experience of Dr. John Lilly illustrates how this intrusion came about.
In 1953 Lilly worked at the National Institutes of Health,
outside Washington, doing experimental studies in an effort to "map" the body
functions controlled from various locations in the brain. He devised a method of
pounding up to 600 tiny sections of hypodermic tubing into the skulls of
monkeys, through which he could insert electrodes "into the brain to any desired
distance and at any desired location from the cortex down to the bottom of the
skull," he later wrote. Using electric stimulation, Lilly discovered precise
centers of the monkeys' brains that caused pain, fear, anxiety, and anger. He
also discovered precise, separate parts of the brain that controlled erection,
ejaculation, and orgasm in male monkeys. Lilly found that a monkey, given access
to a switch operating a correctly planted electrode, would reward himself with
nearly continuous orgasms—at least once every 3 minutes—for up to 16 hours a
day.
As Lilly refined his brain "maps," officials of the CIA
and other agencies descended upon him with a request for a briefing. Having a
phobia against secrecy, Lilly agreed to the briefing only under the condition
that it and his work remain unclassified, completely open to outsiders. The
intelligence officials submitted to the conditions most reluctantly, since they
knew that Lilly's openness would not only ruin the spy value of anything they
learned but could also reveal the identities and the interests of the
intelligence officials to enemy agents. They considered Lilly annoying,
uncooperative—possibly even suspicious.
Soon Lilly began to
have trouble going to meetings and conferences with his colleagues. As part of
the cooperation with the intelligence agencies, most of them had agreed to have
their projects officially classified as SECRET, which meant that access to the
information required a security clearance.[7] Lilly's
security clearance was withdrawn for review, then tangled up and misplaced—all
of which he took as pressure to cooperate with the CIA. Lilly, whose imagination
needed no stimulation to conjure up pictures of CIA agents on deadly missions
with remote-controlled electrodes strategically implanted in their brains,
decided to withdraw from that field of research. He says he had decided that the
physical intrusion of the electrodes did too much brain damage for him to
tolerate.
In 1954 Lilly began trying to isolate the operations
of the brain, free of outside stimulation, through sensory deprivation. He
worked in an office next to Dr. Maitland Baldwin, who the following year agreed
to perform terminal sensory deprivation experiments for ARTICHOKE's Morse Allen
but who never told Lilly he was working in the field. While Baldwin experimented
with his sensory-deprivation "box," Lilly invented a special "tank." Subjects
floated in a tank of body-temperature water wearing a face mask that provided
air but cut off sight and sound. Inevitably, intelligence officials swooped down
on Lilly again, interested in the use of his tank as an interrogation tool.
Could involuntary subjects be placed in the tank and broken down to the point
where their belief systems or personalities could be altered?
It was central to Lilly's ethic that he himself be the first subject of any
experiment, and, in the case of the consciousness-exploring tank work, he and
one colleague were the only ones. Lilly realized that the intelligence
agencies were not interested in sensory deprivation because of its positive
benefits, and he finally concluded that it was impossible for him to work at the
National Institutes of Health without compromising his principles. He quit in
1958.
Contrary to most people's intuitive expectations, Lilly
found sensory deprivation to be a profoundly integrating experience for himself
personally. He considered himself to be a scientist who subjectively explored
the far wanderings of the brain. In a series of private experiments, he pushed
himself into the complete unknown by injecting pure Sandoz LSD into his thigh
before climbing into the sensory-deprivation tank.[8] When the
counterculture sprang up, Lilly became something of a cult figure, with his
unique approach to scientific inquiry—though he was considered more of an
outcast by many in the professional research community.
For
most of the outside world, Lilly became famous with the release of the popular
film, The Day of the Dolphin, which the filmmakers acknowledged was based
on Lilly's work with dolphins after he left NIH. Actor George C. Scott portrayed
a scientist, who, like Lilly, loved dolphins, did pioneering experiments on
their intelligence, and tried to find ways to communicate with them. In the
movie, Scott became dismayed when the government pounced on his breakthrough in
talking to dolphins and turned it immediately to the service of war. In real
life, Lilly was similarly dismayed when Navy and CIA scientists trained dolphins
for special warfare in the waters off Vietnam.[9]
A few scientists like Lilly made up their minds not to cross
certain ethical lines in their experimental work, while others were prepared to
go further even than their sponsors from ARTICHOKE and MKULTRA. Within the
Agency itself, there was only one final question: Will a technique work? CIA
officials zealously tracked every lead, sparing no expense to check each angle
many times over.
By the time the MKULTRA program ended in
1963, Agency researchers had found no foolproof way to brainwash another
person.[10] "All
experiments beyond a certain point always failed," says the MKULTRA veteran,
"because the subject jerked himself back for some reason or the subject got
amnesiac or catatonic." Agency officials found through work like Cameron's that
they could create "vegetables," but such people served no operational use.
People could be tortured into saying anything, but no science could guarantee
that they would tell the truth.
The impotency of brainwashing
techniques left the Agency in a difficult spot when Yuri Nosenko defected to the
United States in February 1964. A ranking official of the Soviet KGB, Nosenko
brought with him stunning information. He said the Russians had bugged the
American embassy in Moscow, which turned out to be true. He named some Russian
agents in the West. And he said that he had personally inspected the KGB file of
Lee Harvey Oswald, who only a few months earlier had been murdered before he
could be brought to trial for the assassination of President Kennedy. Nosenko
said he learned that the KGB had had no interest in Oswald.
Was Nosenko telling the truth, or was he a KGB "plant" sent to throw the United
States off track about Oswald? Was his information about penetration correct, or
was Nosenko himself the penetration? Was he acting in good faith? Were the men
within the CIA who believed he was acting in good faith themselves acting in
good faith? These and a thousand other questions made up the classical trick
deck for spies—each card having "true" on one side and "false" on the other.
Top CIA officials felt a desperate need to resolve the issue
of Nosenko's legitimacy. With numerous Agency counterintelligence operations
hanging in the balance, Richard Helms, first as Deputy Director and then as
Director, allowed CIA operators to work Nosenko over with the interrogation
method in which Helms apparently had the most faith. It turned out to be not any
truth serum or electroshock depatterning program or anything else from the
Agency's brainwashing search. Helms had Nosenko put through the tried-and-true
Soviet method: isolate the prisoner, deaden his senses, break him. For more than
three years—1,277 days, to be exact—Agency officers kept Nosenko in solitary
confinement. As if they were using the Hinkle-Wolff study as their instruction
manual and the Cardinal Mindszenty case as their success story, the CIA men had
guards watch over Nosenko day and night, giving him not a moment of privacy. A
light bulb burned continuously in his cell. He was allowed nothing to read—not
even the labels on toothpaste boxes. When he tried to distract himself by making
a chess set from pieces of lint in his cell, the guards discovered his game and
swept the area clean. Nosenko had no window, and he was eventually put in a
specially built 12' X 12' steel bank vault.
Nosenko broke
down. He hallucinated. He talked his head off to his interrogators, who
questioned him for 292 days, often while they had him strapped into a lie
detector. If he told the truth, they did not believe him. While the Soviets and
Chinese had shown that they could make a man admit anything, the CIA
interrogators apparently lacked a clear idea of exactly what they wanted Nosenko
to confess. When it was all over and Richard Helms ordered Nosenko freed after
three and a half years of illegal detention, some key Agency officers still
believed he was a KGB plant. Others thought he was on the level. Thus the big
questions remained unresolved, and to this day, CIA men—past and present—are
bitterly split over who Nosenko really is.
With the Nosenko
case, the CIA's brainwashing programs had come full circle. Spurred by the
widespread alarm over communist tactics, Agency officials had investigated the
field, started their own projects, and looked to the latest technology to make
improvements. After 10 years of research, with some rather gruesome results, CIA
officials had come up with no techniques on which they felt they could rely.
Thus, when the operational crunch came, they fell back on the basic brutality of
the Soviet system.
Notes
Edward Hunter's article " 'Brain-Washing' Tactics
Force Chinese into Ranks of Communist Party" appeared in the Miami News on
September 24, 1950. His book was Brainwashing in Red China (New York:
Vanguard Press, 1951). Other material came from several interviews with Hunter
just before he died in June 1978.
The Air Force document cited
on brainwashing was called "Air Force Headquarters Panel Convened to Record Air
Force Position Regarding Conduct of Personnel in Event of Capture," December 14,
1953. Researcher Sam Zuckerman found it and showed it to me.
The figures on American prisoners in Korea and the quote from Edward Hunter came
from hearings before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations,84th
Congress, June 19,20,26, and 27, 1956.
The material on the
setting up of the Cornell-Hinkle-Wolff study came from interviews with Hinkle,
Helen Goodell, and several CIA sources. Hinkle's and Wolff's study on
brainwashing appeared in classified form on 2 April 1956 as a Technical Services
Division publication called Communist Control Techniques and in
substantially the same form but unclassified as "Communist Interrogation and
Indoctrination of 'Enemies of the State'—An Analysis of Methods Used by the
Communist State Police." AMA Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry,
August, 1956, Vol. 76.
Allen Dulles spoke on "Brain Warfare"
before the Alumni Conference of Princeton University, Hot Springs, Virginia on
April 10, 1953, and the quote on guinea pigs came from that speech.
The comments of Rockefeller Foundation officials about D. Ewen Cameron
and the record of Rockefeller funding were found in Robert S. Morrison's diary,
located in the Rockefeller Foundation Archives, Pocantico Hills, New York.
The key articles on Cameron's work on depatterning and psychic
driving were "Production of Differential Amnesia as a Factor in the Treatment of
Schizophrenia," Comprehensive Psychiatry, 1960, 1, p. 26 and "Effects of
Repetition of Verbal Signals upon the Behavior of Chronic Psychoneurotic
Patients" by Cameron, Leonard Levy, and Leonard Rubenstein, Journal of Mental
Science, 1960, 106, 742. The background on Page-Russell electroshocks came
from "Intensified Electrical Convulsive Therapy in the Treatment of Mental
Disorders" by L. G. M. Page and R. J. Russell, Lancet, Volume 254,
Jan.—June, 1948. Dr. John Cavanagh of Washington, D.C. provided background on
the use of electroshock and sedatives in psychiatry.
Cameron's MKULTRA subproject was #68. See especially document
68-37, "Application for Grant to Study the Effects upon Human Behavior of the
Repetition of Verbal Signals," January 21, 1957.
Part of
Cameron's papers are in the archives of the American Psychiatric Association in
Washington, and they provided considerable information on the treatment of Mary
C., as well as a general look at his work. Interviews with at least a dozen of
his former colleagues also provided considerable information.
Interviews Yvith John Lilly and Donald Hebb provided background on sensory
deprivation. Maitland Baldwin's work in the field was discussed in a whole
series of ARTICHOKE documents including #A/B, I,76/4, 21 March 1955, Subject:
Total Isolation; #A/B,1, 76/12, 19 May 1955, Subject: Total Isolation—Additional
Comments; and #A/B, I, 76/17,27 April 1955, Subject: Total Isolation,
Supplemental Report #2. The quote from Aldous Huxley on sensory deprivation is
taken from the book of his writings, Moksha: Writings on Psychedelics and the
Visionary Experience (1931-1963), edited by Michael Horowitz and Cynthia
Palmer (New York: Stonehill, 1978).
The material on Val
Orlikow's experiences with Dr. Cameron came from interviews with her and her
husband David and from portions of her hospital records, which she furnished.
Cameron's staff psychologist Barbara Winrib's comments on him
were found in a letter to the Montreal Star, August 11, 1977.
The study of Cameron's electroshock work ordered by Dr. Cleghorn was
published as "Intensive Electroconvulsive Therapy: A Follow-up Study," by A. E.
Schwartzman and P. E. Termansen, Canadian Psychiatric Association, Volume
12, 1967.
In addition to several interviews, much material on
John Lilly came from his autobiography, The Scientist (Philadelphia: J.
B. Lippincott Company, 1978).
The CIA's handling of Yuri
Nosenko was discussed at length in hearings before the House Assassinations
Committee on September 15, 1978. The best press account of this testimony was
written by Jeremiah O'Leary of the Washington Star on September 16, 1978:
"How CIA Tried to Break Defector in Oswald Case."
Footnotes
1. Among the Air Force and
Army project leaders were Dr. Fred Williams of the Air Force Psychological
Warfare Division, Robert Jay Lifton, Edgar Schein, Albert Biderman, and
Lieutenant Colonel James Monroe (an Air Force officer who would later go to work
full time in CIA behavioral programs). (back)
2. Cameron himself may not have known that
the Agency was the ultimate source of these funds which came through a conduit,
the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology. A CIA document stated he was
unwitting when the grants started in 1957, and it cannot be said whether he ever
found out. (back)
3. Cameron wrote that when a patient
remembered his schizophrenic symptoms, the schizophrenic behavior usually
returned. If the amnesia held for these symptoms, as Cameron claimed it often
did, the subject usually did not have a relapse. Even in his "cured" patients,
Cameron found that Rorschach tests continued to show schizophrenic thinking
despite the improvement in overt behavior. To a layman, this would seem to
indicate that Cameron's approach got only at the symptoms, not the causes of
mental problems. Not deterred, however, Cameron dismissed this inconsistency as
a "persistent enigma." (back)
4. Cameron wrote in a professional journal
that he gave only two electroshocks a day, but a doctor who actually
administered the treatment for him says that three were common at the beginning
of the therapy. (back)
5. In his proposal to the Human Ecology
group, Cameron wrote that his subjects would be spending only 16 hours a day in
sensory deprivation, while they listened to psychic driving tapes (thus
providing some outside stimuli). Nevertheless, one of Cameron's colleagues
states that some patients, including Mary C. were in continuously. Always
looking for a better way, Cameron almost certainly tried both variations. (back)
6. Cleghorn's team found little loss of
memory on objective tests, like the Wechsler Memory Scale but speculated that
these tests measured a different memory function—short-term recall—than that the
subjects claimed to be missing. (back)
7. Lilly and other veterans of
government-supported research note that there is a practical advantage for the
scientist who allows his work to be classified: it gives him an added claim on
government funds. He is then in a position to argue that if his work is
important enough to be SECRET, it deserves money. (back)
8. As was the case with LSD work, sensory
deprivation research had both a mind control and a transcendental side. Aldous
Huxley wrote thusly about the two pioneers in the field: "What men like Hebb and
Lilly are doing in the laboratory was done by the Christian hermits in the
Thebaid and elsewhere, and by Hindu and Tibetan hermits in the remote fastness
of the Himalayas. My own belief is that these experiences really tell us
something about the nature of the universe, that they are valuable in themselves
and, above all, valuable when incorporated into our world-picture and acted upon
[in] normal life." (back)
9. In a program called "swimmer
nullification," government scientists trained dolphins to attack enemy frogmen
with huge needles attached to their snouts. The dolphins carried tanks of
compressed air, which when jabbed into a deepdiver caused him to pop dead to the
surface. A scientist who worked in this CIA-Navy program states that some of the
dolphins sent to Vietnam during the late 1960s got out of their pens and
disappeared—unheard of behavior for trained dolphins. John Lilly confirms that a
group of the marine mammals stationed at Cam Ranh Bay did go AWOL, and he adds
that he heard that some eventually returned with their bodies and fins covered
with attack marks made by other dolphins. (back)
10. After 1963 the Agency's Science and
Technology Directorate continued brain research with unknown results. See
Chapter 12. (back)