NOVEMBER
17, 2017
The
death (or possibly murder) of Frank
Olson was but a hint of the enormous secret CIA program of research
into techniques of mind alteration and control. The whole enterprise was
assigned the code-name MK-ULTRA and was run out of the CIA’s Technical Services
Division, headed in the 1950s by Willis Gibbons, a former executive of the US
Rubber Company. In the division’s laboratories and workshops researchers
labored on poisons, gadgets designed to maim and kill, techniques of torture
and implements to carry such techniques to agonizing fruition. Here also were
developed surveillance equipment and kindred tools of the espionage trade. All
of these activities made the Technical Services Division a vital partner of the
covert operations wing of the Agency.
Within
Technical Services MK-ULTRA projects came under the control of the Chemical
Division, headed from 1951 to 1956 by Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, a New York Jew who
received his doctorate in chemistry from California Tech. Born with a clubfoot
and afflicted with a severe stammer, Gottlieb pushed himself with unremitting
intensity. Despite his physical affliction he was an ardent square dancer and
exponent of the polka, capering across many a dance floor and dragging visiting
psychiatrists and chemists on terpsichorean trysts where appalling plans of
mind control were ruminated amidst the blare of the bands.
Gottlieb
and his wife, a fundamentalist Christian, lived on a farm in the Shenandoah
Mountains in northern Virginia. Their house was a former slave quarters, and
Gottlieb rose every morning before sunrise to milk his herd of goats.
As
was demonstrated in the Olson affair, Gottlieb had powerful friends inside the
Agency, notably Richard Helms, at that time deputy director for covert
operations. MK-ULTRA was created on April 13, 1953, when CIA director Allen Dulles
approved Helms’s proposal to develop the “covert use” of biological and
chemical materials. The code-name ULTRA may have been an echo from Helms’s and
Dulles’s OSS days, when ULTRA (the breaking of the primary German code)
represented one of the biggest secrets of World War II.
Gottlieb
himself said that the creation of MK-ULTRA was inspired by reports of
mind-control work in the Soviet Union and China. He defined the mission as an
investigation into how individual behavior could be “altered through covert
means.” He gave this description in 1977 during the Kennedy hearings,
testifying via remote speaker from another room. “It was felt to be mandatory,”
Gottlieb went on, “and of the utmost urgency for our intelligence organization
to establish what was possible in this field.”
The
CIA had followed the trial of the Hungarian Roman Catholic Cardinal Josef
Mindszenty in Budapest in 1949 and concluded that the Cardinal’s ultimate
confession had been manipulated through “some unknown force.” Initially the belief
was that Mindszenty had been hypnotized, and intrigued CIA officers conjectured
that they might use the same techniques on people they were interrogating. The
CIA’s Office of Security, headed at the time by Sheffield Edwards, developed a
hypnosis project called Bluebird, whose object was to get an individual “to do
our bidding against his will and even against such fundamental laws of nature
as self-preservation.”
The
first Bluebird operations were conducted in Japan in October 1950 and were
reportedly witnessed by Richard Helms. Twenty-five North Korean prisoners of
war were given alternating doses of depressants and stimulants. The POWs were
shot up with barbiturates, allowing them to go to sleep, then abruptly awoken
with injections of amphetamines, hypnotized, then questioned. This operation
was in total contravention of international protocols on the treatment of POWs.
These Bluebird interrogations continued throughout the Korean War.
Simultaneously,
US POWs held in North Korea were being paraded by their captors, alleging that
the US was using chemical and biological agents against the Koreans and the
Chinese. An international commission in 1952 concluded that the charges had
merit. But the CIA’s response was to leak to favored reporters at Time, the
Chicago Tribune, and the Miami Herald stories to the effect that the American
POWs had been brainwashed by their Communist captors. This had the double
utility of squelching the charges of germ warfare and also of justifying the
Bluebird program.
In
fact, US military and intelligence agencies had been dabbling in mind control
research for more than forty years. One of the early experimenters was George
H. Estabrooks, a research psychologist who taught for years at Colgate College
in upstate New York. Estabrooks was a Rhodes scholar who had trained in
psychology at Harvard with Gardner Murphy. The psychologist, whose specialty
was the use of hypnosis in intelligence operations, worked as a contractor for
Naval Intelligence and was later to advise CIA researchers such as Martin Orne
and Milton Erickson.
In
1971, Estabrooks gave a chilling portrait of his career in an article in
Science Digest titled “Hypnosis Comes of Age.” “One of the most fascinating but
dangerous applications of hypnosis is its use in military intelligence,”
Estabrooks wrote. “This is a field with which I am familiar through formulating
guidelines for the technique used by the US in two world wars. Communication in
war is always a headache. Codes can be broken. A professional spy may or may not
stay bought. Your own man may have unquestionable loyalty but his judgement is
always open to question. The hypnotic courier, on the other hand, provides a
unique solution.” Estabrooks related in matter-of-fact detail his role in
hypnotizing intelligence officers for dangerous missions inside occupied Japan,
describing how through hypnosis he had “locked” information inside the mind of
unwitting soldiers, information that could only be retrieved by Estabrooks and
other designated military psychologists.
Then
Estabrooks described how he and other government doctors developed techniques
to split personalities, using a combination of hypnosis and drugs. “The
potential for military intelligence has been nightmarish,” Estabrooks wrote. In
one case, he claimed that he had created a new personality in a “normal”
Marine. The new personality “talked Communist doctrine and meant it.”
Estabrooks and the army contrived to have the Marine given a dishonorable
discharge and encouraged him to penetrate the Communist Party. All along,
Estabrooks said, the “deeper personality” was that of the Marine, which had
been programmed to operate as a kind of “subconscious spy.” “I had a pipeline
straight into the Communist camp. It worked beautifully for months with this
subject, but the technique backfired. While there was no way for an enemy to
expose Jones’s dual personality, they suspected it, and played the same trick
on us later.”
The
CIA’s Bluebird project, which investigated hypnosis and other techniques in the
early 1950s, was headed by Morse Allen, a veteran of Naval Intelligence and a
specialist in techniques of interrogation. Criminologists revere Allen as a
pioneer in the use of the polygraph. Allen eventually became disappointed with
the research into hypnosis, and developed a keen interest in the more robust
fields of electro-shock therapy and psycho-surgery.
One
of the CIA’s first grants to an outside contractor was to a psychiatrist who
claimed that he could use electro-shock therapy to produce a state of total
amnesia “or excruciating pain.” Another $100,000 CIA grant went to a
neurologist who vouched for lobotomies and other types of brain surgery as
useful tools in the art of interrogation. Both of these techniques would later
become staples of the operations of one of MK-ULTRA’s most infamous
contractors, Dr. D. Ewen Cameron.
In
1952, the codeword Bluebird was changed to Artichoke. A CIA report on the
project says that, among other things, Artichoke was meant to investigate the
theory that “agents might be given cover stories under hypnosis and not only
learn them faultlessly, but actually believe them. Every detail could be made
to sink in. The conviction and apparent sincerity with which an individual will
defend a false given under post-hypnotic suggestion is almost unbelievable.”
In
one experiment, a female CIA security officer was hypnotized and provided with
a new identity. When she was later interrogated, the agent “defended it hotly,
denying her true name and rationalizing with conviction the possession of identity
cards made out to her real self.” Artichoke also explored using hypnosis to
recruit high-level political agents and unmask spies and double agents, a
particular obsession of James Jesus Angleton, the CIA’s counterintelligence
chief.
The
CIA memos of the time are filled with complaints about the difficulties of
finding suitable human subjects for experimental research. “Human subjects”
were evoked in the tactful phrase “unique research material.” At first the CIA
experimented mostly on prisoners, drug addicts and terminally sick destitutes.
Details are scanty because Helms ordered all CIA records on the programs
destroyed, but much of the “unique research material” came in the form of
prisoners at California’s Vacaville prison, the Georgia state penitentiary and
the Tennessee state prison system. There was a problem, however. In these
instances a certain modicum of informed consent was often required. Prisoners
could get reduced sentences for agreeing to participate in the experiments.
Drug addicts would get cash, drugs or treatment. Informed consent was often a
condition in any treatment of the terminally ill poor. For the CIA researchers
any type of informed consent was antithetical to their research task, which was
to make unwilling subjects talk and covertly elicit cooperation.
By
1952 the CIA’s scientists began to test their techniques on what a CIA memo
described as “individuals of dubious loyalty, suspected agents or plants,
subjects having known reasons for deception.” As one CIA psychologist told John
Marks, author of The
Search for the Manchurian Candidate, a pioneering investigation into these
activities in the late 1970s, “one did not put a high premium on the civil
rights of a person who was treasonable to his own country.” One suspected
double agent was taken to a “thoroughly isolated” CIA safehouse in rural
Germany, “far removed from surrounding neighbors.” The man was told that he was
to undergo a series of routine medical and psychological tests as condition of
his employment. According to detailed account in the Artichoke files, the
entire operation was conducted on the second floor of the safehouse, so as not
to arouse the curiosity of “the household staff and security detail.”
The
session was recorded with “a special device that is easily concealable” and was
monitored by the CIA medical division and investigators from Angleton’s
counterintelligence division. The subject was brought to the safehouse at about
10:30 p.m. and was given a casual interview that lasted about an hour. Then he
was offered a glass of whiskey, which had been spiked with Nembutal. Over the
next three days, the subject underwent intense interrogation, while CIA doctors
gave him “intravenous infusions” of hallucinogens and placed him under
hypnosis. The subject was also attached to a polygraph machine. The Artichoke
scientists deemed the interrogation “profitable and successful.” They noted
that post-hypnotic suggestion had left the subject “completely confused” with a
“severe headache” and a “vague and faulty” memory of the interrogation.
Though
Bluebird had begun in the CIA’s Security division, a contretemps at the CIA
station in Frankfurt, Germany caused the transfer of these CIA researchers to
the Covert Operations sector of the agency. In Frankfurt, where the CIA was
ensconced in the former offices of IG Farben, a CIA civilian contractor – an
American psychologist named Richard Wendt – was assigned the task of testing a
cocktail of THC, Dexedrine and Seconal on five people under interrogation who
were suspected of being double agents or bogus defectors. Wendt brought along
his mistress to the Frankfurt sessions and was partying hard when his wife
arrived. Amid the ensuing fracas, the CIA’s man fled up a cathedral tower and
threatened to throw himself off it. Amid these security lapses, the Security
branch lost control of research, which now passed to Covert Operations, and
eventually into the hands of Dr. Gottlieb.
Furnished
with $300,000 from Allen Dulles, Gottlieb started farming out research to
characters such as Harold Abramson, Olson’s nemesis. In 1953, Dr. Abramson was
given $85,000. His grant proposal listed six areas of investigation:
disturbance of memory, discrediting by aberrant behavior, alteration of sex
patterns, eliciting of information, suggestibility and creation of dependency.
Another
early recipient of Gottlieb’s money was Dr. Harris Isbell, who ran the Center
for Addiction Research in Lexington, Kentucky. Passing through Isbell’s center
was a captive group of human guinea pigs in the shape of a steady stream of
black heroin addicts. Isbell developed a “points system” to secure their
cooperation in his research. These people, supposedly being delivered from
their drug habits, were awarded heroin and morphine in amounts relative to the
nature of a particular research task. It was the normal habit of Gottlieb and
his CIA colleagues back in Virginia to test all materials on themselves, but
more than 800 different compounds were sent over to Isbell’s shop for the
addicts to try first.
Perhaps
the most infamous experiment in Louisville came when Isbell gave LSD to seven
black male heroin addicts for seventy-seven straight days. Isbell’s research
notes indicate “double,” “triple” and “quadruple” as he hiked the doses. Noting
the apparent tolerance of the subjects to this incredible regimen of lysergic
acid, Isbell explained in chilling tones that “this type of behavior is to be
expected in patients of this type.” In another eerie reprise of the Nazi
doctors’ Dachau experiments, Isbell had nine black males strapped to tables,
injected with psilocybin, rectal thermometers inserted, lights shown in their
eyes to measure pupil dilation and joints whacked to test neural reactions. The
money for Isbell’s research was being funneled by the CIA through the National
Institutes of Health.
Isbell
also played a key role as the middleman for the CIA in getting supplies of
narcotics and hallucinogens from drug companies. The Agency had two main
concerns: the acquisition of supplies and new compounds, and veto power over
sales of such materials to the Eastern bloc. To take one example, in 1953 the
CIA became concerned that Sandoz, the Swiss pharmaceutical firm for which
Albert Hoffman had developed LSD, was planning to put the drug on the open
market. So the Agency offered to buy Sandoz’s entire production run of LSD for
$250,000. Ultimately, Sandoz agreed to supply the Agency with 100 grams a week,
deny requests from the Soviet Union and China, and also to furnish the Agency
with a regular list of its LSD customers.
In
the meantime, the CIA helped underwrite Eli Lilly’s efforts to produce
synthetic LSD. Lilly, the Indianapolis-based drug company, succeeded in this
endeavor in 1954. Gottlieb hailed this triumph as a key breakthrough that would
enable the CIA to buy the drug “in tonnage quantities.” Such large amounts were
not of course required for interrogation: Gottlieb’s aim was instead to have
the ability to incapacitate large populations and armies.
The
MK-ULTRA projects were not limited to research on adults. The CIA funded a
project at the Children’s International Summer Village. The objective was to
research how children who spoke different languages were able to communicate.
But CIA documents reveal that an ulterior motive was the identification of
promising young foreign agents. The well-known psychiatrist Loretta Bender was
also a recipient of MK-ULTRA funds. The author of the Bender-Gestalt used her
CIA money to pump hallucinogens, including LSD, into children between the ages
of seven and eleven. Many of the children were kept on the drugs for weeks at a
time. In two cases, Dr. Bender’s “treatments” lasted, on and off, more than a
year.
The
CIA funneled large grants to the University of Oklahoma, home to Dr. Louis
“Jolly” West. West would later go on to head the Violence Project at UCLA,
where he and Dr. James Hamilton, an OSS colleague of George White and a
recipient of CIA largesse, performed psychological research involving behavior
modifications on inmates at Vacaville state prison in northern California. The
MK-ULTRA funds pouring into the University of Oklahoma in the 1950s had a
similar purpose: the study of the structure and dynamics of urban youth gangs.
These studies indicate that from the CIA’s earliest days it has had a keen
interest in developing methods of social control over potentially disruptive
elements in American society.
Certainly,
one of the most nefarious of the MK-ULTRA projects was the “depatterning”
research conducted by Scottish-born psychiatrist Dr. D. Ewen Cameron. Cameron
was not hidden away in a dark closet: he was one of the most esteemed
psychiatrists of his time. He headed both the American Psychiatric Association
and the World Psychiatry Association. He sat on numerous boards and was a
contributing editor to dozens of journals. He also enjoyed a long relationship
with US intelligence agencies dating back to World War II, having been brought
to Nuremberg by Allen Dulles to help evaluate Nazi war criminals, most notably
Rudolf Hess. While in Germany Cameron also lent his hand to the journals. He
also enjoyed a long relationship with US intelligence agencies dating back to
World War II, having been brought to Nuremberg by Allen Dulles to help evaluate
Nazi war criminals, most notably Rudolf Hess. While in Germany Cameron also
lent his hand to the crafting of the Nuremberg Code on medical research.
After
the war Cameron developed a near obsession with schizophrenia. He believed that
he could cure the condition by first inducing a state of total amnesia in his
patients and then reprogramming their consciousness through a process he termed
“psychic driving.” Cameron’s base of operations was the Allan Memorial
Institute at McGill University in Montreal. Through the early 1950s, Cameron’s
work received the lavish support of the Rockefeller Foundation. Then in 1957
Cameron found a new stream of money, Gottlieb’s MK-ULTRA accounts. Over the
next four years, the CIA gave Cameron more than $60,000 for his work in
consciousness-alteration and mind control.
Using
CIA and Rockefeller funds, Cameron pioneered research into the use of sensory
deprivation techniques. He once locked a woman in a small white “box” for
thirty-five days, where she was deprived of all light, smells and sounds. The
CIA doctors back at Langley looked on with some amazement at this research,
since its own experiments with a similar sensory deprivation tank in 1955 had
induced severe psychological reactions in subjects locked up for less than
forty hours.
Cameron
used a variety of exotic drugs on his patients, once slipping LSD to an
unsuspecting woman fourteen times over a two-month period. He also investigated
the practical benefits of inducing paralysis in some of his patients by giving
them injections of curare. Lobotomies were another area of intense interest for
Dr. Cameron, who instructed his psycho-surgeons to perform their operations
using only mild local anesthetics. He wanted the patients awake so that he
could chart the minute changes in their consciousness the deeper the scalpel
blade sliced into the frontal lobe.
Nothing
satisfied Cameron quite like the use of electro-shock therapy, which he
believed could “wipe the mind clean,” allowing him to purge his patients of
their disease. To this end Cameron developed a dire treatment. First, he put
his patients into a prolonged sleep by injecting them with a daily mixture of
Thorazine, Nembutal and Seconal. Using injections of amphetamines he brought
patients out of their sleep three times a day when they would be forced to
endure severe electro-shock treatments involving voltages forty times more
intense than those considered safe and therapeutic at the time. This treatment
would sometimes last two and half to three months. Then Cameron would begin his
“psychic driving” experiment. This bizarre foray in behavioral conditioning
consisted of the patients being assaulted by verbal messages played on a
loop-feed tape player for sixteen hours a day; the speaker was often hidden
under a pillow and was designed to deliver the messages subliminally while the
patient slept.
These
experiments were conducted on more than 150 patients, one of whom was Robert
Loguey. Loguey was sent to Cameron by his family doctor, who believed that a
persistent pain Loguey complained about in his leg was psychosomatic. Loguey
was duly diagnosed as a schizophrenic by Cameron, which rendered him
immediately available as a guinea pig for Cameron’s CIA project. Loguey recalls
that one of the negative messages Cameron piped into his room for twenty-three
straight days was, “You killed your mother. You killed your mother.” When
Loguey went home, he was shocked to discover that his mother was alive and
apparently well.
Linda
McDonald was typical of Cameron’s victims, who tended to be women. McDonald was
a 25-year-old mother of five young children. She was suffering from a modest
case of post-partem depression and chronic back pains. Her physician advised
her husband that he should take Linda to see Dr. Cameron at his clinic in
Montreal. The doctor assured her husband that Cameron was “the best there was”
and would have her back home and healthy in no time. “So we went,” Linda
McDonald recalled in 1994 on the Canadian Broadcasting Company program, The
Fifth Estate. “My medical file even says I took my guitar with me. And that was
the end of my life.”
After
a few days of observation, Cameron had diagnosed McDonald as an acute
schizophrenic and had her transferred to the medical torture chamber he called
“the Sleep Room.” For the next eighty-six days, McDonald was kept in a near
comatose state by the use of powerful narcotics, and awakened only for massive
jolts from Cameron’s electro-shock machine. Over that period, McDonald received
102 electro-shock treatments.
“The
aim was to wipe out the patterns of thought and behavior which were detrimental
to the patient and replace them with healthy patterns of thought and behavior,”
said Dr. Peter Roper, a colleague of Cameron’s who still defends the
experiments. “I think this was stimulated by the effects on the American troops
of the war in Korea, how they seemed to have been brainwashed.”
Linda
McDonald emerged from Cameron’s care in a near infantile condition. “I had to
be toilet trained,” McDonald said. “I was a vegetable. I had no identity, no
memory. I had never existed in the world before. Like a baby.”
Cameron
was eased out of his post at Allan Memorial in 1964 and died of a heart attack
while mountain climbing in 1967 at the age of sixty-six. But that didn’t end
the matter. After the MK-ULTRA program was exposed, McDonald, Loguey and six
other Cameron victims filed suit against the CIA. The Agency eventually agreed
to a settlement, paying out $750,000 – but the CIA still maintains it was not
culpable for Cameron’s actions.
Anthropologists
also got into the MK-ULTRA act. Richard Prince was given CIA money for research
on “folk medicine and faith healing” among the Yoruba people in Nigeria.
Gottlieb was interested in finding possible new drugs in Nigeria and in the
mind-control techniques of Yoruba shamans. Margaret Mead sat with Ewen Cameron
on the editorial board of a CIA-funded publication called the Research in
Mental Health Newsletter, which discussed the use of psychedelic drugs to
induce and treat schizophrenia. Mead’s former husband, medical anthropologist
Gregory Bateson, was given CIA-procured LSD by Harold Abramson. Bateson, in
turn, gave some to his friend, the beat poet Allen Ginsberg. It was also
Bateson’s stash of LSD that eventually found its way to experiments being
conducted on student volunteers by Dr. Leo Hollister. One of his subjects was a
young creative writing student at Stanford, Ken Kesey, who would become the
drug’s chief proponent in the sixties counterculture.
In
the early 1960s, the CIA even helped set up a company to scour the Amazon for
potential new drugs, the Amazon Natural Drug Company. This nominally private
enterprise was run by an old CIA hand named J. C. King, who had headed the
CIA’s Western Hemisphere Division during the Bay of Pigs and was officially
moved out of the Agency shortly thereafter. Operating from his houseboat, King
supervised a network of Amazon tribespeople, anthropologists and botanists to
bring back new toxic compounds, including yage, the powerful hallucinogen used
by the Yanomamo.
In
1954, Gottlieb and his colleagues in the Technical Services Division concocted
a plan to spike punchbowls with LSD at the Agency’s Christmas party, an amazing
idea considering that only a year earlier a similar stunt had resulted in the
death of Frank Olson. A more ambitious project was described in a CIA memo as
follows “Technical Services Division concocted a plan to spike punchbowls with
LSD at the Agency’s Christmas party, an amazing idea considering that only a
year earlier a similar stunt had resulted in the death of Frank Olson. A more
ambitious project was described in a CIA memo as follows: “We thought about the
possibility of putting some [LSD] in a city water supply and having citizens
wander around in a more or less happy state, not terribly interested in
defending themselves.”
This
was certainly a hazardous time to be at any public function attended by Dr.
Sidney Gottlieb and his associates. In the midst of their MK-ULTRA researches,
the CIA had concluded that since prisoners had lawyers who might turn ugly, it
was probably not a good idea to use them as human guinea pigs. Initially they
cut down the risk margin by administering the various hallucinogens to
themselves, tripping regularly at CIA safehouses and institutions such as the
CIA’s wing at Georgetown and at Dr. Abramson’s floor at Mount Sinai Hospital.
The trips lacked the consciousness-heightening ambitions of the Leary
generation, however. As John Marks put it, “the CIA experimenters did not trip
for the experience itself, or to get high, or to sample new realities. They
were testing a weapon; for their purposes, they might as well have been in a
ballistics lab.” But the Olson disaster reduced their enthusiasm for
self-testing, and so did another mishap that occurred when an unwitting CIA
officer had a dose of LSD slipped into his coffee at the Agency’s offices on
the Mall in Washington, D.C. The man dashed out the building, across the
street, past the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial, hallucinating
that he was beset by monsters with huge eyes. Hotly pursued by CIA colleagues,
he fled across a bridge over the Potomac and was finally cornered, crouching in
a fetal position near Arlington National Cemetery.”
After
these mishaps, Gottlieb became persuaded that the best course was simply to
test the hallucinogens on a random basis at public gatherings, or to pick out
street people and induce them to swallow a dram of whatever potion was under
review that day.
In
late 1953, Gottlieb took his black bag to Europe, where at a political rally he
primed the water glass of a speaker whom the CIA wanted to render ridiculous.
The psycho-sabotage was apparently a rousing success, and greatly encouraged
Gottlieb with the potential for similar dosing of charismatic left figures
around the world. Gottlieb then gave the green light for CIA station officers
in Manila and Atsugi, Japan, to begin the operational use of LSD.
For
continued experimentation, Gottlieb now decided to begin widespread testing on
the urban poor: street people, prostitutes and other undesirables. He had two
reasons: they were unlikely to complain, and there was, he believed, a higher
potential that these people could handle untoward side-effects. To oversee this
operation, Gottlieb turned to George Hunter White, whom we last encountered
testing the marijuana truth drug on Mafia muscle man Augusto Del Gracio. White
had now gone back to work at the Narcotics Bureau in New York. He was a
somewhat bizarre-looking figure, 200 pounds, 5-feet-7-inches tall and bald.
White claimed he was such an expert in physical combat that he had killed a
Japanese agent in a hand-to-hand encounter. He was also a lusty drinker with a
preference for straight gin.
Gottlieb
asked White to establish a CIA safehouse in New York, invite suitable subjects
to party there, drug them covertly and then review their behavior. White rented
two adjoining apartments at 81 Bedford Street in Greenwich Village. The
cooperation of the Narcotics Bureau was secured by a deal whereby the bureau
could use the apartments for drug stings during CIA down time. White was
guaranteed an unceasing flow of drink, all of it paid for by Gottlieb. The
safehouse became a working lab for the CIA’s Technical Services Division,
fitted out with two-way mirrors, listening devices and concealed cameras.
Indeed, the house became a model for subsequent CIA interrogation facilities.
From
the fall of 1953 to the late spring of the following year, White hosted a
string of parties, inviting a stream of unsuspecting CIA subjects to Bedford
Street, spiking their food and drink with chemicals such as sodium pentothal,
Nembutal, THC and, of course, what White referred to as “the LSD surprise.”
White’s immediate supervisor in New York was Richard Lashbrook, the man who
shared Frank Olson’s room on the latter’s last night on earth.
White’s
diary records that Lashbrook visited the apartment on numerous occasions,
delivering drugs and watching the human guinea pigs through the two-way mirror.
Connoisseurs
of CIA denials should study Lashbrook’s performance in 1977, when he was
questioned during Ted Kennedy’s senatorial probe. Despite the fact that
Kennedy’s subcommittee had White’s records, which documented Lashbrook’s visits
to Bedford Street, Lashbrook received no challenge from the subcommittee when
he insisted that he had never gone anywhere near the CIA safehouse. And not
only did the subcommittee have White’s diary, it also had Lashbrook’s signature
on receipts for White’s substantial expenses in New York.
In
1955 the Narcotics Bureau transferred White to San Francisco. This didn’t end
his role as an agent for MK-ULTRA. He simply continued his researches in
Baghdad-by-the-Bay. He rented a new safehouse on Telegraph Hill and had it
wired with state-of-the-art equipment from Technical Services. This time
White’s surveillance post was a small bathroom, with a two-way mirror allowing
him to peer into the main room.
White
would sit on the lavatory, martini in hand, watching prostitutes give CIA
designer drugs to their unsuspecting clients. White called this enterprise
Operation Midnight Climax. He assembled a string of whores, many of them black
heroin addicts whom he paid in drugs, to lure their clients to the CIA-sponsored
drug and sex sessions. The women, who were known by the San Francisco police as
George’s Girls, were protected from arrest.
To
further the scientific work, Gottlieb sent out the Agency’s chief psychologist,
John Gittinger, to evaluate the prostitutes through personality tests and,
since part of the research was to evaluate the use of sex as a means of
eliciting information, to instruct the women in interviewing techniques.
Unsurprisingly, it was soon discovered that the clients were more likely to
talk after sexual activity. The content of their conversations often centered
on family and work problems – something the prostitutes probably could have
told the CIA without any investment of taxpayer money.
All
of these San Francisco sessions were filmed and tape-recorded, in another eerie
parallel with Nazi research: Himmler had recommended to the doctors conducting
the Dachau experiments in cold water immersion that perhaps the subjects be
revived by “animal warmth,” meaning sex with prostitutes held in a special
building at Dachau. The therapeutic sessions were filmed and passed along for
viewing by Himmler.
It
wasn’t long before the CIA researchers carried their investigations beyond the
safehouse on Telegraph Hill. CIA men would often go down to the Tenderloin
district, visit bars and slip hallucinogens into patrons’ drinks. They would
also hand out doctored cigarettes. Hundreds of people were thus unknowingly
dosed, and there is no way of knowing how many psychological and physical
traumas the CIA was responsible for. The CIA did know of several test victims
who took themselves or were taken to hospitals in the San Francisco area. But
it never assisted in diagnosis or paid any hospital bills, or in any other way
took the slightest responsibility for what it had done. In fact, it was in the
Agency’s self-interest that these people be diagnosed as drug addicts or as
psychotics. Some of the drugs being thus furtively administered were extremely
dangerous. One of the men in the CIA’s Technical Services Division later told
Marks, “If we were scared enough of a drug not to try it on ourselves we sent
it to San Francisco.”
The
CIA men organized a weekend party at another Agency safehouse in Marin County,
north of San Francisco. The plan was to invite a crowd of party-goers and then
spray the rooms with an aerosol formulation of LSD concocted in Gottlieb’s
shop. But it turned out to be an exceedingly hot day and the party-goers kept
the windows open, allowing breezes off the Pacific to swirl through the room,
thus dispersing the LSD. In frustration, Gittinger, the CIA psychologist,
locked himself in the bathroom, sprayed furiously and inhaled as deeply as
possible.
The
LSD safehouse program continued in both New York and San Francisco until 1963,
when the CIA’s new Inspector General, John Earman, stumbled across the
enterprise. Earman was particularly galled by the itemized list of expenses,
including $44 for a telescope, $1,000 for a few days of White’s liquor bill and
$31 to pay off a local lady whose car White had rammed. Earman probed deeper,
unearthing what he swiftly concluded was an illegal, indeed criminal, venture.
He gathered his findings and confronted Gottlieb and Helms.
Helms
knew he was in a spot of trouble. He had not told new agency director John
McCone about the program, and he double-crossed Earman on a promise to do so.
Eventually Earman wrote a 24-page report for McCone in which he harshly
denounced the drug-testing program, which he said “put the rights and interests
of all Americans in jeopardy.” Helms and Gottlieb fiercely defended MK-ULTRA to
McCone, with Helms raising the spectre of a Soviet chemical gap, claiming that
widespread testing was necessary to keep pace with Soviet advances. Helms told
McCone that “positive operational capacity to use drugs is diminishing owing to
a lack of realistic testing.”
McCone
put a freeze on CIA-sponsored testing at the safe-houses, but they remained
open for George White’s use – with the CIA paying the bills – until 1966, when
White retired. As he headed off toward eventual death from cirrhosis of the
liver, White wrote an envoi to his old sponsor Sidney Gottlieb: “I toiled
wholeheartedly in the vineyards because it was fun, fun, fun. Where else could
a red-blooded American boy lie, kill, cheat, steal, rape and pillage with the
sanction and bidding of the All Highest.”
Gottlieb’s
colleagues at Army Intelligence were conducting their own experiments with LSD,
called Operation Third Chance. In 1961, James Thornwell, a black US Army
sergeant who worked at a NATO office in Orleans, France, came under suspicion
of stealing classified documents. He was interrogated, hypnotized, and given a
polygraph and truth serum. All these attempts to coerce a confession from him
failed, but the Army Intelligence men remained convinced of his guilt. They
even concocted a bizarre scenario involving the French police, who pulled over
Thornwell’s car, drew their guns and opened fire as he sped away.
The
officers also told colleagues of Thornwell that the black man had been sleeping
with their wives and girlfriends: several of these men beat up Thornwell in a
jealous rage. Eventually Thornwell turned to the intelligence officers for help
in escaping this harassment. They duly offered to put the sergeant in
protective custody in an abandoned millhouse. There Thornwell was secretly
given LSD over a period of several days by army and CIA interrogators, during
which he was forced to undergo extremely aggressive questioning, replete with
racial slurs. At one point his interrogators threatened “to extend the state
indefinitely, even to a permanent condition of insanity.” They consummated this
promise. Thornwell experienced a major mental crisis from which he never
recovered. In 1982 he was found drowned in his swimming pool in Maryland. There
was never any evidence that Thornwell had anything to do with the missing NATO
papers.
MK-ULTRA
was never designed to be pure research. It was always intended as an
operational program, and by the early 1960s these techniques were being fully
deployed in the field, sometimes in situations so vile that they rivaled in
evil the efforts of the Nazi scientists in German concentration camps.
Well-known is the journey of Dr. Sidney Gottlieb to the Congo, where his little
black bag held an Agency-developed biotoxin scheduled for Patrice Lumumba’s
toothbrush. Less well-known is the handkerchief laced with botulinum that was
to sent to an Iraqi colonel. Then there are the endless potions directed at
Fidel Castro, from the LSD the Agency wanted to spray in his radio booth to the
poisonous fountain pen intended for Castro that was handed by a CIA man to
Rolando Cubela in Paris on November 22, 1963.
And
even less well remembered is one mission in the Agency’s Phoenix operation in
Vietnam in the late 1960s. In July 1968 a team of CIA psychologists set up shop
at Bien Hoa Prison outside Saigon, where NLF suspects were being held after
Phoenix Program round-ups. The CIA had become increasingly frustrated with its
inability to break down suspected NLF leaders by using traditional means of
interrogation and torture. They had doped up NLF officers with LSD, hoping that
by inducing irrational behavior, the seemingly unbreakable solidarity of their
captives could be broken and that the other inmates would then begin to talk.
These experiments ended in failure, leaving the prisoners to became little more
than lab material for experiments.
In
one such experiment, three prisoners were anaesthetized; their skulls were then
opened and electrodes were implanted by CIA doctors into different parts of
their brains. The prisoners were revived, placed in a room with knives and the
electrodes in the brains activated by the CIA psychiatrists who were covertly
observing them. The hope was that they could be prompted in this manner to
attack each other. The experiment failed. The electrodes were removed, the
patients were shot and their bodies burned. This rivaled anything in Dachau.
The
CIA’s drug testing and adventures into mind control became the subject of four
ground-breaking book-length investigations: John Marks’s The Search for
the Manchurian Candidate (1979), Walter Bowart’s Operation
Mind Control (1978), Alan Scheflin’s The
Mind Manipulators (1978) and Martin Lee and Bruce Schlain’s Acid
Dreams (1985). But aside from these pioneering works, how did the
American press and historians of the CIA deal with this astonishing saga, in
which a man such as Olson lost his life, thousands of people were involuntarily
and unknowingly dosed with drugs so dangerous or untested that the CIA’s own
chemists dared not try them? A story in which for more than twenty years the
CIA paid for such illegal activities, protected criminals from arrest, let
others suffer without intervention and tried to destroy all evidence of its
crimes? When the saga did unfold before the Kennedy hearings in 1977, the
Washington Post offered this laconic and dismissive headline, “The Gang that
Couldn’t Spray Straight,” accompanied by a trivial story “designed to downplay
the whole MK-ULTRA scandal. Tom Powers, the biographer of MK-ULTRA’s patron and
protector, Richard Helms, skips over the program in his 350-page book The Man
Who Kept the Secrets.
“I
thought in 1978 when our books were appearing, when we were doing media work
all over the world, that we would finally get the story out, the vaults would
be cleansed, the victims would learn their identities, the story would become
part of history, and the people who had been injured could seek recompense,”
recalled Alan Scheflin. “Instead, what happened was the great void. As soon as
the story hit the paper it was yesterday’s news, and we waited and waited for
real congressional hearings and we waited for the lists of people who were
victims to be notified. And none of that happened.”
This
essay is adapted from Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press.
***
The
Man Who Taught Us How to Read
I
was very sad to learn that Edward S. Herman died last Saturday morning. Ed
passed in his sleep at age 92, his mind still as sharp as ever, his spirit
fiercely defiant. In the early 1990s, Ed was an early supporter of our
environmental rag, Wild Forest Review, and invited me to start
writing for Lies of Our (ie., NY) Times. Ed
was an original subscriber to CounterPunch and never failed to praise us when
we got things right and shame us when we screwed up. He was the best kind of
reader. In fact, he taught us all how to read to read between the lines,
through the bullshit and beyond the imperial dogma.
Anastasia
Screamed in Vain
Sound
Grammar
What
I’m listening to this week…
Comment
C’est by Michael Mantler, Himoko Paganotti and the Max Brand Ensemble
Booked
Up
What
I’m reading this week…
The
Whole Bloody Business
Jean
Rhys: “You want to know what I’m afraid of? All right, I’ll tell you. I’m
afraid of men – yes, I’m very much afraid of men. And I’m even more afraid of
women. And I’m very much afraid of the whole bloody human race. Afraid of them?
Of course I’m afraid of them. Who wouldn’t be afraid of a pack of damned
hyenas? And when I say afraid – that’s just a word I use. What I really mean is
that I hate them. I hate their voices, I hate their eyes, I hate the way they
laugh. I hate the whole bloody business. It’s cruel, it’s idiotic, it’s
unspeakably horrible. I never had the guts to kill myself or I’d have got out
of it long ago.” (Good
Morning, Midnight)
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