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Rights and Liberties

How the U.S. Army's Field Manual Codified Torture -- and Still Does

By Jeffrey S. Kaye, AlterNet. Posted January 7, 2009.


Buried in Appendix M of the Army Field Manual, the Guantanamo virus is spreading, and eradicating it will require all of us to spread the word.
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In early September 2006, the U.S. Department of Defense, reeling from at least a dozen investigations into detainee abuse by interrogators, released Directive 2310.01E. This directive was advertised as an overhaul and improvement on earlier detainee operations and included a newly rewritten Army Field Manual for Human Intelligence Collector Operations (FM-2-22-3). This guidebook for interrogators was meant to set a humane standard for U.S. interrogators worldwide, a standard that was respectful of the Geneva Conventions and other U.S. and international laws concerning treatment of prisoners.

While George W. Bush was signing a presidential directive allowing the CIA to conduct other, secret "enhanced interrogation techniques," which may or may not have included waterboarding, the new AFM was sold to the public as a return to civilized norms, in regards to interrogation.

Before long, opponents of U.S. torture policy were championing the new AFM as an appropriate "single-standard" model of detainee treatment. Support for implementing the revised AFM, as a replacement for the hated "enhanced" techniques earlier championed by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and the CIA, began to appear in legislation out of Congress, in the literature of human-rights organizations and in newspaper editorials. Some rights groups have felt the new AFM offered some improvements by banning repellent interrogation tactics, such as waterboarding, use of nudity, military dogs and stress positions. It was believed the AFM cemented the concept of command responsibility for infractions of the law.

There was only one problem: the AFM did not eliminate torture. Despite what it said, it did not adhere to the Geneva Conventions. Even worse, it took the standard operating procedure of Camp Delta at Guantanamo Bay and threatened to expand it all over the world.

The President of the National Lawyers Guild Marjorie Cohn has stated that portions of the AFM protocol, especially the use of isolation and prolonged sleep deprivation, constitutes cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and is illegal under the Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, the U.N. Convention Against Torture and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Hina Shamsi, an attorney with the ACLU's National Security Project, has stated that portions of the AFM are "deeply problematic" and "would likely violate the War Crimes Act and Geneva," and at the very least "leave the door open for legal liability." Physicians for Human Rights and the Constitution Project have publicly called for the removal of problematic and abusive techniques from the AFM.

Yet, the interrogation manual is still praised by politicians, including then-presidential candidate Barack Obama, who in December 2007 said he would "have the Army Field Manual govern interrogation techniques for all United States Government personnel and contractors."

Viral Instructions for a Torture Paradigm

I call the covert actualization of torture in current Department of Defense interrogation policy the "viralization" of the Army Field Manual. Just as a computer virus inserts a seemingly harmless set of instructions or code into a computer's operating system, unnamed four-star combatant commanders insisted that a special "interrogation-control technique" be inserted into the new manual. In a computer, viral instructions morph into a destructive set of routines, which replicate and continue to pass the tainted instructions on to uninfected users.

The viral instructions in the AFM transform into an abusive and illegal torture program. Most of these "instructions" can be found hidden in the proverbial fine print of the document, in its very last appendix, labeled with no apparent irony as regards the mythology of James Bond, Appendix M.

Appendix M, titled "Restricted Interrogation Technique -- Separation," misrepresents itself from the very beginning. (One wonders if it was rewritten from an earlier draft, at a time when the Pentagon wanted to keep these procedures classified.) It is not actually a technique (singular), but a set of techniques, though one has to read deeply into its 10 pages of text and be somewhat sophisticated in the history of psychological torture procedures, to assemble a full view of the viral program.

This program is nothing less than the one established in researcher Albert Biderman's Chart of Coercion, which, as revealed by the recent Senate Armed Services Committee investigation into detainee abuse, was the blueprint used by SERE instructors at Guantanamo in late 2002 to teach abusive interrogation techniques. (SERE stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape and is the military program to "inoculate" certain military personnel against torture or abusive treatment by an enemy that doesn't recognize Geneva protocol.)


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See more stories tagged with: torture, guantanamo, waterboarding, army field manual, sere, sensory deprivation, jeff kimmons

Jeffrey Kaye is a psychologist active in the anti-torture movement. He works clinically with torture victims at Survivors International in San Francisco. His blog is Invictus; as "Valtin," he also regularly blogs at Daily Kos, Docudharma, American Torture, Progressive Historians and elsewhere.

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My first thought upon reading this was
Posted by: kittybrat on Jan 7, 2009 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
isn't it obvious torture is wrong? However, I realize in order to engage in battle, soldiers are taught to hate and dehumanize. There goes the obvious out the window.
So it is necessary to adhere to the Geneva Convention, and harshly punish (not torture) those who do not follow those guidelines. These people are people. Treat them as you would a human being. Do not allow the perceived crimes, actual or suspected, to allow this policy to change. We already know people will say anything to make the torture stop. The information therefore is unreliable, and what have you done besides given more reason for a people to hate us?
What would be obvious to healthy minds is needing to be explained because of the sick mental state of armed forces.

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Spreading the word about a new foundation for soldiers
Posted by: jcore77 on Jan 7, 2009 8:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any type of human torture is inhumane and should not be practiced. Sometimes I do believe an eye for an eye is truly the best answer for drastic crimes.


Just spreading the news about a brand new foundation for American wounded soldiers and their families.
If you are a military soldier that is need of some extra assistance , then come and check out "The David H Brooks Foundation for American Wounded Soldiers"
david h brooks

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This is not new!
Posted by: fanny666 on Jan 7, 2009 10:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The techniques used in Gitmo and Abu Ghraib were laid out a long long time ago. For example, the KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation Manual from 1963.

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What difference does it make
Posted by: cactus on Jan 7, 2009 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if it's new or old? Torture is wrong, it's counterproductive and the U.S. should not, under any circumstances use it.

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Geneva Convention my eye!
Posted by: Tequila Kid on Jan 7, 2009 4:37 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only certain restricted classes of combatants enjoy the rights set forth in the Geneva Convention, namely those who comply with a few basic rules of civilised warfare. If you claim a threat exists of breaches of the Geneva Convention, you must first prove that the victims of the proposed procedures are indeed combatants covered by the Convention. Terrorism constitutes a breach of the laws of war. Hence if the procedures are applied to persons accused of terrorism and the like, the government can automatically raise the defense that they are not covered. In other words, torturing terror detainees may not be to your taste (or mine) and may be illegal, but it is not a breach of the Geneva Convention.

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» RE: Geneva Convention my eye! Posted by: jeffkaye
» "civilised warfare", my eye! Posted by: leighsure
» RE: "civilised warfare", my eye! Posted by: Deathbunny
» Legal fiction of the Bush regime Posted by: greenknight
Yes, Obama plans to continue using torture on US held POWs
Posted by: logansafi on Jan 7, 2009 9:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reason that Obama and his Democratic Party cohorts have not denounced the Bush-Cheney mandated use of torture on US held POWs is simply because they plan to continue using it, but hope to avoid bad publicity by better sugar coating it for the American public.

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Israel's gifts to America
Posted by: weathered on Jan 8, 2009 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
an inexhaustable supply of toxic karma.

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I agree totally
Posted by: jeffkaye on Jan 8, 2009 8:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I did not go more into this aspect of the AFM Appendix M than already mentioned in the article, as I didn't want to draw attention away from the issue of the techniques of torture. But perhaps I should have added this point, i.e., eliminating the false category of illegal combatant, to the other suggestions at the end of the article.

Thanks for making this excellent point in this particular discussion.

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Thank you.
Posted by: Urgelt on Jan 8, 2009 5:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was not aware of the changes that had been made to the Army field manual.

I doubt I'd have ever heard it from mainstream media, either.

It seems that the relentless stupidity of this Administration is without bounds.

Torture simply does not produce reliable intelligence. Other methods are proven to work better, without damaging our international standing and credibility or wrecking our claim to the moral high ground.

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Why Torture?
Posted by: Windwhistler on Jan 9, 2009 4:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems to me that its pretty well accepted that information obtained under the situation of torture is of very low value. So my guess is that some other strategy is involved with the use of torture. One possibility is that it demoralizes the "enemy" making him more interested in escaping than fighting. Another possible part of torture strategy is that it will make "Our Side" soldiers more aggressive and cruel operating in an atmosphere where the government supports torture. It appears to me that the attempts to deny and obfuscate the practice of torture are for the folks at home and not for the combatants. Although some percentage of the Folks at Home are probably "troop-like" in their support of torture.

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