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Authors: James Risen

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But he was also a behavioral science researcher who had cultivated close ties to the CIA and Pentagon while working as an analyst at the RAND Corporation and later at the Defense Group, a defense and intelligence contracting firm. He had a Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information clearance, and his research focused on finding new ways of determining when someone was lying—“deception detection” research. He would regularly disappear from his Santa Monica apartment to fly to Washington for meetings with officials from the CIA, Pentagon, Department of Homeland Security, and National Security Agency. He sought meetings with top aides to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. He participated in an exclusive, CIA-backed workshop with Samantha Ravich, Cheney's aide. He was a protégé of one of the CIA's top psychologists, who quietly talked to him about moving to Langley. He considered taking a job with Mitchell and Jessen but decided against it because he didn't want to move to Spokane.

But the last twist in Gerwehr's life, not long before he died, was that he took tentative steps toward becoming a whistleblower. He started talking to an investigator for a human rights organization as well as to a journalist about what he knew about Mitchell and Jessen and the broader behavioral science infrastructure that enabled and supported the Bush administration in the development and use of its enhanced interrogation methods. He was cautious and hesitant, never fulfilling the tantalizing promise of a full-blown whistleblower. Even today, the extent of his knowledge of the CIA's detention and interrogation programs remains unclear, and it is also not certain that he would ever have been willing to reveal everything he knew to human rights organizations or to the press. Kirk Hubbard, a former senior behavioral scientist for the CIA who was close to Gerwehr, said that Gerwehr was not involved in the CIA's interrogation program and had no operational background. “Having said that, I don't know what he may have been doing for anyone else,” Hubbard said.

It is possible Gerwehr was simply jealous of the success of other outside contractors, like Mitchell and Jessen, who were getting bigger contracts and becoming even more deeply enmeshed in the secret side of the war on terror. But it is also possible that the disconnect between his dual lives, one in Santa Monica and another in Washington, had become too much to bear as he approached his forties. He privately told a psychologist that he had innovative ideas for the protection of detainees, that he had proposed putting video cameras in interrogations at Guantánamo as a form of verification that they were not being tortured, but that his ideas had been rejected. Despite his misgivings, Gerwehr was “manic with ideas,” recalled Brad Olson, a psychologist at National Louis University in Chicago and a critic of the Bush interrogation tactics. Olson had talked to Gerwehr and then put him in contact with a human rights organization. He said Gerwehr had told him he was eager to do research on detainees and interrogations. “He wasn't talking to me out of guilt, he was talking to me out of optimism about the potential for the work. He seemed optimistic about the possibilities of testing out psychological theories on interrogation issues. He never said exactly who he was working for, but at one point, he said, oh, they are doing it all wrong, they have to do it like this, but he never gave me any specifics.”

Gerwehr's interest in videotaping interrogations would have run into a brick wall at the CIA, which was then secretly in turmoil over the earlier videotaping of the interrogations of at least three high-value detainees in the agency's secret prisons. Those tapes had been secretly destroyed in 2005; after the tape destruction was revealed by the
New York Times
in 2007, the Justice Department appointed a special prosecutor to investigate whether any laws had been broken.

 

Several years after his death, I obtained a copy of Gerwehr's personal computer files, including an archive of his personal e-mails. The Gerwehr computer files do not include any explosive bombshells that suggest that he was on the verge of making major revelations about the Bush administration or the CIA at the time of his death. His e-mails and other documents reveal that he was on the outer edges of the intelligence community and the war on terror. His deception detection research was abstract and had a number of potential uses, for the government as well as for corporate customers. For a time, the primary focus of his research was not interrogations at all but the study of how to apply deception detection methods to protecting computer systems from sophisticated cyberattacks.

Yet the computer files show that he knew the right people. He was part of a wide network of psychologists, academic researchers, contractors, think tank analysts, and intelligence and Pentagon officials who formed the behavioral science infrastructure that grew up suddenly after 9/11 to support the Bush administration's war on terror.

The significance of the Gerwehr files is not in what they say about him or in what he was doing. Rather, it is in what they help reveal about the tight network of behavioral scientists so eager for CIA and Pentagon contracts that they showed few qualms about getting involved with institutions that were using pseudo behavioral science to brutalize prisoners. They help reveal the close relationships between behavioral scientists and the government that made it easier for the CIA and Pentagon to develop such a large detention and interrogation infrastructure so quickly.

What is most striking about many of the e-mails is their utter banality, showing the connections between the intelligence community and the behavioral science profession in big ways and small.

For example, Dr. Martin Seligman, a former president of the American Psychological Association and an expert on the concept of “learned helplessness,” which is at the core of the doctrine behind the CIA's enhanced interrogation program, is shown in an e-mail in the Gerwehr files to have had a professional relationship with Kirk Hubbard, the senior CIA behavioral scientist who was close to Gerwehr. Hubbard wrote to Gerwehr and others on March 30, 2004, to complain: “My office director would not even reimburse me for circa $100 bucks for CIA logo t-shirts and ball caps for Marty Seligman's five kids! He's helped out a lot over the past four years so I thought that was the least I could do. But no, has to come out of my own pocket! And people wonder why I am so cynical!”

In December 2001, Seligman held a meeting at his home outside Philadelphia with a group of academics and national security officials, including James Mitchell and Hubbard, to discuss ways to address Muslim extremism, according to the
New York Times.
Seligman told the
Times
that Mitchell introduced himself during the meeting and said that he admired Seligman's writings on learned helplessness. Seligman said that he was later horrified to discover that his work on learned helplessness had been used as the doctrinal basis for the interrogation program. In 2002, Seligman and Hubbard met again, this time at a SERE conference in San Diego where they had lunch, according to both men.

Seligman said that he never got the hats or T-shirts for his children, “nor any other token of gratitude from the CIA,” and also said that he never worked for the CIA. Hubbard confirmed that Seligman did not work for the CIA and said that he ended up not buying the hats and T-shirts.

 

After 9/11, Scott Gerwehr began to make his mark in the burgeoning field of deception detection. In 2003, he was deeply involved with a conference on the topic that brought together leading experts from RAND, the American Psychological Association, and the CIA. The conference, funded by the CIA, marked Gerwehr's acceptance into a tight-knit network of behavioral science experts all playing roles in the war on terror. Mitchell and Jessen, who were then at the height of their influence within the CIA, attended the conference, along with Hubbard.

Hubbard sent Gerwehr an e-mail about the CIA's participation in the detection deception conference, which was revealing for the secretive way in which he identified CIA psychologists as well as Mitchell and Jessen. Hubbard wrote that CIA operational psychologists, whom he identified only as “Herb, Alisa, John and Dave,” would be coming, along with “contractors to CIA” identified only as “Jim” and “Bruce.”

Gerwehr began to ingratiate himself with a small clique of national security psychologists who had influence behind the scenes at key institutions throughout Washington. Among Gerwehr's closest contacts were Hubbard, who was chief of the CIA's Behavioral Sciences Staff; Susan Brandon, a psychologist who worked at the Bush White House as a behavioral science expert in the Office of Science Policy, and then bounced through other key positions in national security psychology; Geoffrey Mumford, director of science policy at the American Psychological Association; and Kirk Kennedy, the chief of the Center for National Security Psychology for the Counterintelligence Field Activity, a Pentagon unit that was later abolished after disclosures of its involvement in domestic spying. In a 2003 e-mail, Brandon, Hubbard, Mumford, and Gerwehr were identified as the “organizing committee” of the CIA-backed deception detection conference attended by Mitchell and Jessen.

 

Despite the professional consensus among psychologists that torture was counterproductive, the American Psychological Association, the largest professional organization for psychologists, worked assiduously to protect the psychologists who did get involved in the torture program.

In 2002, the APA issued subtle changes to its ethics rules that, in effect, gave greater professional cover for psychologists who had been helping to monitor and oversee harsh interrogations. Perhaps the most important change was a new ethics guideline: if a psychologist faced a conflict between the APA's ethics code and a lawful order or regulation, the psychologist could follow the law or “governing legal authority.” In other words, a psychologist could engage in activities that the U.S. government said were legal—such as harsh interrogations—even if they violated the APA's ethical standards. This change introduced the Nuremberg defense into American psychology—following lawful orders was an acceptable reason to violate professional ethics. The change in the APA's ethics code was essential to the Bush administration's ability to use enhanced interrogation techniques on detainees.

Without the changes to the APA's ethics code, more psychologists would likely have taken the view that they were prevented by their own professional standards from involvement, and that would have made it far more difficult for the Justice Department to craft opinions that provided the legal approvals needed for the CIA to go ahead with the interrogation tactics. The involvement of psychologists in the interrogations helped the lawyers in the Justice Department to argue that the enhanced interrogation program was legal because health professionals were monitoring the interrogations to make sure they stayed within the limits established by the Bush administration.

If the American Psychological Association and its member psychologists had not gone along with the Bush administration, it is unclear that any other health professionals would have taken their place. In fact, in a 2006 Pentagon conference call with reporters, Dr. William Winkenwerder, then the assistant secretary of defense for health affairs, made it clear that the Defense Department had come to rely far more heavily on psychologists at Guantánamo than psychiatrists. “Psychologists and psychiatrists can do at times similar things,” said Winkenwerder, according to a transcript provided by the Defense Department. “As we looked at the role of the behavioral science consultant first, it seemed to us that—and in fact it has been the practice for most of the history of Guantánamo Bay that it has been psychologists who have been in that role. . . . Our policy doesn't preclude a psychiatrist from performing the task. It recognizes that it typically would be performed by a psychologist.”

“There is a second issue that did to some extent influence our thinking, and that is as we spoke to the American Psychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association—the American Psychological Association was—clearly supports the role of psychologists in interrogations in a way our behavioral science consultants operate,” Winkenwerder added. “The American Psychiatric Association, on the other hand, I think had a great deal of debate about that and there were some who were less comfortable with that. I don't—I can't describe for you where they came out exactly on the policy with regards as to psychiatrists participating in interrogations. But . . . we try to be sensitive to the respective roles of—as they are viewed in their professions.”

The APA cooperated not just because a few psychologists like Mitchell and Jessen were involved (Mitchell and Jessen were not APA members). Instead, critics say the psychological profession cooperated because it had so much at stake in its relationship with the government's national security apparatus. For America's psychologists, cooperation with interrogations was all about money and status, many critics argue.

The U.S. military had helped to foster the growth of the psychological profession throughout the twentieth century, dating back to its early involvement in the aptitude testing of soldiers in World War I and World War II. The Defense Department and the Veterans Administration eventually became two of the largest employers of psychologists in the nation, and both provide outside contracts to psychologists as well.

Many psychologists have long been deeply insecure about their status compared to psychiatrists, who are medical doctors and thus can prescribe medicine for their patients. Prescription-writing privileges have given psychiatrists a huge competitive advantage over psychologists at a time when the market for psychiatric drugs—from antidepressants like Zoloft and Prozac to antipsychotics like Thorazine—has exploded.

Here, too, the Pentagon has come to the rescue; the Defense Department has begun to grant prescription-writing privileges to some psychologists treating patients at military hospitals, an important professional breakthrough at a time when psychiatric drugs represent a huge growth industry. What the psychological profession wanted, in Zimbardo's view, “was prescription privileges.” Turning against the interrogation program would have put the psychological profession's entire relationship with the CIA and Pentagon at risk.

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