| MKULTRA: CIA Mind Control | ||
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MKULTRA is one of the most disturbing instances of intelligence
community abuse on record. In U.S. history books, the period is mostly portrayed as a mellow, But for the CIA, the "I Like Ike" years were packed with adventure and action,
much of it conducted outside of the public's view. Few programs were sheltered with more secrecy than the Agency's mind control
experiments, identified together with the code-name MKULTRA. Reviewing the experiments five years later, one secrecy-conscious CIA auditor
wrote: "Precautions must be taken not only to protect operations from exposure
to enemy forces but also to conceal these activities from the American public
in general.The knowledge that the agency is engaging in unethical and illicit
activities would have serious repercussions in political and diplomatic circles." Though many of the documents related to MKULTRA were destroyed by the CIA
in 1972, some records relating to the program have made it into the public domain,
and the work of historians, investigative reporters, and various congressional
committees has resulted in the release of enough information to make MKULTRA
one of the most disturbing instances of intelligence community abuse on record. As writer Mark Zepezauer puts it, "the surviving history is nasty enough." The CIA was intrigued by the drug, and harbored hopes that acid or a similar
drug could be used to clandestinely disorient and manipulate target foreign
leaders. (The Agency would consider several such schemes in its pursuit of Cuban
leader Fidel Castro, who they wanted to send into a drug-induced stupor or tirade
during a public or live radio speech.) In fact, an early phase of the experiments was probably the setting for the
first acid trip in the United States -- experienced by a courageous CIA man
no less! A pleasant man who lived on a farm with his wife, Gottlieb drank only goat's
milk and grew Christmas trees, which he sold at a roadside stand." When he wasn't
busy on the farm, Dr. Gottlieb was dosing subjects with LSD-laced drinks, scrutinizing
their reactions, and searching for qualities of the drug that would benefit
CIA covert actions. Some of the MKULTRA subjects who were informed faced even more inhumane treatment:
during one experiment in Kentucky, seven volunteers were given LSD for 77 days
straight. .On November 19, 1953, an Army scientist and germ warfare specialist
named Frank Olson, who was working on an MKULTRA project, was slipped a solid
dose of LSD in his drink. Then, after spending eight days stumbling about in
what many observers described as a paranoid, depressed state, Olson jumped through
his hotel window in New York and fell ten stories to his death. When the CIA's acid exploits were made public in the mid-1970s, the Agency
found itself facing heavy criticism. One Senate committee put it this way in
1975: CIA researchers probed the potential of numerous parapsychological phenomena,
including hypnosis, telepathy, precognition, photokinesis and "remote viewing." These studies weren't conducted merely to satisfy the CIA's scientific curiosity
-- the Agency was looking for weapons that would give the United States the
louter hand in the mind wars. Toward that objective, the Agency poured millions of dollars into studies probing
literally dozens of methods of influencing and controlling the mind. One 1955 MKULTRA document gives an indication of the size and range of the
effort; the memo refers to the study of an assortment of mind-altering substances
which would:
View MKULTRA Documents Sources: Gross, Peter, Gentleman Spy: The Life of Allen Dulles (Houghton Mifflin, 1994). Thomas, Evan, The Very Best Men (Simon & Schuster, 1995). Marks, John, The Search for the "Manchurian Candidate": The CIA and Mind Control (Times Books, 1979). Mark Zepezauer, The CIA's Greatest Hits (Odionan, 1994). |
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