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- From: zodiac@ionews.io.org (Zodiac)
- Newsgroups: alt.politics.org.cia,alt.activism,alt.drugs,alt.conspiracy
- Subject: LSD, the CIA, and Your Brain
- Message-ID: <2hom17$cc9@ionews.io.org>
- Date: 21 Jan 94 13:40:55 GMT
-
- What follows is a chapter from Martin Lee and Bruce Shlain's book, Acid
- Dreams_. The book is a terrific read. The following selection is
- chapter 1, which examines the development of the CIA's interest in the
- mysterious new drug, LSD. It is alternately funny, disgusting, and
- horrific.
-
- Lemme give you a preview of what follows.
-
- At first, the CIA thought LSD would make them virtual masters of the
- universe. Later, after sober second thought, they realized they might
- have to set their sights little lower, but they continued their
- enthusiasm for the drug (which Richard Helms called "dynamite").
-
- The CIA realized that an adversary intelligence service could
- employ LSD "to produce anxiety or terror in medically
- unsophisticated subjects unable to distinguish drug-induced
- psychosis from actual insanity". The only way to be sure that an
- operative would not freak out under such circumstances would be
- to give him a taste of LSD (a mind control vaccine?) before he
- was sent on a sensitive overseas mission. Such a person would
- know that the effects of the drug were transitory and would
- therefore be in a better position to handle the experience. CIA
- documents actually refer to agents who were familiar with LSD as
- "enlightened operatives".
-
- At one point, CIA employees were running around, dosing themselves and
- their buddies in acid to either "immunize" themselves to its effects, or
- just test its limits. This part makes amusing reading -- to borrow the
- hackneyed phrase: truth is stranger than fiction.
-
- Finally, someone had to clamp down on the CIA's LSD consumption. One of
- my favorite passages quotes a security memo (dated Dec. 15, 1954)
- dealing with a rumored proposal to "spike" the annual CIA Christmas
- party punch with acid.
-
- The writer of this memo concluded indignantly and unequivocally
- that he did "not recommend [LSD] testing in the Christmas punch
- bowls usually present at the Christmas office parties".
-
- CIA was consumed with interest in developing the perfect drug for every
- emotion/intellectual brain reaction. Dial-a-brain drugs.
-
- What's more, according to a document dated May 5, 1955, the CIA
- placed a high priority on the development of a drug "which will
- produce 'pure euphoria' with no subsequent letdown".
-
- (I think I might place a "high priority" on such a thing myself...)
-
- All this interest led to extravagant CIA funding of LSD research everywhere
- -- including a soon-to-be famous fellow named Timothy Leary.
-
- The rest, as they say, is history.
-
-
-
- *
-
-
-
- _ACID DREAMS_
- The CIA, LSD and the Sixties Rebellion
-
- Martin A Lee and Bruce Shlain
- Grove Press, New York: 1985
- ISBN 0-394-55013-7
-
-
- chapter 1
- IN THE BEGINNING THERE WAS MADNESS...
-
-
- The Truth Seekers
-
-
- In the spring of 1942, General William "Wild Bill" Donovan, chief of the
- OSS, the CIA's wartime predecessor, assembled a half-dozen prestigious
- American scientists and asked them to undertake a top-secret research
- program. Their mission, Donovan explained, was to develop a
- speech-inducing drug for use in intelligence interrogations. He
- insisted that the need for such a weapon was so acute as to warrant any
- and every attempt to find it.
-
- The use of drugs by secret agents had long been a part of
- cloak-and-dagger folklore, but this would be the first concerted attempt
- on the part of an American espionage organization to modify human
- behavior through chemical means. "We were not afraid to try things that
- had never been done before," asserted Donovan, who was known for his
- freewheeling and unconventional approach to the spy trade. The OSS
- chief pressed his associates to come up with a substance that could
- break down the psychological defenses of enemy spies and POWs, thereby
- causing an uninhibited disclosure of classified information. Such a
- drug would also be useful for screening OSS personnel in order to
- identify German sympathizers, double-agents, and potential misfits.
-
- Dr Windfred Overhulser, superintendent of Saint Elizabeth's Hospital in
- Washington, DC, was appointed chairman of the research committee. Other
- members included Dr Edward Strecker (then president of the American
- Psychiatric Association) and Harry J Anslinger (head of the Federal
- Bureau of Narcotics). The committee surveyed and rejected numerous
- drugs -- including alcohol, barbituates, and caffeine. Peyote and
- scopolamine were also tested, but the visions produced by these
- substances interfered with the interrogation process. Eventually,
- marijuana was chosen as the most likely candidate for a speech-inducing
- agent.
-
- OSS scientists created a highly-potent extract of cannabis and, through
- a process known as esterification, a clear and viscous liquid was
- obtained. The final product had no color, odor, or taste. It would be
- nearly impossible to detect when administered surreptitiously -- which
- is exactly what the spies intended to do. "There is no reason to
- believe that any other nation or group is familiar with the preparation
- of this particular drug," stated one classified OSS document.
- Henceforth, the OSS referred to the marijuana extract as "TD" -- a
- rather transparent cover for "Truth Drug".
-
- Various ways of administering TD were tried upon witting and unwitting
- subjects. OSS operatives found that the medicated goo could "be
- injected into any type of food, such as mashed potatoes, butter, salad
- dressing, or in such things as candy." Another scheme relied on using
- facial tissues impregnated with the drug. But these methods had
- drawbacks. What if someone had a particularly ravenous appetite? Too
- much TD could knock a subject out and render him useless for
- interrogation. The OSS eventually determined that the best approach
- involved the use of a hypodermic syringe to inject a diluted TD solution
- into a cigarette or cigar. After smoking such an item, the subject
- would get suitably stoned, at which point a skillful interrogator would
- move in and try to get him to spill the beans.
-
- The effects of TD were described in an OSS report:
-
- "TD appears to relax all inhibitions and to deaden the areas of the
- brain which govern an individual's discretion and caution. It
- accentuates the senses and makes manifest any strong
- characteristics of the individual. Sexual inhibitions are lowered,
- and the sense of humor is accentuated to the point where any
- statement or situation can become extremely funny to the subject.
- On the other hand, a person's unpleasant characteristics may also
- be heightened. It may be stated that, generally speaking, the
- reaction will be one of great loquacity and hilarity."
-
- (This was a rather mild and playful assessment of the effects of
- marijuana compared to the public rantings of Harry Anslinger, the
- narcotics chief, who orchestrated an unrelenting media campaign against
- "the killer weed".)
-
- After testing TD on themselves, their associates, and US military
- personnel, OSS agents utilized the drug operationally, although on a
- limited basis. The results were mixed. In certain circumstances, TD
- subjects felt a driving necessity "to discuss psychologically-charged
- topics. Whatever the individual is trying to withhold will be forced to
- the top of his subconscious mind." But there were also those who
- experienced "toxic reactions" -- better known in latter-day lingo as
- "bummers". One unwitting doper became irritable and threatening and
- complained of feeling like he was "two different people". The peculiar
- nature of his symptoms precluded any attempt to question him.
-
- That was how it went, from one extreme to the other. At times, TD
- seemed to stimulate "a rush of talk"; on other occasions, people got
- paranoid and didn't say a word. The lack of consistency proved to be a
- major stumbling block and "Donovan's dreamers" -- as his enthusiastic
- OSS staffers have been called -- reluctantly weaned themselves from
- their reefer madness. A handwritten comment in the margins of an OSS
- document summed up their stoned escapades:
-
- "The drug defies all but the most expert and searching analysis
- and, for all practical purposes, can be considered beyond
- analysis."
-
- After the war, the CIA and the military picked-up where they OSS had
- left off in the secret search for a truth serum. The navy took the lead
- when it initiated Project CHATTER in 1947 -- the same year the CIA was
- formed. Described as an "offensive" program, CHATTER was supposed to
- devise means of obtaining information from people independent of their
- volition but without physical duress. Toward this end, Dr Charles
- Savage conducted experiments with mescaline (a semi-synthetic extract of
- the peyote cactus that produces hallucinations similar to those caused
- by LSD) at the Naval Medical Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland.
- But these studies, which involved animal as well as human subjects, did
- not yield as effective truth serum, and CHATTER was terminated in 1953.
-
- The navy became interested in mescaline as an interrogation agent when
- American investigators learned of mind control experiments carried out
- by Nazi doctors at the Dachau concentration camp during World War II.
- After administering the hallucinogen to 30 prisoners, the Nazis
- concluded that it was "impossible to impose one's will on another person
- as in hypnosis even when the strongest dose of mescaline had been
- given." But the drug still afforded certain advantages to SS
- interrogators, who were consistently able to draw "even the most
- intimate secrets from the [subject] when questions where cleverly put."
- Not surprisingly, "sentiments of hatred and revenge were exposed in
- every case."
-
- The mescaline experiments at Dachau were described in a lengthy report
- by the US Naval Technical Mission, which swept across Europe in search
- of every scrap of industrial material and scientific data that could be
- garnered from the fallen Reich. This mission set the stage for the
- wholesale importation of more than 600 top Nazi scientists under the
- auspices of Project paperclip -- which the CIA supervised during the
- early years of the Cold War. Among those who emigrated to the US in
- such a fashion was Dr Hubertus Strughold, the German scientist whose
- chief subordinates (Dr Sigmund Ruff and Dr Sigmund Rascher) were
- directly involved in "aviation medicine" experiments at Dachau, which
- included the mescaline studies. Despite recurring allegations that he
- sanctioned medical atrocities during the war, Strughold settled in Texas
- and became an important figure in America's space program. After Werner
- von Braun, he was the top Nazi scientist employed by the American
- government, and he was subsequently hailed by NASA as the "father of
- space medicine".
-
- The CIA, meanwhile, had launched an intensive research effort geared
- toward developing "special" interrogation techniques. Two methods
- showed promise in the late 1940s. The first involved narcohypnosis --
- in which a CIA psychiatrist attempted to induce a trance state after
- administering a mild sedative. A second technique involved a
- combination of two different drugs with contradictory effects. A heavy
- dose of barbituates was given to knock the subject out, and then he
- received an injection of a stimulant, usually some type of amphetamine.
- As he started to come out of a somnambulant state, he would reach a
- certain ineffable point prior to becoming fully conscious. Described in
- CIA documents as "the twilight zone", this groggy condition was
- considered optimal for interrogation.
-
- CIA doctors attempted to extend the stuporous limbo as long as possible.
- In order to maintain the delicate balance between consciousness and
- unconsciousness, an intravenous hookup was inserted in both the
- subject's arms. One set of works contained a downer, the other an upper
- (the classic "goofball" effect), with a mere flick of the finger an
- interrogator could regulate the flow of chemicals. The idea was to
- produce a "push" -- a sudden outpouring of thoughts, emotions,
- confidences, and whatnot. Along this line, various combinations were
- tested. Seconal and Dexedrine; Pentothal and Desoxyn; and depending on
- the whim of the spy in charge,some marijuana (the old OSS stand-by,
- which the CIA referred to as "sugar") might be thrown in for good
- measure.
-
- The goofball approach was not a precision science. There were no
- strictly prescribed rules or operating procedures regarding what drugs
- should be employed in a given situation. The CIA interrogators were
- left to their own devices, and a certain degree of recklessness was
- perhaps inevitable. In one case, a group of CIA experts hastily drafted
- a memo after reviewing a report prepared by one of the Agency's special
- interrogation teams. The medical consultants pointed out that "the
- amounts of scopolamine administered were extremely heavy." They also
- noted that the best results were obtained when two or at most three
- different chemicals were used in a session. In this case, however,
- heavy doses of scopolamine were administered along with thiamine, sodium
- luminal, atropine sulfate, sodium pentothal and caffeine sulfate. One
- of the CIA's professional consultants in "H" techniques also questioned
- why hypnosis was attempted "after a long and continuous use of
- chemicals, after the subject had vomited, and after apparently a maximum
- tolerance point had been reached with the chemicals." Everyone who read
- the interrogation report agreed that hypnosis was useless, if not
- impossible, under such conditions. Nevertheless, the memo concluded by
- reaffirming that "no criticism is intended whatsoever" and that "the
- choice of operating weapons" must be left to the agents in the field.
-
- Despite the potential hazards and tenuousness of the procedure as a
- whole, special interrogations were strongly endorsed by Agency
- officials. A CIA document dated November 26, 1951, announced:
-
- "We're now convinced that we can maintain a subject in a controlled
- state for a much longer period of time that we heretofore had
- believed possible. Furthermore, we feel that by use of certain
- chemicals or combinations, we can, in a very high percentage of
- cases, produce relevant information."
-
- Although these techniques were still considered experimental, the
- prevailing opinion among members of the special interrogation teams was
- that there had been enough experiments "to justify giving the green
- light to operational use of the techniques." "There will be many a
- failure," a CIA scientist acknowledged, but he was quick to stress that
- "very success with this method will be pure gravy."
-
- In an effort to expand its research program, the CIA contacted academics
- and other outside experts who specialized in areas of mutual interest.
- Liaison was established with the research sections of police departments
- and criminology laboratories; medical practitioners, professional
- hypnotists, and psychiatrists were brought on as paid consultants, and
- various branches of the military provided assistance. Oftentimes, these
- arrangements involved a cover to conceal the CIA's interest in behavior
- modification. With the bureaucratic apparatus already in place, the
- CIA's mind control efforts were integrated into a single project under
- the codename BLUEBIRD. Due to the extreme sensitivity of the project,
- the usual channels for authorization were bypassed -- instead of going
- through the Projects Review Committee, the proposal for BLUEBIRD was
- submitted directly to CIA director Roscoe Hillenkoetter, who authorized
- the use of unvouchered funds to finance the hush-hush undertaking. With
- this seal of approval, the CIA's first major drug-testing program was
- officially launched. BLUEBIRD was to remained a carefully guarded
- secret, for if word of the program leaked out, it would have been a
- great embarrassment and a detriment to American intelligence. As one
- CIA document put it, BLUEBIRD material was "not fit for public
- consumption."
-
- From the outset, the CIA's mind control program had an explicit domestic
- angle. A memo dated July 13, 1951, described the Agency's mind-bending
- efforts as "broad and comprehensive, involving both domestic and
- overseas activities, and taking into consideration the programs and
- objectives of other departments, principally the military services."
- BLUEBIRD activities were designed to create as "exploitable alteration
- of personality" in selected individuals; specific targets included
- "potential agents, defectors, refugees, POWs," and a vague category of
- "others." A number of units within the CIA participated in this
- endeavor, including the Inspection and Security Staff (the forerunner of
- the Office of Security), which assumed overall responsibility for
- running the program and dispatching the special interrogation teams.
- Colonel Sheffield Edwards, the chairman of the BLUEBIRD steering
- committee, consistently pushed for a more reliable speech-inducing
- substance. By the time BLUEBIRD evolved into Operation ARTICHOKE (the
- formal change in codenames occurred August 1951), Security officials
- were still searching for the magic technique -- the deus ex machina --
- that would guarantee surefire results.
-
- The whole concept of a truth drug was a bit farfetched to begin with.
- It presupposed that there was a way to chemically bypass the mind's
- censor and turn the psyche inside out, unleashing a profusion of buried
- secrets, and that surely some approximation of "truth" would emerge
- amidst all the personal debris. In this respect the CIA's quest
- resembled a skewed version of a familiar mythological theme from which
- such images as the Philosopher's Stone and the Fountain of Youth derive
- -- that through touching or ingesting something one can acquire wisdom,
- immortality, or eternal peace. It is more than a bit ironic that the
- biblical inscription on the marble wall of the main lobby at CIA
- headquarters in Langley, Virginia, reads, "And ye shall know the Truth
- and the Truth shall set you free".
-
- The freewheeling atmosphere that prevailed during the CIA's early years
- encouraged an "anything goes" attitude among researchers associated with
- the mind control program. This was before the Agency's bureaucratic
- arteries began to harden, and those who participated on Operation
- ARTICHOKE were intent on leaving no stone unturned in an effort to
- deliver the ultimate truth drug. A number of agents were sent on
- fact-finding missions to all corners of the globe to procure samples of
- rare herbs and botanicals. The results of one such trip were recorded
- in a heavily deleted document entitled "Exploration of Potential Plant
- Resources in the Caribbean Region". Among the numerous items mentioned
- in this report, a few were particularly intriguing. A plant called a
- "stupid bush", characterized by the CIA as a psychogenic agent and a
- pernicious weed, was said to proliferate in Puerto Rico and Saint
- Thomas. Its effects were shrouded in mystery. An "information bush"
- was also discovered. This shrub stumped CIA experts, who were at a loss
- to pin down its properties. The "information bush" was listed as a
- psychogenic agent followed by a lingering question mark. What type of
- information -- prophetic or mundane -- might be evoked by this unusual
- herb was unclear. Nor was it known whether the "information bush" could
- be used as an antidote to the "stupid bush" or vice versa. [grin grin
- grin]
-
- The CIA studied a veritable pharmacopoeia of drugs with the hope of
- achieving a breakthrough. At one point during the early 1950s Uncle
- Sam's secret agents viewed cocaine as a potential truth serum.
- "Cocaine's general effects have been somewhat neglected", noted an
- astute researcher. Whereupon tests were conducted that enabled the CIA
- to determine that the precious powder "will produce elation,
- talkativeness, etc." when administer by injection. "Larger doses,"
- according to a previously classified document, "may cause fearfulness
- and alarming hallucinations." The document goes on to report that
- cocaine "counteracts... the catatonia of catatonic schizophrenics" and
- concludes with the recommendation that the drug be studied further.
-
- A number of cocaine derivatives were also investigated from an
- interrogation standpoint. Procaine, a synthetic analogue, was tested on
- mental patients and the results were intriguing. When injected into the
- frontal lobe of the brain through trephine holes in the skull, the drug
- "produced free and spontaneous speech within two days in mute
- schizophrenics". This procedure was rejected as "too surgical for our
- use". Nevertheless, according to a CIA pharmacologist, "it is possible
- that such a drug could be gotten into the general circulation of subject
- without surgery, hypodermic or feeding." He suggested a method known as
- iontophoresis, which involves using an electric current to transfer the
- ions of a chosen medicament into the tissues of the body.
-
- The CIA's infatuation with cocaine was short-lived. It may have
- titilated the nostrils of more than a few spies and produced some heady
- speculation, but after the initial inspiration it was back to square
- one. Perhaps their expectations were too high for any drug to
- accommodate. Or maybe a new approach to the problem was required.
-
- The search for an effective interrogation technique eventually led to
- heroin. Not the heroin that ex-Nazi pilots under CIA contract smuggled
- out of the Golden Triangle in Southeast Asia on CIA proprietary airlines
- during the late 1940s and 1950s; nor the heroin that was pumped into
- America's black and brown ghettos after passing through contraband
- networks controlled by mobsters who moonlighted as CIA hitmen. The
- Agency's involvement in worldwide heroin traffic, which has been well
- documented in _The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia_ by Alfred
- McCoy, went far beyond the scope of Operation ARTICHOKE, which was
- primarily concerned with eliciting information from recalcitrant
- subjects. However, ARTICHOKE scientists did see possible advantages in
- heroin as a mind control drug. According to a CIA document dated April
- 26, 1952, heroin was "frequently used by police and intelligence
- officers _on a routine basis_ [emphasis added]". The cold turkey theory
- of interrogation: CIA operatives determined that heroin and other
- habit-forming substances "can be useful in reverse because of the
- stresses produced when they are withdrawn from those who are addicted to
- their use".
-
-
- Enter LSD
-
-
- It was with the hope of finding the long-sought miracle drug that CIA
- investigators first began to dabble with LSD-25 in the early 1950s. At
- the time very little was known about the hallucinogen, even in
- scientific circles. Dr Werner Stoll, the son of Sandoz president Arthur
- Stoll and a colleague of Albert Hoffmann's, was the first person to
- investigate the psychological properties of LSD. The results of his
- study were presented in the _Swiss Archives of Neurology_ in 1947.
- Stoll reported that LSD produced disturbances in perception,
- hallucinations, and acceleration in thinking; moreover, the drug was
- found to blunt the usual suspiciousness of schizophrenic patients. No
- favorable aftereffects were described. Two years later in the same
- journal Stoll contributed a second report entitled "A New Hallucinatory
- Agent, Active in Very Small Amounts".
-
- The fact that LSD caused hallucinations should not have been a total
- surprise to the scientific community. Sandoz first became interested in
- ergot, the natural source of all lysergic acid. The rye fungus had a
- mysterious and contradictory reputation. In China and parts of the
- Mideast it was thought to possess medicinal qualities, and certain
- scholars believe that it may have been used in sacred rites in ancient
- Greece. In other parts of Europe, however, the same fungus was
- associated with the horrible malady known as St Anthony's Fire, which
- struck periodically like the plague. Medieval chronicles tell of
- villages and towns where nearly everyone went mad for a few days after
- ergot-diseased rye was unknowingly milled into flour and baked as bread.
- Men were afflicted with gangrenous limbs that looked like blackened
- stumps, and pregnant women miscarried. Even in modern times, there have
- been reports of ergot-related epidemics.
-
- FOOTNOTE: In 1951 hundreds of respectable citizens in Pont-Saint-Esprit,
- a small French village, went completely berserk one evening. Some of
- the town's leading citizens jumped from windows into the Rhone. Others
- ran through the streets screaming abut being chased by lions, tigers,
- and "bandits with donkey ears". Many died, and whose who survived
- suffered strange aftereffects for weeks. In his book _The Day of St
- Anthony's Fire_, John C Fuller attributes this bizarre outbreak to rye
- flour contaminated with ergot.
-
- The CIA inherited this ambiguous legacy when it embraced LSD as a mind
- control drug. An ARTICHOKE document dated October 21, 1951, indicates
- that acid was tested initially as part of a pilot study of the effects
- of various chemicals "on the conscious suppression of experimental or
- non-threat secrets". In addition to lysergic acid this particular
- survey covered a wide range of substances, including morphine, ether,
- Benzedrine, ethyl alcohol, and mescaline. "There is no question," noted
- the author of this report, "that drugs are already on hand (and new ones
- are being produced) that can destroy integrity and make indiscreet the
- most dependable individual." The report concluded by recommending that
- LSD be critically tested "under threat conditions beyond the scope of
- civilian experimentation". POWs, federal prisoners, and Security
- officers were mentioned as possible candidates for these field
- experiments.
-
- In another study designed to ascertain optimal dosage levels for
- interrogation sessions, a CIA psychiatrist administered LSD to "at least
- 12 human subjects _of not too high mentality_". At the outset the
- subjects were "told only that a new drug was being tested and promised
- that nothing serious or dangerous would happen to them.... During the
- intoxication they realized something was happening, but were never told
- exactly what." A dosage range of 100 to 150 micrograms was finally
- selected, and the Agency proceeded to test the drug in mock
- interrogation trials.
-
- Initial reports seemed promising. In one instance LSD was given to an
- officer who had been instructed not to reveal "a significant military
- secret". When questioned, however, "he gave all the details of the
- secret... and after the effects of the LSD had worn off, the officer
- had no knowledge of revealing the information (complete amnesia)."
- Favorable reports kept coming in, and when this phase of experimentation
- was completed, the CIA's Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI)
- prepared a lengthy memorandum entitled "Potential New Agent for
- Unconventional Warfare". LSD was said to be useful "for eliciting true
- nd accurate statements from subjects under its influence during
- interrogation". Moreover, the data on hand suggested that LSD might
- help in reviving memories of past experiences.
-
- It almost seemed to good to be true -- a drug that unearthed secrets
- buried deep in the unconscious mind but also caused amnesia during the
- effective period. The implications were downright astounding. Soon the
- entire CIA hierarchy was head over heels as news of what appeared to be
- a major breakthrough sent shock waves rippling through headquarters.
- (C.P.Snow once said, "The euphoria of secrecy goes to the head.") For
- years they had searched, and now they were on the verge of finding the
- Holy Grail of the cloak-and-dagger trade. As one CIA officer recalled,
- "We had thought at first this was the secret that was going to unlock
- the universe."
-
- But the sense of elation did not last long. As the secret research
- progressed, the CIA ran into problems. Eventually they came to
- recognize that LSD was not really a truth serum in the classical sense.
- Accurate information could not always be obtained from people under the
- influence of LSD because it induced a "marked anxiety and loss of
- reality contact". Those who received unwitting doses experienced an
- intense distortion of time, place, and body image, frequently
- culminating in full-blown paranoid reactions. The bizarre
- hallucinations caused by the drug often proved more of a hindrance than
- an aid to the interrogation process. There was always the risk, for
- example, that an enemy spy who started to trip out would realize he'd
- been drugged. This could make him overly suspicious and taciturn to the
- point of clammy up entirely.
-
- There were other pitfalls that made the situation even more precarious
- from an interrogation standpoint. While anxiety was the predominant
- characteristic displayed during LSD sessions, some people experienced
- delusions of grandeur and omnipotence. An entire operation might
- backfire if someone had an ecstatic or transcendental experience and
- became convinced that he could defy his interrogators indefinitely. And
- then there was the question of amnesia, which was not as cut-and-dried
- as first supposed. Everyone agreed that a person would probably have a
- difficult time recalling exactly what happened while he was high on LSD,
- but that didn't mean his mind would be completely blank. While the drug
- might distort memory to some degree, it did not destroy it.
-
- When CIA scientists tested a drug for speech-inducing purposes and found
- that it didn't work, they usually put it aside and tried something else.
- But such was not the case with LSD. Although early reports proved
- overoptimistic, the Agency was not about the discard such a powerful and
- unusual substance simply because it did not live up to its original
- expectations. They had to shift gears. A reassessment of the strategic
- implications of LSD was necessary. If, strictly speaking, LSD was not a
- reliable truth drug, then how else could it be used?
-
- CIA researchers were intrigued by this new chemical, but they didn't
- quite know what to make of it. LSD was significantly different from
- anything else they knew about. "The most fascinating thing about it," a
- CIA psychologist recalled, "was that such minute quantities had such a
- terrible effect." Mere micrograms could create "serious mental
- confusion... and render the mind temporarily susceptible to
- suggestion". Moreover, the drug was colorless, odorless, and tasteless,
- and therefore easily concealed in food and beverage. But it was hard to
- predict the response to LSD. On certain occasions acid seemed to cause
- an uninhibited disclosure of information, but oftentimes the
- overwhelming anxiety experienced by the subject obstructed the
- interrogation process. And there were unexplainable mood swings -- from
- total panic to boundless blissout. How could one drug produce such
- extreme behavior and contradictory reactions? It didn't make sense.
-
- As research continued, the situation became even more perplexing. At
- one point a group of Security officers did an about-face and suggested
- that acid might best be employed as an anti-interrogation substance:
-
- "Since information obtained from a person in a psychotic state
- would be unrealistic, bizarre, and extremely difficult to assess,
- the _self-administration_ of LSD-25, which is effective in minute
- doses, might in special circumstances offer an operative temporary
- protection against interrogation [emphasis added]."
-
- This proposal was somewhat akin to a suicide pill scenario. Secret
- agents would be equipped with micro-pellets of LSD to take on dangerous
- assignments. If they fell into enemy hands and were about to be
- interrogated, they could pop a tab of acid as a preventive measure and
- babble gibberish. Obviously this idea was impractical, but it showed
- just how confused the CIA's top scientists were about LSD. First they
- thought it was a true serum, then a lie serum, and for a while they
- didn't know what to think.
-
- To make matters worse, there was a great deal of concern within the
- Agency that the Soviets and the Red Chinese might also have designs on
- LSD as an espionage weapon. A survey conducted by the Officer of
- Scientific Intelligence noted that ergot was a commercial product in
- numerous Eastern Bloc countries. The enigmatic fungus also flourished
- in the Soviet Union, but Russian ergot had not yet appeared in foreign
- markets. Could this mean the Soviets were hoarding their supplies?
- Since information on the chemical structure of LSD was available in
- scientific journals as early as 1947, the Russians might have been
- stockpiling raw ergot in order to convert it into a mind control weapon.
-
- "Although no Soviet data are available on LSD-25," the OSI study
- concluded, "it must be assumed that the scientists of the USSR are
- thoroughly cognizant of the strategic importance of this powerful
- new drug and are capable of producing it at any time."
-
- Were the Russian really into acid? "I'm sure they were," asserted John
- Gittlinger, one of the CIA's leading psychologists during the Cold War,
- "but if you ask me to prove it, I've never seen any direct proof of it."
- While hard evidence of a Soviet LSD connection was lacking, the CIA
- wasn't about to take any chances. What would happen, for example, if an
- American spy was caught and dosed by the Commies? The CIA realized that
- an adversary intelligence service could employ LSD "to produce anxiety
- or terror in medically unsophisticated subjects unable to distinguish
- drug-induced psychosis from actual insanity". The only way to be sure
- that an operative would not freak out under such circumstances would be
- to give him a taste of LSD (a mind control vaccine?) before he was sent
- on a sensitive overseas mission. Such a person would know that the
- effects of the drug were transitory and would therefore be in a better
- position to handle the experience. CIA documents actually refer to
- agents who were familiar with LSD as "enlightened operatives".
-
- Along this line, Security officials proposed that LSD be administered to
- CIA trainee volunteers. Such a procedure would clearly demonstrate to
- select individuals the effects of hallucinogenic substances upon
- themselves and their associates. Furthermore, it would provide an
- opportunity to screen Agency personnel for "anxiety proneness"; those
- who couldn't pass the acid test would be excluded from certain critical
- assignments. This suggestion was well received by the ARTICHOKE
- steering committee, although the representative from the CIA's Medical
- Office felt that the test should not be "confined merely to male
- volunteer trainee personnel, but that it should be broadened to include
- all components of the Agency". According to a CIA document dated
- November 19, 1953, the Project Committee "verbally concurred in this
- recommendation".
-
- During the next few years numerous CIA agents tried LSD. Some used the
- drug on repeated occasions. How did their firsthand experience with
- acid affect their personalities? How did it affect their attitude to
- their work -- particularly those who were directly involved in mind
- control research? What impact did it have on the program as a whole?
-
- At the outset of the CIA's behavior control endeavors the main emphasis
- was on speech-inducing drugs. But when acid entered the scene, the
- entire program assumed a more aggressive posture. The CIA's turned-on
- strategic came to believe that mind control techniques could be applied
- to a wide range of operations above and beyond the strict category of
- "special interrogation". It was almost as if LSD blew the Agency's
- collective mind-set -- or was it mind-rut? With acid acting as a
- catalyst, the whole idea of what could be done with a drug , or drugs in
- general, was suddenly transformed. Soon a perfect compound was
- envisioned for every conceivable circumstance: there would be smart
- shots, memory erasers, "antivitamins", knock-out drops, "aphrodisiacs
- for operational use", drugs that caused "headache clusters" or
- uncontrollable twitching, drugs that could induce cancer, a stroke or a
- heart attack without leaving a trace as to the source of the ailment.
- There were chemicals to make a drunk man sober and a sober man as drunk
- as a fish. Even a "recruitment" pill was contemplated. What's more,
- according to a document dated May 5, 1955, the CIA placed a high
- priority on the development of a drug "which will produce 'pure
- euphoria' with no subsequent letdown".
-
- This is not to suggest that the CIA had given up on LSD. On the
- contrary, after grappling with the drug for a number of years, the
- Agency devised new methods of interrogation based on the "far-out"
- possibilities of this mind-altering substance. When employed as a
- third-degree tactic, acid enabled the CIA to approach a hostile subject
- with a great deal of leverage. CIA operatives realized that intense
- mental confusion could be produced by deliberately attacking a person
- along psychological lines. Of all the chemicals that caused mental
- derangement, none was as powerful as LSD. Acid not only made people
- extremely anxious, it also broke down the character defenses for
- handling anxiety. A skillful interrogator could exploit this
- vulnerability by threatening to keep an unwitting subject in a
- tripped-out state indefinitely unless he spilled the beans. This tactic
- often proved successful where others had failed. CIA documents indicate
- that LSD was employed as an aid to interrogation on an operational basis
- from the mid-1950s through the early 1960s.
-
-
- Laboratories of the State
-
-
- When the CIA first became interested in LSD, only a handful of
- scientists in the United States were engaged in hallucinogenic drug
- research. At the time there was little private or public support for
- this relatively new field of experimental psychiatry, and no one had
- undertaken a systematic investigation of LSD. The CIA's mind control
- specialists sensed a golden opportunity in the making. With a sizable
- treasure chest at their disposal they were in a position to boost the
- careers of scientists whose skill and expertise would be of maximum
- benefit to the CIA. Almost overnight a whole new market for grants in
- LSD research sprang into existence as money started pouring through
- CIA-linked conduits or "cutouts" such as the Geschickter Fund for
- Medical Research, the Society for the Study of Human Ecology, and the
- Josiah Macy, Jr Foundation.
-
- Among those who benefited from t he CIA's largesse was Dr Max Rinkel,
- the first person to bring LSD to the United States. In 1949 Rinkel, a
- research psychiatrist, obtained a supply of LSD from Sandoz
- Pharmaceuticals in Switzerland and gave the drug to his partner, Dr
- Robert Hyde, who took the first acid trip in the Western Hemisphere.
- Rinkel and Hyde went on to organize an LSD study at the Boston
- Psychopathic Institute, a pioneering mental health clinic affiliated
- with Harvard University. They tested the drug on 100 volunteers and
- reported the initial findings in May 1950 (nearly three years before the
- CIA began funding their work) at the annual meeting of the American
- Psychiatric Association. Rinkel announced that LSD had produced "a
- transitory psychotic disturbance" in normal subjects. This was highly
- significant, for it raised the possibility that mental disorders could
- be studied objectively in a controlled experimental setting.
-
- Rinkel's hypothesis was supported and expanded upon during the same
- forum by Dr Paul Hoch, a prominent psychiatrist who would also proffer
- his services to the CIA in the years ahead. Hoch reported that the
- symptoms produced by LSD, mescaline, and related drugs were similar to
- those of schizophrenia: intensity of color perception, hallucinations,
- depersonalization, intense anxiety, paranoia, and in some cases
- catatonic manifestations. As Hock put it, "LSD and Mescaline
- disorganize the psychic integration of the individual." he believed that
- the medical profession was fortunate to have access to these substances,
- for now it would be possible to reconstruct temporary or "model"
- psychoses in the laboratory. LSD was considered an exceptional research
- tool in that the subject could provide a detailed description of his
- experience while he was under the influence of the drug. It was hoped
- that careful analysis of these data would shed new light on
- schizophrenia and other enigmatic mental diseases.
-
- Hock's landmark thesis -- that LSD was a "psychotomimetic" or
- "madness-mimicking" agent -- caused a sensation in scientific circles
- and led to several important and stimulating theories regarding the
- biochemical basis of schizophrenia. This in turn sparked an upsurge of
- interest in brain chemistry and opened new vistas in the field of
- experimental psychiatry. In light of the extremely high potency of LSD,
- it seemed completely plausible that infinitesimal traces of a
- psychoactive substance produced through metabolic dysfunction by the
- human organism might cause psychotic disturbances. Conversely, attempts
- to alleviate a "lysergic psychosis" might point the way toward cutting
- schizophrenia and other forms of mental illness.
-
- FOOTNOTE: While the miracle cure never panned out, it is worth nothing
- that Thorazine was found to mollify an LSD reaction and subsequently
- became a standard drug for controlling patients in mental asylums and
- prisons.
-
- As it turned out, the model psychosis concept dovetailed particularly
- well with the secret schemes of the CIA, which also viewed LSD in terms
- of its ability to blow minds and make people crazy. Thus it is not
- surprising that the CIA chose to invest in men like Rinkel and Hoch.
- Most scientists were flattered by the government's interest in their
- research, and they were eager to assist the CIA in its attempts to
- unravel the riddle of LSD. This was, after all, the Cold War, and one
- did not have to be a blue-ribboned hawk or a hard-liner to work in
- tandem with American intelligence.
-
- In the early 1950s the CIA approached Dr Nick Bercel, a psychiatrist who
- maintained a private practice in Los Angeles. Bercel was one of the
- first people in the United States to work with LSD, and the CIA asked
- him to consider a haunting proposition. What would happen if the
- Russians put LSD in the water supply of a large American city? A
- skillful saboteur could carry enough acid in his coat pocket to turn an
- entire metropolis into a loony bin, assuming he found a way to
- distribute it equally. In light of this frightening prospect, would
- Bercel render a patriotic service by calculating exactly how much LSD
- would be required to contaminate the water supply of Los Angeles? Bercel
- consented, and that evening he dissolved a tiny amount of acid in a
- glass of tap water, only to discover that the chlorine neutralized the
- drug. "Don't worry," he told his CIA contact, "it won't work."
-
- The Agency took this as a mandate, and another version of LSD was
- eventually concocted to overcome the drawback. A CIA document state
- accordingly,
-
- "If the concept of contaminating a city's water supply seems, or in
- actual fact, is found to be far-fetched (this is by no means
- certain), there is still the possibility of contaminating, say, the
- water supply of a bomber base or, more easily still, that of a
- battleship.... Our current work contains the strong suggestion
- that LSD-25 will produce hysteria (unaccountable laughing, anxiety,
- terror).... It requires little imagination to realize what the
- consequences might be if a battleship's crew were so affected."
-
- The CIA never got in touch with Bercel again, but they monitored his
- research reports in various medical journals. When Bercel gave LSD to
- spiders, they spun perfectly symmetrical webs. Animal studies also
- showed that cats cringed before untreated mice, and fish that normally
- swam close to the bottom of a water tank hovered near the top. In
- another experiment Dr Louis Joylon ("Jolly") West, chairman of the
- Department of Psychiatry at the University of Oklahoma, injected an
- elephant with a massive dose of 300,000 micrograms. Dr West, a CIA
- contract employee and an avid believer in the notion that hallucinogens
- were psychotomimetic agents, was trying to duplicate the periodic "rut"
- madness that overtakes male elephants for about one week each year. But
- the animal did not experience a model elephant psychosis; it just keeled
- over and remained in a motionless stupor. In attempting to revive the
- elephant, West administered a combination of drugs that ended up killing
- the poor beast.
-
- Research on human subjects showed that LSD lodged primarily in the
- liver, spleen, and kidneys. Only a tiny amount (.01%) of the original
- dose entered the brain, and it only remained there for 20 minutes. This
- was a most curious finding, as the effect of LSD was not evident until
- the drug had disappeared entirely from the central nervous system. Some
- scientists thought LSD might act as a trigger mechanism, releasing or
- inhibiting a naturally occurring substance in the brain, but no one
- could figure out exactly why the drug had such a dramatic effect on the
- mind.
-
- Many other questions were in need of clarification. Could the drug be
- fatal? What was the maximum dose? Were the effects constant, or were
- there variations according to different personality types? Could the
- reaction be accentuated by combining LSD with other chemicals? Was there
- an antidote? Some of these questions overlapped with legitimate medical
- concerns, and researchers on CIA stipends published unclassified
- versions of their work in prestigious scientific periodicals. But these
- accounts omitted secret data given to the CIA on how LSD affected
- "operationally pertinent categories" such as disturbance of memory,
- alteration of sex patterns, eliciting information, increasing
- suggestibility, and creating emotional dependence.
-
- The CIA was particularly interested in psychiatric reports suggesting
- that LSD could break down familiar behavior patterns, for this raised
- the possibility of reprogramming or brainwashing. If LSD temporarily
- altered a person's view of the world and suspended his belief system,
- CIA doctors surmised, then perhaps Russian spies could be cajoled into
- switching loyalties while they were tripping. The brainwashing strategy
- was relatively simple: find the subject's weakest point (his "squeaky
- board") and bear down on it. Use any combination or synthesis which
- might "open the mind to the power of suggestion to a degree never
- hitherto dreamed possible". LSD would be employed to provoke a reality
- shift, to break someone down and tame him, to find a locus of anonymity
- and leave a mark there forever.
-
- To explore the feasibility of this approach, the Agency turned to Dr
- Ewen Cameron, a respected psychiatrist who served as president of the
- Canadian, the American, and the World Psychiatric Association before his
- death in 1967. Cameron also directed the Allain Memorial Institute at
- Montreal's McGill University, where he developed a bizarre and
- unorthodox method for treating schizophrenia. With financial backing
- from the CIA he tested his method on 53 patients at Allain. The
- so-called treatment started with "sleep therapy", in which subjects were
- knocked out for months at a time. The next phase, "depatterning",
- entailed massive electroshock and frequent doses of LSD designed to wipe
- out past behavior patterns. Then Cameron tried to recondition the mind
- through a technique known as "psychic driving". The patients, once
- again heavily sedated, were confined to "sleep rooms" where
- tape-recorded messages played over and over from speakers under their
- pillows. Some heard the message a quarter of a million times.
-
- Cameron's methods were later discredited, and the CIA grudgingly gave up
- on the notion of LSD as a brainwashing technique. But that was little
- consolation to those who served as guinea pigs for the CIA's secret mind
- control projects. Nine of Cameron's former patients have sued the
- American government for $1,000,000 each, claiming that they are still
- suffering from the trauma they went through at Allain. These people
- never agreed to participate in a scientific experiment -- a fact which
- reflects little credit on the CIA, even if the Agency officials feared
- that the Soviets were spurting ahead in the mind control race. The CIA
- violated the Nuremberg Code for medical ethics by sponsoring experiments
- on unwitting subjects. Ironically, Dr Cameron was a member of the
- Nuremberg tribunal that heard the case against Nazi war criminals who
- committed atrocities during World War II.
-
- Like the Nazi doctors at Dachau, the CIA victimized certain groups of
- people, who were unable to resist: prisoners, mental patients,
- foreigners, the terminally ill, sexual deviants, ethnic minorities. One
- project took place at the Addiction Research Centre of the US Public
- Health Service Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky. Lexington was
- ostensibly a place where heroin addicts could go to shake a habit, and
- although it was officially a penitentiary, all the inmates were referred
- to as "patients". The patients had their own way of referring to the
- doctors -- "hacks" or "croakers" -- who patrolled the premises in
- military uniforms.
-
- The patients at Lexington had no way of knowing that it was one of 15
- penal and mental institutions utilized by the CIA in its super-secret
- drug development program. To conceal its role the Agency enlisted the
- aid of the navy and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH),
- which served as conduits for channeling money to Dr Harris Isbell, a
- gung-ho research scientist who remained on the CIA payroll for over a
- decade. According to CIA documents the directors of NIMH and the
- National Institutes of Health were fully cognizant of the Agency's
- "interest" in Isbell's work and offered "full support and protection".
-
- When the CIA came across a new drug (usually supplied by American
- pharmaceutical firms) that needed testing, the frequently sent it over
- to their chief doctor at Lexington, where an ample supply of captive
- guinea pigs was readily available. Over 800 compounds were farmed out
- to Isbell, including LSD and a variety of hallucinogens. It became an
- open secret among street junkies that if the supply got tight, you could
- always commit yourself to Lexington, where heroin and morphine were
- doled out as payment if you volunteered for Isbell's wacky drug
- experiments. (Small wonder that Lexington had a return rate of 90%.) Dr
- Isbell, a longtime member of the Food and Drug Administration's Advisory
- Committee on the Abuse of Depressant and Stimulant Drugs, defended the
- volunteer program on the grounds that there was no precedent at the time
- for offering inmates cash for their services.
-
- CIA documents describe experiments conducted by Isbell in which certain
- patients -- nearly all black inmates -- were given LSD for more than 75
- consecutive days. In order to overcome tolerance to the hallucinogen,
- Isbell administered "double, triple and quadruple doses". A report
- dated May 5, 1959, comments on an experiment involving psilocybin (a
- semi-synthetic version of the magic mushroom). Subjects who ingested
- the drug became extremely anxious, although sometimes there were periods
- of intense elation marked by "continuous gales of laughter". A few
- patients felt that they
-
- "had become very large, or had shrunk to the size of children.
- Their hands of feet did not seem to be their own and sometimes took
- on the appearance of animal paws.... They reported many fantasies
- or dreamlike states in which they seemed to be elsewhere.
- Fantastic experiences, such as trips to the moon or living in
- gorgeous castles, were occassionally reported."
-
- Isbell concluded,
-
- "Despite these striking subjective experiences, the patients
- remained oriented in time, place, and person. In most instances,
- the patients did not lose their insight but realized that the
- effects were due to the drug. Two of the nine patients, however,
- did lose insight and felt that their experiences were cased by the
- experimenters controlling their minds."
-
- In addition to his role as a research scientists, Dr Isbell served as a
- go-between for the CIA in its attempt to obtain drug samples from
- European pharmaceutical concerns which assumed they were providing
- "medicine" to a US Public Health official. The CIA in turn acted as a
- research coordinator, passing information, tips, and leads to Isbell and
- its other contract employees so that they could keep abreast of each
- other's progress; when a new discovery was made, the CIA would often ask
- another researcher to conduct a follow-up study for confirmation. One
- scientist whose work was coordinated with Isbell's in such a manner was
- Dr Carl Pfeiffer, a noted pharmacologist from Princeton who tested LSD
- on inmates at the federal prison in Atlanta and the Bordentown
- Reformatory in New Jersey.
-
- Isbell, Pfeiffer, Cameron, West, and Hoch -- all were part of a network
- of doctors and scientists who gathered intelligence for the CIA.
- Through these scholar-informants the Agency stayed on top of the latest
- developments within the "aboveground" LSD scene, which expanded rapidly
- during the Cold War. By the mid-1950s numerous independent
- investigators had undertaken hallucinogenic drug studies, and the CIA
- was determined not to let the slightest detail escape its grasp. In a
- communique dated May 26, 1954, the Agency ordered all domestic field
- offices in the United States to monitor scientists engaged in LSD
- research. People of interest, the memo explained,
-
- "will most probably be found in biochemistry departments of
- universities, mental hospitals, private psychiatric practice....
- We do ask that you remember their importance and report their work
- when it comes to your attention."
-
- The CIA also expended considerable effort to monitor the latest
- development in LSD research on a world-wide scale. Drug specialists
- funded by the Agency made periodic trips to Europe to confer with
- scientists and representatives of various pharmaceutical concerns,
- including, of course, Sandoz Laboratories. Initially the Swiss firm
- provided LSD to investigators all over the world free of charge, in
- exchange for full access to their research data. (CIA researchers did
- not comply with this stipulation.) By 1953, Sandoz had decided to deal
- directly with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which assumed a
- supervisory role in distributing LSD to American investigators from then
- on. It was a superb arrangement as far as the CIA was concerned, for
- the FDA went out of its way to assist the secret drug program. With the
- FDA as its junior partner, the CIA not only had ready access to supplies
- of LSD (which Sandoz marketed for a while under the brand name Delysid)
- but also was able to keep a close eye on independent researchers in the
- United States.
-
- The CIA would have been content to let the FDA act as an intermediary in
- its dealings with Sandoz, but business as usual was suspended when the
- Agency learned of an offer that could not be refused. Prompted by
- reports that large quantities of the drug were suddenly available,
- top-level CIA officials authorized the purchase of 10 _kilos_ of LSD
- from Sandoz at an estimated price of 4240,000 -- enough for a staggering
- 100 million doses. A document dated November 16, 1953, characterized
- the pending transaction as a "risky operation", but CIA officials felt
- it was necessary, if only to preclude any attempt the Communists might
- make to get their hands on the drug. What the CIA intended to do with
- such an incredible stash of acid was never made clear.
-
- The CIA later found out that Sandoz had never produced LSD in quantities
- even remotely resembling ten kilograms. Apparently only 10 milligrams
- were for sale, but a CIA contact in Switzerland mistook a kilogram,
- 1,000 grams, for a milligram (.001 grams), which would explain the huge
- discrepancy. Nevertheless, Sandoz officials were pleased by the CIA's
- interest in their product, and the two organizations struck up a
- cooperative relationship. Arthur Stoll, president of Sandoz, agreed to
- keep the CIA posted whenever new LSD was produced or a shipment was
- delivered to a customer. Likewise, any information concerning LSD
- research behind the Iron Curtain would be passed along confidentially.
-
- But the CIA did not want to depend on a foreign company for supplies of
- a substance considered vital to American security interests. The Agency
- asked the Eli Lilly Company in Indianapolis to try to synthesize a batch
- of all-American acid. By mid-1954 Lilly had succeeded in breaking the
- secret formula held by Sandoz. "This is a closely guarded secret," a
- CIA document declared, "and should not be mentioned generally."
- Scientists as Lilly assured the CIA that "in a matter of months LSD
- would be available in tonnage quantities".
-
-
- Midnight Climax
-
-
- In a speech before the National Alumni Conference at Princeton
- University on April 10, 1953, newly appointed CIA director Allen Dulles
- lectured his audience on "how sinister the battle for men's minds had
- become in Soviet hands". The human mind, Dulles warned, was a
- "malleable tool", and the Red Menace had secretly developed "brain
- perversion techniques". Some of these methods were "so subtle and so
- abhorrent to our way of life that we have recoiled from facing up to
- them". Dulles continued,
-
- "The minds of selected individuals who are subjected to such
- treatment... are deprived of the ability to state their own
- thoughts. Parrot-like, the individuals so conditioned can
- merely repeat the thoughts which have been implanted in their
- minds by suggestion from outside. In effect the brain... becomes
- a phonograph playing a disc put on the spindle by an outside
- genius over which is has no control."
-
- Three days after delivering this address Dulles authorized Operation
- MK-ULTRA, the CIA's major drug and mind control program during the Cold
- War. MK-ULTRA was the brainchild of Richard Helms, a high-ranking
- member of the Clandestine Services (otherwise known as the "dirty tricks
- department") who championed such methods throughout his career as an
- intelligence officer. As helms explained to Dulles when he first
- proposed the MK-ULTRA project,
-
- "Aside from the offensive potential, the development of a
- comprehensive capability in this field... gives us a thorough
- knowledge of the enemy's theoretical potential, thus enabling us
- to defend ourselves against a foe who might not be as restrained
- in the use of these techniques as we are."
-
- The supersecret MK-ULTRA program was run by a relatively small unit
- within the CIA known as the Technical Services Staff (TSS). Originally
- established as a supplementary funding mechanism to the ARTICHOKE
- project, MK-ULTRA quickly grew into a mammoth undertaking that
- outflanked earlier mind control initiatives. For a while both the TSS
- and the Office of Security (which directed the ARTICHOKE project) were
- engaged in parallel LSD tests, and a heated rivalry developed between
- the two groups. Security officials were miffed because they had gotten
- into acid first and then this new clique started cutting in on what the
- ARTICHOKE crowd considered their rightful turf.
-
- The internecine conflict grew to the point where the Office of security
- decided to have one of its people spy on the TSS. This set off a flurry
- of memos between the Security informant and his superiors, who were
- dismayed when they learned that Dr Sidney Gottlieb, the chemist who
- directed the MK-ULTRA program, had approved a plan to give acid to
- unwitting American citizens. The Office of Security had never attempted
- such a reckless gesture -- although it had its own idiosyncracies;
- ARTICHOKE operatives, for example, were attempting to have a hypnotized
- subject skill someone while in a trance.
-
- Whereas the Office of Security utilized LSD as an interrogation weapon,
- Dr Gottlieb had other ideas about what to do with the drug. Because the
- effects of LSD were temporary (in contrast to the fatal nerve agents),
- Gottlieb saw important strategic advantages for its use in covert
- operations. For instance, a surreptitious dose of LSD might disrupt a
- person's thought process and cause him to act strangely or foolishly in
- public. A CIA document notes that administering LSD "to high officials
- would be a relatively simple matter and could have a significant effect
- at key meetings, speeches, etc." But Gottlieb realized there was a
- considerable difference between testing LSD in a laboratory and using
- the drug in clandestine operations. In an effort to bridge the gap, he
- and his TSS colleagues initiated a series of in-house experiments
- designed to find out what would happen if LSD was given to someone in a
- "normal" life setting without advance warning.
-
- They approached the problem systematically, taking one step at a time,
- until they reached a point where outsiders were zapped with no
- explanation whatsoever. First everyone in Technical Services tried LSD.
- They tripped alone and in groups. A typical experiment involved two
- people pairing off in a closed room where they observed each other for
- hours at a time, took noted, and analyzed their experiences. As
- Gottlieb later explained,
-
- "There was an extensive amount of self-experimentation for the
- reason that we felt that a first hand knowledge of the subjective
- effects of these drugs [was] important to those of us who were
- involved in the program."
-
- When they finally learned the hallucinogenic ropes, so to speak, they
- agreed among themselves to slip LSD into each other's drinks. The
- target never knew when his turn would come, but as soon as the drug was
- ingested a TSS colleague would tell him so he could make the necessary
- preparations -- which usually meant taking the rest of the day off.
- Initially the leaders of MK-ULTRA restricted the surprise acid tests to
- TSS members, but when this phase had run its course they started dosing
- other Agency personnel who had never tripped before. Nearly everyone
- was fair game, and surprise acid trips became something of an
- occupational hazard among CIA operatives. Such tests were considered
- necessary because foreknowledge would prejudice the results of the
- experiment.
-
- Indeed, things were getting a bit raucous down at headquarters. When
- Security officials discovered what was going on, they began to have
- serious doubts about the wisdom of the TSS game plan. MOral
- reservations were not paramount; it was more a sense that the MK-ULTRA
- staff had become unhinged by the hallucinogen. The Office of Security
- felt that the TSS should have exercised better judgment in dealing with
- such a powerful and dangerous chemical. The straw that broke the
- camel's back came when a Security informant got wind of a plan by a few
- TSS jokers to put LSD in the punch served at the annual CIA Christmas
- office party. A security memo dated December 15, 1954, noted that acid
- could "produce serious insanity for periods of 8 to 18 hours and
- possibly for longer". The writer of this memo concluded indignantly and
- unequivocally that he did "not recommend testing in the Christmas punch
- bowls usually present at the Christmas office parties".
-
- The purpose of these early acid tests wa not to explore mystical realms
- or higher states of consciousness. On the contrary, the TSS was trying
- to figure out how to employ LSD in espionage operations. Nevertheless,
- there were times when CIA agents found themselves propelled into a
- visionary world and they were deeply moved by the experience. One
- MK-ULTRA veteran wept in front of his colleagues at the end of his first
- trip. "I didn't want it to leave," he explained. "I felt I would be
- going back to a place where I wouldn't be able to hold on to this kind
- of beauty." His colleagues assumed he was having a bad trip and wrote a
- report stating that the drug had made him psychotic.
-
- Adverse reactions often occurred when people were given LSD on an
- impromptu basis. One one occassion a CIA operative discovered he'd been
- dosed during his morning coffee break.
-
- "He sort of knew he had it," a fellow-agent recalled, "but he
- couldn't pull himself together. Somehow, when you known you've
- taken it, you start the process of maintaining your composure. But
- this grabbed him before he was aware, and it got away from him."
-
- Then he got away from them and fled across Washington stoned out of his
- mind while they searched frantically for their missing comrade.
-
- "He reported afterwards," the TSS man continued, "that every
- automobile that came by was a terrible monster with fantastic eyes,
- out to get him personally. Each time a car passed he would huddle
- down against a parapet, terribly frightened. It was a real horror
- for him. I mean, it was hours of agony... like being in a dream
- that never stops -- with someone chasing you."
-
- Incidents such as these reaffirmed to the MK-ULTRA crew just how
- devastating a weapon LSD could be. But this only made them more
- enthusiastic about the drug. They kept springing it on people in a
- manner reminiscent of the ritual hazing of fraternity pledges.
-
- "It was just too damned informal," a TSS officer later said. "We
- didn't know much. We were playing around in ignorance.... We were
- just naive about what we were doing."
-
- Such pranks claimed their first victim in November 1953, when a group of
- CIA and army technicians fathered for a three-day work retreat at a
- remote hunting lodge in the backwoods of Maryland. On the second day of
- the meeting Dr Gottlieb spiked the after-dinner cocktails with LSD. As
- the drug began to take effect, Gottlieb told everyone that they had
- ingested a mind-altering chemical. By that time the group had become
- boisterous with laughter and unable to carry on a coherent conversation.
-
- One man was not amused by the unexpected turn of events. Dr Frank
- Olson, an army scientist who specialized in biological warfare research,
- had never taken LSD before, and he slid into a deep depression. His
- mood did not lighten when the conference adjourned. Normally a
- gregarious family man, Olson returned home quiet and withdrawn. When he
- went to work after the weekend, he asked his boss to fire him because he
- had "messed up the experiment" during the retreat. Alarmed by his
- erratic behavior, Olson's superiors contacted the CIA, which sent him to
- New York to see Dr harold Abramson. A respected physician, Abramson
- taught at Columbia University and was chief of the allergy clinic at
- Mount Sinai Hospital. He was also one of the CIA's principal LSD
- researchers and a part-time consultant to the Army Chemical Corps.
- While these were impressive credentials, Abramson was not a trained
- psychiatrist, and it was this kind of counseling his patients
- desperately needed.
-
- For the next weeks Olson confided his deepest fears to Abramson. He
- claimed the CIA was putting something in his coffee to make him stay
- awake at night. He said people were plotting against him and he heard
- voices at odd hours commanding him to throw away his wallet -- which he
- did, even though it contained several uncashed checks. Dr Abramson
- concluded that Olson was mired in "a psychotic state... with delusions
- of persecution" that had been "crystallized by the LSD experience".
- Arrangements were made to move him to Chestnut Lodge, a sanitorium in
- Rockville, Maryland, staffed by CIA-cleared psychiatrists. (Apparently
- other CIA personnel who suffered from psychiatric disorders were
- enrolled in this institution.) On his last evening in New York, Olson
- checked into a room at the Statler Hilton along with a CIA agent
- assigned to watch him. And then, in the wee hours of the morning, the
- troubled scientist plunged headlong through a closed window to his death
- 10 floors below.
-
- The Olson suicide had immediate repercussions within the CIA. An
- elaborate cover-up erased clues to the actual circumstances leading up
- to his death. Olson's widow was eventually given a government pension,
- and the full truth of what happened would not be revealed for another 20
- years. Meanwhile CIA director Allen Dulles suspended the in-house
- testing program for a brief period while an internal investigation was
- conducted. In the end, Gottlieb and his team received only a mildly
- worded reprimand for exercising "bad judgment", but no records of the
- incident were kept in their personnel files which would harm their
- future careers. The importance of LSD eclipsed all other
- considerations, and the secret acid tests resumed.
-
- Gottlieb was now ready to undertake the final and most daring phase of
- the MK-ULTRA program: LSD would be given to unwitting targets in
- real-life situations. But who would actually do the dirty work? While
- looking through some old OSS files, Gottlieb discovered that marijuana
- had been tested on unsuspecting subjects in an effort to develop a truth
- serum. These experiments had been organized by George Hunter White, a
- tough, old-fashioned narcotics officer who ran a training school for
- American spies during World War II. Perhaps White would be interested
- in testing drugs for the CIA. As a matter of protocol Gottlieb first
- approached Harry Anslinger, chief of the Federal Narcotics Bureau.
- Anslinger was favorably disposed and agreed to "lend" one of his top men
- to the CIA on a part-time basis.
-
- Right from the start White had plenty of leeway in running his
- operations. He rented an apartment in New York's Greenwich Village, and
- with funds supplied by the CIA he transformed it into a safehouse
- complete with two-way mirrors, surveillance equipment, and the like.
- Posing as an artist and a seaman, White lured people back to his pad and
- slipped them drugs. A clue as to how his subjects fared can be found in
- White's personal diary, which contains passing references to surprise
- LSD experiments: "Gloria gets horrors.... Janet sky high." The
- frequency of bad reactions prompted White to coin his own code word for
- the drug: "Stormy", which was how he referred to LSD throughout his
- 14-year stint as a CIA operative.
-
- In 1955 White transferred to San Francisco, where two more safehouses
- were established. During this period he initiated Operation Midnight
- Climax, in which drug-addicted prostitutes were hired to pick up men
- from local bars and bring them back to a CIA-financed bordello.
- Unknowing customers were treated to drinks laced with LSD while White
- sat on a portable toilet behind two-way mirrors, sipping martinis and
- watching every stoned and kinky moment. As payment for their services
- the hookers received $100 a night, plus a guarantee from White that he'd
- intercede on their behalf should they be arrested while plying their
- trade. In addition to providing data about LSD, Midnight Climax enabled
- the CIA to learn about the sexual proclivities of those who passed
- through the safehouses. White's harem of prostitutes became the focal
- point of an extensive CIA study of how to exploit the art of lovemaking
- for espionage purposes.
-
- When he wasn't operating a national security whorehouse, White would
- cruise the streets of San Francisco tracking down drug pushers for the
- Narcotics Bureau. Sometimes after a tough day on the beat he invited
- his narc buddies up to one of the safehouses for a little "R&R".
- Occassionally they unzipped their inhibitions and partied on the
- premises -- much to the chagrin of the neighbors, who began to complain
- about men with guns in shoulder straps chasing after women in various
- states of undress. Needless to say, there was always plenty of dope
- around, and the feds sampled everything from hashish to LSD.
-
- "So far as I'm concerned," White later told an associate, "'clear
- thinking' was non-existent while under the influence of any of
- these drugs. I did feel at times like I was having a
- 'mind-expanding experience', but this vanished like a dream
- immediately after the session."
-
- White had quite a scene going for a while. By day he fought to keep
- drugs out of circulation, and by night he dispensed them to strangers.
- Not everyone was cut out for this kind of schizophrenic lifestyle, and
- White often relied on the bottle to reconcile the two extremes. But
- there were still moments when his Jekyll-and-Hyde routine got the best
- of him. One night a friend who had helped install bugging equipment for
- the CIA stopped by the Safehouse only to find the roly-poly narcotics
- officer slumped in front of a full-length mirror. White had just
- finished polishing off a half gallon of Gibson's. The he sat, with gun
- in hand, shooting wax slugs at his own reflection.
-
- The safehouse experiments continued without interruption until 1963,
- when CIA inspector general John Earman accidentally stumbled across the
- clandestine testing program during a routine inspection of TSS
- operations. Only a handful of CIA agents outside Technical Services
- knew about the testing of LSD on unwitting subjects, and Earman took
- Richard Helms, the prime instigator of MK-ULTRA, to task for not fully
- briefing the new CIA director, John J McCone. Although McCone had been
- replaced by President Kennedy to replace Allen Dulles as the dean of
- American intelligence, Helms apparently had his own ideas about who was
- running the CIA.
-
- Earman had grave misgivings about MK-ULTRA and he prepared to 24-page
- report that included a comprehensive overview of the drug and mind
- control projects. In a cover letter to McCone he noted that the
- "concepts involved in manipulating human behavior are found by many
- people within and outside the Agency to be disasterous and unethical".
- But the harshest criticism was reserved for the safehouse experiments,
- which, in his words, placed "the rights and interests of US citizens in
- jeopardy". Earman stated that LSD had been tested on "individuals at
- all social levels, high and low, native American and foreign". Numerous
- subjects had become ill,and some required hospitalization for days and
- weeks at a time. Moreover, the sophomoric procedures employed during
- the safehouse sessions raised serious questions about the validity of
- the data provided by White, who was hardly a qualified scientist. As
- Earman pointed out, the CIA had no way of knowing whether White was
- fudging the results to suit his own ends.
-
- Earman recommended a freeze on unwitting drug tests until the matter was
- fully considered at the higher level of the CIA. But helms, then deputy
- director for covert operations (the number two position within the
- Agency), defended the program. In a memo dated November 9, 1964, he
- warned that the CIA's "positive operational capacity to use drugs is
- diminishing owing to a lack of realistic testing", and he called for a
- resumption of the safehouse experiments. While admitting that he had
- "no answer to the moral issue", Helms argued that such tests were
- necessary "to keep up with Soviet advances in this field".
-
- This Cold War refrain had a familiar ring. Yet only a few months
- earlier Helms had sung a different tune when J Lee Rankin, chief counsel
- of the Warren Commission investigating the Kennedy assassination, asked
- him to report on Soviet mind control initiatives. Helms stated his
- views in a document dated June 16, 1964:
-
- "Soviet research in the pharmacological agents producing behavioral
- effects had consistently lagged five years _behind_ Western
- research [emphasis added]." Furthermore, he confidently asserted
- that the Russians did not have "any singular, new potent drugs...
- to force a course of action on an individual."
-
- The bureaucratic wrangling at CIA headquarters didn't seem to bother
- George Hunter White, who kept on sending vouchers for "unorthodox
- expenses" to Dr Sidney Gottlieb. No definitive record exists as to when
- the unwitting acid tests were terminated, but it appears that White and
- the CIA parted ways when he retired from the Narcotics Bureau in 1966.
- Afterwards White reflected upon his service for the Agency in a letter
- to Gottlieb:
-
- "I was a very minor missionary, actually a heretic, but 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 blessing of the
- All-Highest?"
-
- By this time the CIA had developed a "stable of drugs", including LSD,
- that were used in covert operations. The decision to employ LSD on an
- operational basis was handled through a special committee that reported
- directly to Richard Helms, who characterized the drug as "dynamite" and
- asked to be "advised at all times when it was intended for use". A
- favorite plan involved slipping "P-1" (the code name for LSD when used
- operationally) to socialist or left-leaning politicians in foreign
- countries so that they would babble incoherently and discredit
- themselves in public.
-
- Fidel Castro was among the Third World leaders targeted for surprise
- acid attacks. When this method proved unworkable, CIA strategists
- thought of other ways to embarrass the Cuban president. One scheme
- involved dusting Castro's shoes with thalium salts to make his beard
- fall out. Apparently they thought that Castro would lose his charisma
- along with his hair. Eventually the Agency shifted its focus from bad
- trips nd close shaves to eliminating Castro altogether. Gottlieb and
- his TSS cohorts were asked to prepare an array of bizarre gadgets and
- biochemical poisons for a series of murder conspiracies allying the CIA
- with anti-Castro mercenaries and the Mob.
-
- Egyptian president Gamal Abdal Nasser also figured high on the CIA's
- hallucinogenic hit list. While he managed to avoid such a fate, others
- presumably were less fortunate. CIA documents cited in a documentary by
- ABC News confirm that Gottlieb carried a stash of acid overseas on a
- number of occasions during the Cold War with the intention of dosing
- foreign diplomats and statesmen. But the effects of LSD were difficult
- to predict when employed in such a haphazard manner, and the CIA used
- LSD only sparingly in operations of this sort.
-
-
- The Hallucination Battlefield
-
-
- [ section on US Army experiments with LSD and BZ deleted ]
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- transcribed by zodiac@io.org
- --
- "Don't HATE the media... | K.K.Campbell
- beCOME the media!" --*-- <zodiac@io.org>
- - J. Biafra | . . . . cum grano salis
-
-
-