Posts Tagged ‘Stress Positions’

Interview with Monsignor Denis Faul

Context: Research for Brainwash: The Secret History of Mind Control
Location: TBC
Date: 9th November 2004
Interviewee: Monsignor Denis Faul

Monsignor Denis Faul was a prominent campaigner for civil rights in Northern Ireland. Here he talks about ‘Interrogation in Depth’ and reveals how he and his colleagues managed to discover what the British Army was up to in 1971, then get the word of the abuses out in the Press. I like his take on US interrogation techniques and Guantanamo Bay.

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Where were you at the time of Internment?

In 1971 I was teaching in a grammar school, St Barter’s (sp). I was up there for years but I was on holiday. I was applying for a place in Pomeroy which is in County Tyrone, and the Internment day was 9th August, which I think was a Monday, and on Wednesday after Mass a man came in to see me, a past pupil of mine, he was a young teacher and he said ‘I was taken away to be interned and we were brutally ill-treated’. I said ‘Where did this happen?’ He said ‘I think it was Ballykinder’. The British army stamped on them and kicked them around and put them into stress positions and treated them very, very badly. ‘Oh, it happened to everybody’, he said.

I got in touch with a colleague of mine, Fr Brian Brady in Belfast, and he’d had the same very bad reports from Belfast. So I went down to Belfast and we straight away got a number of priests together and we started recording the statements from all these people and eventually we formed a little group, the Association for Legal Justice… We got together some excellent men who worked very, very hard, set up a little office at the bottom of the Falls Road and [interviewed] everybody who was interrogated by the police or had been in and out. We gathered a terrible picture of ill-treatment over the next – well it went on for the next nine years. But then a few days went past and we were told by relatives that a number of people were missing. There was in particular a young man here, Paddy Joe Maclean, who was also a teacher and a good friend of mine and a very peaceful man. The relatives could get no trace of them.

His wife contacted you?

Yes, as far as I remember, the message came to me, probably from the wives – the relations and different ones – and we couldn’t work out where these people were. We worked out eventually that there were about 10 – I think it was 12 – and there were 2 more later on, that were missing from different parts.

I went to Belfast every day and we were collaborating together to put together this information. It was most mysterious: these ten were missing. It began to get into the Irish news, the local papers a little bit about this but not very much. Eventually then after about 7 or 8 days we found these men had arrived back into the Crumlin Road prison, which was a remand prison in Belfast and we were able then to get the whole story. Some of our staff and workers got the whole story then – had to be 16th or 17th August 1971, we began to get the story. So by about the 21st, we had the whole story

How did you get the story?

We advertised and made it known public that we were taking statements. People came to Belfast and relatives got in touch with us from different parts…it was that little committee, a number of priests in Belfast. People came up to the Falls Road and saw the group and told them. The relatives were in a state of terror and they just went to anyone to tell them. And we managed to assemble the material and find out that there was 10, I think, that were missing.

You were phoning the authorities?

Oh yes. But they would put you off. We did that, I did a lot of that. But they wouldn’t tell you about it, they didn’t seem to know themselves.

You rang up…

Yes. ‘I’m looking for Sean McKenna, where is Sean McKenna? His mother or his wife is looking for him’ (he was one of the ones from Newry and then there were two from Armagh). As you can see it was a rather confused situation, we were trying to gather a bit of information here, a bit of information there. We thought at first it was simply – since they had taken in 330 men and let out a good number of them all right, like my teacher friend who came to Mass. We thought it was just a bit of bureaucratic confusion, that these men would turn up somewhere.

Then they turned up and we found how they had been treated. Hooded, put in stress positions, and beaten up for seven days non-stop, day and night. We immediately recognised this as torture. We gathered up all the facts as best we could. Father Brady went to the ** (hotel). I also conveyed the information to Cardinal Conway but he had it already.

How did he get it?

He got it from Paddy Joe Maclean. As soon as Paddy Joe got back to the Crumlin Rd Prison, about 16th, 17 August, he wrote it all out and gave it to one of the prison officers who took it to Cardinal Conway. When I saw Conway he already had got it from Paddy Joe. He went over to see Mr [Edward] Heath. But I didn’t know that.

We went to the Sunday Times Insight Team on 24, 25 August and we gave it all to them. We thought it was a great scoop. It never appeared.

Interview with British Army Interrogator #3

Context: Research for Brainwash: The Secret History of Mind Control
Location: Reading, UK
Date: 2005
Interviewee: British Army Interrogation Royal Intelligence Corps

This army interrogator, a senior NCO from the Intelligence Corps with a number of decades’ experience, is very good on the role of interrogation in war and the importance of maintaining the ‘shock of capture’ . He has some interesting revelations about the US military’s use of white noise – and some straightforwad views regarding journalists who accuse men like him of ‘torturing’ subjects – when in reality they have no idea what war is actually all about.

His views on Northern Ireland (‘It’s not the Irish Republican TEA PARTY, is it?’) are well worth reading. Funnily enough, I put his comments on the harsh interrogation techniques deployed in Belfast in the early 1970s to a former IRA member – who agreed with them entirely. It’s worth noting that both men were appalled by goings-on at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay. This interviewee’s comments on interrogation there are well worth noting. The interview was conducted in a pub in Reading, UK  in 2005

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Where were you taught to interrogate?

Every single Intelligence Corps NCO certainly and indeed officer was expected by the time they’d been in the Corps for about 4 or 5 years to have gone through a tactical questioning and prisoner handling course. But we were taught, certainly during the training side, all about interview techniques and extraction of information, bearing in mind that a lot of our work was all to do with investigation – let’s say the loss of a parcel in an office. Or it might be (and I was involved in), in West Germany, interviewing people who came across the border by train or something… The whole business of human intelligence and extraction of information was inherent in the Corps and had been inherent in the Corps for many, many years. It was nothing new. We just carried on where the field security team left off.

Then when we did RA1 as NCOs – class A trade exam, class one, we then did the week’s tactical questioning/prisoner handling. And this was to equip us with skills that would allow us to select a prisoner and how that prisoner could be briefly questioned, or was required for further interrogation further up the line. Every unit should have had a tactical prisoner handler. The whole part of the prisoner handling was to be taught how to handle a prisoner so that – while that prisoner was not mistreated in any way – but was nevertheless handled in a fit state when he was pushed up the line he was still going to be indoctrinated (if that’s the right word) into talking to an interrogator.

Keep him sweet?

Keep him sweet.

So there is a rapid first interrogation – and then if the prisoner seems to have relevant information, he is moved on up the chain?

Yes. It’s important to appreciate that a prisoner of war is a bit like a dead body or a document, a piece of SIGINT or something you pick up, a wrecked vehicle. A prisoner is nothing more than an element of the intelligence process. The prisoner has the same value as a body to a certain extent, as signals intelligence. But there is one critical difference: that the prisoner has been in contact with the enemy most recently. You have to bear in mind that a prisoner is probably the most defensive person on the battlefield. He is being handled by people who don’t speak their language, doesn’t know what’s going to happen to him, doesn’t know when he’s going to see his family again, doesn’t know when he’s going to get his next meal, or his next drink. All he knows is that he is in the hands of the enemy. That’s all he knows. And it is frankly a very upsetting experience. It really is. And that is shown in a thing called The Shock of Capture. When a person is captured, they go through a psychological process of shock. And you will experience shock, perhaps, at school, when somebody said to you at school, ‘Oh, the headmaster wants to see you Monday morning at 9’. And you spend the entire weekend wondering what the headmaster wants to see you about. Your heart will race, your hands will feel clammy. If you’re roaring down the motorway at 90 and you see a blue light in your mirror, and as the police car comes nearer and nearer, you will begin to get the signs of shock. As the car passes, everything will drain away, of course. But the whole idea is to retain that shock of capture in the best way possible. Very, very difficult in different conditions.

Nevertheless, every prisoner will experience that shock because he doesn’t know what is going to happen to him. Life for him is very bleak. It really is. The prisoner himself, if he is trained, will be thinking about a) Escape; and b) ‘If I can’t escape, how am I going to resist?’ So that’s what we were trained to do. We were trained to identify the prisoners, for further interrogation. To maintain the shock of capture, and to decrease the chance of resistance in further interrogation.

Did they teach you about the history of interrogation?

Oh yeah, I remember the training film. We used to watch a training film called Camp 020. Absolutely. It was all there. We used to get handouts on the turning of prisoners. It was all part of our job. The Intelligence Corps is a very special corps. It was all part of our job, to turn people if we could. To use agents and sources. 020, the experiences of the prisoners of Korea and so forth, was all part of the history that we learned.

When did you join?

I transferred in 1970 from the **** Corps. …We had an exercise in Germany against the Danes, and each rounded each other up and up against the wall and so forth. I became interested in the interrogation process.

When the Danes caught you, they used the full white noise treatment?

No. Just tactical questioning. But we were questioned by Brits who I now know to be **** Company. We were given about 8 hours worth or so. Quite an experience.

Not with the noise, though?

No. You wouldn’t get the noise at that stage. It was just a couple of troopers, perhaps the odd officer, in a barn somewhere. As you would expect to be captured. I think we were not allowed to go through the full lot at that stage because we were not what was called at that stage Prone-to-Capture. Every soldier is prone to capture, of course, but there was – aircrew, special forces, navy divers, and a whole raft of other people.

There was a relationship to what happened in Korea, wasn’t there? Were your lecturers Korean veterans?

Yes, of course. And when I was an instructor, we got a sergeant from the Glosters who had been captured in Korea. He had been captured at the Imjin River. He had spent three months denying that he knew anything about a 303 rifle – which was his weapon! Great resilience. Why do you want to tell these Koreans about the 303? We also used to get Americans who had been captured in Vietnam. This was when I was instructing. We were exposed to these people.

The real push in counter-interrogation training came from Korea in the first place, didn’t it? Escape and Evasion?

Yes. It’s a bit more fundamental than that. By then the threat was a communist threat. Resisting the Germans in WWII was – there was no real, there was a programme in WWII on resistance to interrogation. But because it was wartime, not many aircrew went through it. They were told, ‘When you bale out of the aircraft, the only thing you think about is survival. And when you hit the deck, you’re in enemy territory.’ There’s this whole trauma – burning aircraft, or being captured at Dieppe. Very real. Very hard to get it across just how traumatic these experiences can be.

The problem with Korea was that for the first time, Allied/Western forces had fallen into the hands of communists and they had a whole different way of approaching this. Much more against the individuals. The other factor about the army of Korea is that a large number of the men who fought then were left-wing. And so the Koreans and the Chinese would say ‘But of course, you are our allies, aren’t you?’ This was a major dilemma for ordinary men – suddenly to be exposed to this whole ideology. And there was this re-education process. Very hard to get through, and men signed confessions – I don’t blame them. None of these men had ever had this training before. Suddenly these pressures are coming, conditions are very bad.

Interview with US Army Interrogator #1

Context: Research for Brainwash: The Secret History of Mind Control
Location: London
Date: TBC
Interviewee: US Army Sergeant / Interrogation Instructor

This interrogator, a young sergeant in the US Army, worked in Afghanistan at the start of the War on Terror. Here he talks about his training and describes some of his experiences at Kandahar and Bagram. This guy is almost the exact opposite of what the general public might expect of an NCO involved in the interrogation business: highly intelligent, clearly well-trained – and with very strong ethical views regarding what is, and is not, acceptable in interrogation.

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Is interrogation a dark art?

It’s a public perception. I don’t think that it’s a dark art. It was never, all the time that we trained and all the preparation that we had, it was never – we thought that we were part of something really special and cool and out in the open. And because our training manuals were never classified and stuff, we never felt that we were part of something weird.

Not secret-secret, then?

There was a bit of elitism about it. They kept telling you that you were special to be selected for the corps. We then found out that there’s nothing that special about it at all… So, when you’re very young you buy into that.

Ever come across ‘truth drugs’ in your training?

I think that they’ve changed a bit about the instruction. I remember it being much more categoric when I was going through the training as a private. Versus what I remember teaching as a staff sergeant. The training that I got when I was very young, sort of 1990, 17 years old, was – the theme was that we went through the different classes of drugs, we went through what was their official pharmacological classification and we talked about what the effects were on people, but it was always in the context of either: a) This is what our enemies do; or b) They don’t work. This is what was told us, and it was repeated over and over again.

I think that as novice interrogators, educated in films – as we were – people thought that this would be a panacea, you know? I think a lot of us actually thought that we would learn how to give shots. There were rumours in basic training that they would teach us to give sodium pentothal shots by using oranges – you practised giving shots of the truth serum on oranges. That was the first I ever learned of it. Then we had this half-day class, maybe a three hour block of instruction.

Later when I went to instruct, the course had been revised in 1993, the course had been changed and there was a much more in-depth piece about it with practical examples, and they talked more about the American experience using truth serum.

Where?

It was never in a military context, it was always talked about as police investigations or the CIA. It was not talked about in terms of ‘does the army do this?’ And there were actual cases cited. Again the bias was always that it was not something that was applicable, not something that would work. It was taught to us as a kind of awareness thing.

What about sensory deprivation? What were you taught about that?

I have experienced it because I went to train at the Evasion and Escape School at Fort Polk, Louisiana. So I learned about it there. The first time I learned about it was as an instructor because it was a part of a block that was added. I was not taught that as a private but when I went back to teach as a sergeant, they talked about it. They talked about evolution of it – sensory deprivation, like isolation, darkness. Then they went into these funky things like water stasis chambers. It was stuff that we were talking about. Although there was a video, a movie about it that had the look of one of those 1960s nuclear bomb stories. But again it was never in the context of ‘we use it’. It was awareness. It was in the context of ‘you’re an army interrogator and you have 10 approaches. Use them.’

The film you saw featured somebody in a helmet?

No, not like that. It looked like it was a documentary not prepared by the army, it was too high quality for the army. It looked like somebody was in a Jacuzzi with a lid. There was a square-looking thing, much bigger than a bathtub and there were people looking down, because they were up high, on walkways that were around it.

They were looking down on the person in the tank?

It was up high and there was this tank surrounded by these walkways that must have been at their chest level. These platforms with staircases leading to it, and these people with clipboards.

Spooky or funny?

I didn’t find it comedic or spooky. It looked like something that had been done at a university. A research project.