MKULTRA Legacy: The Stain of Dishonor and the Prerequisites for Redemption

Sunday 18 October 2009


by: Gordon P. Erspamer, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed







 Despite the passage of four decades, America and its military have
never come to grips with its own ghastly programs of using soldiers as
guinea pigs to test chemical or biological weapons such as LSD, sarin,
nerve gases, plague, mescaline, anthrax and hundreds of others. At the
same time, they also conducted mind-control experiments, as soldiers
and others were administered drugs, and septal implants were inserted
in the sinus cavities a la "The Manchurian Candidate." The secret
research programs, originally code-named MKULTRA but continued under a
long succession of other code names, were conducted mainly by the US
Army from 1943 until at least 1975. However, the CIA provided planning,
financial support and field testing. Participants in the experiments
were recruited by the Army and lured by promises of no KP duty, a
four-day workweek, the promise of medals and special recognition. At
the same time, they were sworn to secrecy and forced to sign a general
consent form without informed consent or even knowing the nature of the
toxic substances that were sprayed in their faces, applied to their
skin or injected into their veins. And the government continues to try
to hide the fact that Nazi members were recruited to help devise these
experiments as part of Operation Paperclip, and that many of the
biological experiments were modeled after those conducted by the
notorious Col. Shiro Ishi in Manchuria and Japan.




 When word of these programs leaked out in the mid-1970's, the CIA
director, Adm. Stansfield Turner, promised Congress that the affected
veterans would be notified and provided medical treatment. See Final
Report of the Senate Select Committee (Church) on Intelligence
Activities, 94th Cong. (1976), Book I: XVII ("Foreign and Military
Intelligence: Testing and Use of Chemical and Biological Agents by the
Intelligence Communities"), at 
http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/church/reports/book1/html/ChurchB1_0197a.htm.
See also Project MKULTRA, The CIA's Program of Research in Behavioral
Modification: Joint Hearing Before the Senate Select Committees on
Intelligence and Human Resources, 95th Cong. (1977), Testimony of CIA
Director Admiral Stansfield Turner at 
http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/history/e1950/mkultra/Hearing03.htm.




 However, that promise was more observed in the breach, as the
process of notifying and treating the victims of human experimentation
has barely scratched the surface of their acts of treachery. And now we
learn that the DoD will not even compile an initial roster of affected
veterans until 2012. Unlike Britain, which long ago compensated its
veteran participants in a parallel group of tests at Porton Down,
America is waiting patiently for these veterans to die, and it is one
of the greatest injustices of our time.




 Yet, despite the long passage of time, the agents responsible for
this program continue to offer rationalizations to justify their own
acts or those of their predecessors. They cite the fears engendered by
the Cold War, real or imagined, and raise the chance that our enemies
might beat us to the punch. You hear a lot of denial or outright lies,
and the trail of documents suddenly disappeared in a purging ordered by
the CIA director, Richard Helms. And they speak of sacrifices for the
common good (not their own, but of those men exposed). The doctors
among them don't like to talk about the Hippocratic Oath or basic
principles of morality. Rather, they talk a lot about science, advances
in learning and the thrills of discovery. They forget that "Blood does
not wipe out dishonor, nor violence indicate possession" (Julia Ward
Howe). And you hear nothing or very little about the long-term health
effects of their programs, and their failure to notify, monitor or
treat the victims, who have experienced a panoply of adverse health
effects such as PTSD, breathing and lung problems, problems with
internal organs and countless others.




 Walter Lippman once said that a man has honor if he holds himself
to an ideal of conduct though it is inconvenient, unprofitable or
dangerous to do so. The perpetrators of these programs have stained
their honor. In a time of admitted polarization and confrontation, they
sacrificed their scruples, and victimized their fellow man. Their honor
will never be restored unless they candidly admit their complicity and
fault, and do everything in their power to help restore the health and
well-being of their victims. With each death, their debt swells and the
possibilities of redemption become more distant and unlikely. And a
miasma of shame, as toxic as the clouds created by biological weapons,
continues to hang over this great nation.




 And when the last man standing succumbs, a pall of infamy and
shame will become indelible, and choke the last glimmer of redemption,
and history will justly record another chapter in the annals of infamy.




 Note: The views expressed herein are solely those of the author,
and do not necessarily represent the views of any institution or person
with whom he is affiliated.





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    Gordon P. Erspamer is the
lead counsel in the class action complaint which is pending in San
Francisco Federal District Court, Vietnam Veterans of America, et al.
v. Central Intelligence Agency, et al., Case No. 09-0037 CW (ND Cal.
2009). More information regarding this lawsuit can be found at 
www.edgewoodtestvets.org.






      

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