-Caveat Lector-
Begin forwarded message:
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: April 7, 2007 3:16:50 AM PDT
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: High Times in Uniform
Researchers tested pot, LSD on Army volunteers
|
Psychiatrist James Ketchum performs a neurological test on a
soldier volunteer in an Army chemical weapons program that run
until 1972.
James Ketchum
USA TODAY
By Richard Willing, USA TODAY
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2007-04-05-army-
experiments_N.htm
Army doctors gave soldier volunteers synthetic marijuana, LSD and
two dozen other psychoactive drugs during experiments aimed at
developing chemical weapons that could incapacitate enemy soldiers,
a psychiatrist who performed the research says in a new memoir.
The program, which ran at the Army's Edgewood, Md., arsenal from
1955 until about 1972, concluded that counterculture staples such
as acid and pot were either too unpredictable or too mellow to be
useful as weapons, psychiatrist James Ketchum said in an interview.
The program did yield one hallucinogenic weapon: softball-size
artillery rounds that were filled with powdered quinuclidinyl
benzilate or BZ, a deliriant of the belladonnoid family that had
placed some research subjects in a sleeplike state and left them
impaired for days.
Ketchum says the BZ bombs were stockpiled at an Army arsenal in
Arkansas but never deployed. They were later destroyed.
The Army acknowledged the program's existence in 1975. Follow-up
studies by the Army in 1978 and the National Academy of Sciences in
1981 found that volunteers suffered no long-term effects.
Insider's account
Ketchum's book, Chemical Warfare: Secrets Almost Forgotten, appears
to be the first insider's account of experiments performed on about
2,000 soldier volunteers, says Steven Aftergood, a government-
secrecy expert for the Federation of American Scientists in
Washington, D.C. Ketchum self-published the book, which he sells on
his website.
In an interview, Ketchum, 75, said he wrote the book to trigger a
debate about the potential uses of non-lethal chemicals to
incapacitate terrorists who take hostages or use human shields.
"Incapacitating agents are designed to save lives," he said. "Isn't
it at least something we should be thinking about?"
Such research, says chemical weapons opponent Edward Hammond, would
not only be illegal under current international law but probably
never should have been performed.
"There are things that have taken place in the past that should
probably stay there," says Hammond, director of the Sunshine
Project, an Austin group that opposes biological warfare.
Ketchum's memoir draws from previously classified files, including
filmed experiments, and notes of tests given subjects before,
during and after they were fed, sprayed or injected with mind-
altering chemicals.
He says:
•LSD was rejected for weapons use because even soldiers on
prolonged trips could carry out violent acts.
•Even especially powerful marijuana lacked "knockdown effect." It
was rejected because its effects could be overcome simply by lying
down and resting.
•Soldier volunteers were willing participants who knew the
program's potential risks. Drugs given to soldiers were described
in general terms but not named though "many seemed to find out
through the grapevine."
•Intelligence reports of the time showed that Soviet researchers
were planning a large-scale LSD program.
•The CIA ran a parallel program that sometimes gave hallucinogens
secretly to unwitting citizens. The agency persuaded two Army
doctors to carry out experiments for the CIA that the Army would
not have authorized.
Ketchum says the Army phased out the hallucinogen project in about
1972, in part because disclosure of such research would have caused
a "public relations problem."
Ketchum's notes suggest the Army's fears were not imaginary. They
describe soldiers on "red oil," an especially powerful form of
marijuana, who smirked for hours and found even routine spatial
reasoning tests to be hilarious.
Soldiers under the influence of hallucinogens ate imaginary
chickens, took showers in full uniform while smoking cigars and
chatted with invisible people for two to three days at a time. One
attempted to ride off on an imaginary horse while another played
with kittens only he could see. Another described an order of toast
as smelling "like a French whore."
Some of the researchers also took LSD "as a matter of curiosity,"
Ketchum says.
His lone trip, he adds, was "something of an anti-climax." Colors
seemed more vivid and music more compelling, he remembers, but
"there were no breakthroughs in consciousness, no Timothy Leary
stuff."
At least two soldiers who received LSD in the 1950s later sued the
Army, alleging that the drug later caused them to suffer memory
loss, hallucinations and occasional outbursts of violence. The
claims were denied.
After leaving the Army, Ketchum saw patients in a private
psychiatric practice.
The experiments on human subjects ended in 1975, according to Jeff
Smart, historian for the Army's Research, Development and
Engineering Command at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.
The United States signed a United Nations-sponsored chemical
weapons ban in 1993 that outlawed incapacitating agents.
Calmative agents
Even so, the U.S. military has remained interested in researching
non-lethal chemicals.
In 2000, the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate, a Quantico, Va.,
group run by all four major military branches, commissioned a study
of the possible military uses of "calmative" pharmaceuticals such
as anesthetics and serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
The Sunshine Project's Hammond, who obtained the study through the
Freedom of Information Act, says using calmatives as weapons would
also be outlawed by the 1993 chemical weapons ban. Ketchum says
that is not clear.
In October 2002, Russian special forces used a calmative agent to
subdue Islamist Chechen terrorists who were holding about 850
hostages in a Moscow theater. More than 120 hostages died from the
drug's effects.
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