Brainwashing and the CIA

 



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                             Brainwashing and the CIA

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              SEE NOTES AT END FOR INFO ON SOURCES OF THESE DOCUMENTS


                            CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

                               WASHINGTON 25, D. C.


                     OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR       25 APR 1956


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               MEMORANDUM FOR: The Honorable J. Edgar Hoover

                               Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation


               SUBJECT       : Brainwashing


                    The attached  study  on brainwashing was prepared by my

               staff in response to the increasing acute interest in the

               subject throughout the intelligence and security components

               of the Government. I feel you will find it well worth your

               personal attention.


                    It represents the thinking  of  leading psy-chologists,

               psychiatrists and intelligence specialists, based in turn on

               interviews with  many  individuals  who  have  had  personal

               experience with  Communist  brainwashing,  and  on extensive

               research and testing.


                    While individuals specialists  hold  divergent views on

               various aspects of this most complex subject,  I believe the

               study reflects  a  synthesis  of  majority expert opinion. I

               will, of course, appreciate  any  comments on it that you or

               your staff may have.



                                                 (signed)

                                               Allen W. Dulles

                                                  Director




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                        A REPORT ON COMMUNIST BRAINWASHING



           The report that follows is a condensation of a study by training

       experts of the  important  classified  and  unclassified information

       available on this subject.


       BACKGROUND


          Brainwashing, as a technique, has been used for centuries and

       is no mystery to psychologists.  In this sense, brainwashing means

       involuntary re-education of basic beliefs and values.


          All people  are being re-educated  continually.  New  information

       changes one's beliefs.  Everyone has experienced to  some degree the

       conflict that ensues  when  new  information  is not consistent with

       prior belief.


          The experience of the brainwashed  individual differs in that the

       in-consistent information is   forced  upon  the  individual   under

       controlled conditions after the possibility of critical judgment has

       been removed by a variety of methods.


          There is no question that an individual can be broken psycholog-

       ically by captors with knowledge and willingness to persist in tech-

       niques aimed at   deliberately   destroying  the  integration  of  a

       personality.


          Although it is probable that everyone reduced to such a confused,

       disoriented state will respond to  the  introduction of new beliefs,

       this cannot be stated dogmatically.


       PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN CONTROL AND REACTION TO CONTROL


          There are  progressive  steps  in  exercising  control   over  an

       individual and changing his behaviour and personality integration.


           The following five steps are typical of behaviour changes in any

       controlled individual:


            1.  Making  the  individual aware of control is the first stage

                in changing his behaviour.  A  small child is made aware of

                the physical and psychological control of  his  parents and

                quickly recognizes  that  an  overwhelming  force  must  be

                reckoned with.

                So, a controlled adult comes  to recognize the overwhelming

                powers of  the  state  and the impersonal,  "incarcerative"

                machinery in   which   he   is   enmeshed.  The  individual

                recognizes that definite limits have been put upon the ways

                he can respond.


       (Approved for Release)          (62-80750-2712X)

       (Date: 8 FEB 1984)


                                                       OA 53-37


            2. Realization of his complete  dependence upon the controlling

               system is a major factor in the controlling of his behavior.


                                      Page 2


               The controlled adult is forced to accept the fact that food,

               tobacco,praise, and the only social contact that he will get

               come from  the  very interrogator who exercises control over

               him.


            3. The awareness of control  and  recognition  of dependence re

               sult in causing internal conflict and breakdown  of previous

               patterns of behaviour.

               Although this  transition can be relatively mild in the case

               of a child, it is almost  invariably  severe  for  the adult

               undergoing brainwashing.  Only an individual  who  holds his

               values lightly can change them easily.

               Since the   brainwasher-interrogators   aim   to   have  the

               individuals undergo profound  emotional  change,  they force

               their victims to seek out painfully what is  desired  by the

               controlling individual.

               During this  period  the  victim  is likely to have a mental

               breakdown characterized by delusions and hallucinations.


            4. Discovery  that  there is  an  acceptable  solution  to  his

               problem is  the  first  stage  of reducing the  individual's

               conflict.

               It is characteristically reported by victims of brainwashing

               that this discovery led to an overwhelming feeling of relief

               that the  horror  of  internal conflict would cease and that

               perhaps they would not, after all, be driven insane.

               It is at this point that  they  are  prepared  to make major

               changes in  their value-system. This is an automatic  rather

               than voluntary  choice.  They  have lost their ability to be

               critical.


            5. Reintergration of values and identification with the cont-

               rolling system is the final  stage in changing the behaviour

               of the controlled individual.

               A child who has learned a new, socially desirable  behaviour

               demonstrates its  importance by attempting to as apt the new

               behaviour to a variety of  other  situations. Similar states

               in the brainwashed adult are (SECTION DELETED BY CIA)

               pitiful.

               His new value-system, his manner of perceiving,  organizing,

               and giving  meaning  to  events, is virtually independent of

               his former  value  system.   He  is  no  longer  capable  of

               thinking or  speaking in concepts other than  those  he  has

               adopted.

               He tends to identify by expressing thanks to

               his captors for helping him see the light.

               Brainwashing can be achieved without using illegal

               means.

               Anyone willing  to  use  known  principles  of  control  and

               reactions to  control  and   capable  of  demonstrating  the

               patience needed  in  raising  a  child can probably  achieve

               successful brainwashing.









                                      Page 3


       COMMUNIST CONTROL TECHNIQUES AND THEIR EFFECTS


          A description of usual communist control techniques follows.


          1. Interrogation. There are at least two ways in which "interro-

             gation" is used:


                a. Elicitation, which is designed to get the individual to

                   surrender protected    information,   is   a   form   of

                   interrogation.  One major difference between elicitation

                   and interrogation used  to  achieve brainwashing is that

                   the mind of the individual must be kept  clear to permit

                   coherent, undistorted     disclosure     of    protected

                   information.


                b. Elicitation for the purpose of brainwashing consists of

                   questioning, argument,      indoctrination,     threats,

                   cajolery, praise,  hostility,  and  a variety  of  other

                   pressures. The  aim  of  this interrogation is to hasten

                   the breakdown of the  individual's  value  system and to

                   encourage the substitution of a different  value-system.

                   The procurement  of  protected  information is secondary

                   and is used as a device  to  increase  pressure upon the

                   individual. The term "interrogation" in  this paper will

                   refer, in  general,  to this type. The "interrogator" is

                   the individual who conducts  this  type of interrogation

                   and who  controls  the  administration   of   the  other

                   pressures. He is the protagonist against whom the victim

                   develops his conflict, and upon whom the victim develops

                   a state  of  dependency as he seeks some solution to his

                   conflict.


          2. Physical Torture and Threats of Torture. Two types of physical

             torture are distinguishable more by their psychological effect

             in inducing conflict than by the degree of painfulness:


                a. The first type is one  in which the victim has a passive

                   role in  the pain inflicted on him (e.g.,beatings).  His

                   conflict involves the decision of whether or not to give

                   in to demands in order to avoid further pain. Generally,

                   brutality of  this  type  was  not  found to achieve the

                   desired results. Threats  of  torture  were  found  more

                   effective, as  fear  of  pain  causes  greater  conflict

                   within the individual than does pain itself.


                b. The  second  type of torture is represented by requiring

                   the individual to stand in one spot for several hours or

                   assume some  other  pain-inducing   position.   Such   a

                   requirement often   engenders   in  the   individual   a

                   determination to  "stick  it  out." This internal act of

                   resistance provide a  feeling  of  moral  superiority at

                   first.

                   As time  passes  and  his  pain  mounts,   however,  the

                   individual becomes  aware  that  it  is his own original

                   determination to resist  that is causing the continuance

                   of pain.

                   A conflict  develops within the individual  between  his

                   moral determination  and  his  desire  to  collapse  and

                   discontinue the pain. It is this extra internal


                                      Page 4


                   conflict, in  addition  to  the conflict over whether or

                   not to give in to the demands made of him, that tends to

                   make this  method  of  torture  more  effective  in  the

                   breakdown of the individual personality.


          3. Isolation. Individual differences in reaction to isolation are

             probably greater than to any other method.

             Some individuals  appear  to  be  able to withstand  prolonged

             periods of  isolation  without  deleterious  effects,  while a

             relatively short period of  isolation  reduces  others  to the

             verge of  psychosis.  Reaction varies with the  conditions  of

             the isolation cell.

             Some sources  have  indicated  a  strong reaction to filth and

             vermin, although  they  had   negligible   reactions   to  the

             isolation.

             Others reacted  violently  to  isolation  in relatively  clean

             cells. The  predominant  cause of breakdown in such situations

             is a lack of sensory stimulation  (i.e.,  grayness  of  walls,

             lack of sound, absence of social contact, etc.).

             Experimental subjects exposed to this condition  have reported

             vivid hallicinations  and  overwhelming  fears of losing their

             sanity.


          4. Control of Communication. This is one of the most effective

             methods for creating a sense of helplessness and despair. This

             measure might  well  be  considered  the  cornerstone  of  the

             communist system of control.

             It consists   of   strict   regulation  of  the   mail,reading

             materials, broadcast  materials,  and social contact available

             to the individual.  The need  to  communicate is so great that

             when the  usual  channels  are  blocked,  the individual  will

             resort to   any   open   channel,  almost  regardless  of  the

             implications of using that particular channel.

             Many POWs in Korea, whose only  act  of "collaboration" was to

             sign petitions and "peace appeals," defended  their actions on

             the ground  that  this  was  the  only  method  of letting the

             outside world know they were still alive.

             Many stated that their morale  and  fortitude  would have been

             increased immeasurably  had  leaflets  of  encouragement  been

             dropped to them.

             When the  only  contact  with  the  outside  world  is via the

             interrogator, the prisoner comes to develop extreme dependency

             on his  interrogator  and hence  loses  another  prop  to  his

             morale.


             Another wrinkle  in  communication  control  is  the  informer

             system.  The recruitment of informers in POW camps discouraged

             communication between  inmates. POWs who feared that every act

             or thought of resistance would  be  communicated  to  the camp

             administrators, lost faith in their fellow man and were forced

             to "untrusting  individualism."  Informers   are   also  under

             several stages of brainwashing and  elicitation to develop and

             maintain control over the victims.


          5. Induction of Fatigue. This is a well-known device for breaking

             will power  and  critical  powers  of judgment. Deprivation of

             sleep results in more intense  psychological debilitation than

             does any other method of engendering fatigue.  The  communists

             vary their methods.


                                      Page 5


             "Conveyor belt"  interrogation that last 50-60 hours will make

             almost any individual compromise,  but  there  is  danger that

             this will kill the victim.

             It is safer to conduct interrogations of 8-10  hours  at night

             while forcing  the  prisoner  to  remain awake during the day.

             Additional interruptions   in   the  remaining  2-3  hours  of

             allotted sleep quickly reduce the most resilient  individual .

             Alternate administration  of  drug  stimulants and depressants

             hastens the process of fatigue  and sharpens the psychological

             reactions of excitement and depression.


             Fatigue, in  addition  to reducing the will  to  resist,  also

             produces irritation  and fear that arise from increased "slips

             of the  tongue."  forgetfulness,   and  decreased  ability  to

             maintain orderly thought processes.


          6. Control of Food, Water and Tobacco. The controlled individual

             is made   intensely   aware   of  his  dependence   upon   his

             interrogator for  the  quality  and  quantity  of his food and

             tobacco. The  exercise  of  this  control  usually  follows  a

             pattern.

             No food and little or no water is permitted the individual for

             several days prior to interrogation. When the  prisoner  first

             complains of  this  to  the interrogator, the latter expresses

             surprise at such inhumane treatment.  He makes a demand of the

             prisoner.  If the latter complies,he receives  a good meal. If

             he does  not,  he  gets a diet of unappetizing food containing

             limited vitamins,minerals, and calories.

             This diet is supplemented occasionally  by the interrogator if

             the prisoner  "cooperates."  Studies of controlled  starvation

             indicate that the whole value-system of the subjects underwent

             a change.   Their  irritation  increased  as  their ability to

             think clearly decreased.  The  control of tobacco presented an

             even greater  source  of  conflict for heavy smokers.  Because

             tobacco is  not  necessary  to  life, being manipulated by his

             craving for it can in the individual a strong sense of guilt.


          7. Criticism  and  Self-Criticism.   There   are   mechanisms  of

             communist thought    control.   Self-criticism    gains    its

             effectiveness from  the  fact  that although it is not a crime

             for a man to be wrong, it is  a major crime to be stubborn and

             to refuse  to learn. Many individuals feel intensely  relieved

             in being able to share their sense of guilt.

             Those individuals however, who have adjusted to handling their

             guilt internally  have  difficulty  adapting  to criticism and

             self-criticism. In brainwashing,  after  a sufficient sense of

             guilt has  been created in the individual, sharing  and  self-

             criticism permit  relief.  The  price  paid  for  this relief,

             however, is loss of individuality and increased dependency.


          8. Hypnosis and Drugs as Controls. There is no reliable evidence

             that the communists are making  widespread  use  of  drugs  or

             hypnosis in brainwashing or elicitation. The exception to this

             is the  use  of common stimulants or depressants  in  inducing

             fatigue and "mood swings."


          9. Other  methods of control, which when used in conjunction with

             the basic processes, hasten  the  deterioration  of prisoners'

             sense of values and resistance are:


                                      Page 6


                a. Requiring   a  case  history  or  autobiography  of  the

                   prisoner provides   a   mine   of  information  for  the

                   interrogator in    establishing    and     "documenting"

                   accusations.


                b. Friendliness  of  the interrogator, when least expected,

                   upsets the prisoner's  ability  to  maintain  a critical

                   attitude.


                c. Petty  demands, such as severely limiting  the  allotted

                   time for  use  of toilet facilities or requiring the POW

                   to kill hundreds of flies, are harassment methods.


                d. Prisoners are often humiliated  by refusing them the use

                   of toilet facilities during interrogator until they soil

                   themselves.  Often prisoners were not permitted to bathe

                   for weeks until they felt contemptible.


                e. Conviction  as a war criminal appears  to  be  a  potent

                   factor in   creating  despair  in  the  individual.  One

                   official analysis  of   the  pressures  exerted  by  the

                   ChiComs on   "confessors"   and   "non-confessors"    to

                   participation in bacteriological warfare in Korea showed

                   that actual  trial  and  conviction  of "war crimes" was

                   overwhelmingly associated with breakdown and confession.


                f. Attempted  elicitation   of   protected  information  at

                   various times  during the brainwashing process  diverted

                   the individual  from  awareness  of the deterioration of

                   his value-system.

                   The fact that, in most  cases,  the ChiComs did not want

                   or need such intelligence was not known to the prisoner.

                   His attempts to protect such information was made at the

                   expense of hastening his own breakdown.


       THE EXERCISE OF CONTROL: A "SCHEDULE" FOR BRAINWASHING

       --------------------------------------------------------------------

            From the  many  fragmentary  accounts reviewed,  the  following

       appears to be  the  most  likely  description  of what occurs during

       brainwashing.


            In the period immediately following  capture,  the  captors are

       faced with the problem of deciding on best ways of  exploitation  of

       the prisoners.  Therefore, early treatment is similar both for those

       who are to  be  exploited  through  elicitation and those who are to

       undergo brainwashing.  Concurrently   with  being  interrogated  and

       required to write   a  detailed  personal  history,   the   prisoner

       undergoes a physical    and   psychological   "softening-up"   which

       includes: limited unpalatable     food     rations,withholding    of

       tobacco,possible work details,  severely inadequate  use  of  toilet

       facilities, no use   of   facilities   for   personal   cleanliness,

       limitation of sleep such as requiring  a  subject  to  sleep  with a

       bright light in his eyes.


            Apparently the  interrogation  and autobiographical  ,material,

       the reports of   the   prisoner's   behaviour  in  confinement,  and

       tentative "personality typing" by  the  interrogators,  provide  the

       basis upon which exploitation plans are made.



                                      Page 7


            There is a major difference between preparation for elicitation

       and for brainwashing  .Prisoners  exploited through elicitation must

       retain sufficient clarity  of   thought   to   be   able   to   give

       coherent,factual accounts.


            In brainwashing , on the other hand, the first  thing  attacked

       is clarity of  thought.  To  develop  a  strategy  of  defense,  the

       controlled individual must determine  what  plans have been made for

       his exploitation. Perhaps  the  best  cues he can get  are  internal

       reactions to the pressures he undergoes.


            The most  important  aspect  of the brainwashing process is the

       interrogation. The other pressures  are  designed  primarily to help

       the interrogator achieve his goals. The following states are created

       systematically within the individual . These may vary  in order, but

       all are necessary to the brainwashing process:


            1. A  feeling  of  helplessness  in attempting to deal with the

               impersonal machinery of control.


            2. An initial reaction of "surprise."


            3. A feeling of uncertainty about what is required of him.


            4. A developing feeling of dependence upon the interrogator .


            5. A sense of doubt and loss of objectivity.


            6. Feelings of guilt.


            7. A questioning attitude toward his own value-system.


            8. A feeling of potential "breakdown,"  i.e.,that  he  might go

               crazy.


            9. A need to defend his acquired principles.


           10. A final sense of "belonging" (identification).


            A feeling  of  helplessness  in  the  face  of  the  impersonal

            machinery of   control   is  carefully  engendered  within  the

            prisoner. The individual who receives the preliminary treatment

            described above not only begins  to  feel  like an "animal" but

            also feels that nothing can be done about it.  No  one pays any

            personal attention  to  him.  His complaints fall on deaf ears.

            His loss of communication, if  he  has been isolated, creates a

            feeling that he has been "forgotten."


            Everything that   happens  to  him  occurs  according   to   an

            impersonal time schedule that has nothing to do with his needs.

            The voices and footsteps of the guards are muted. He notes many

            contrasts,e.g.,his greasy,unpalatable  food  may  be  served on

            battered tin dishes by guards immaculately dressed in white.


            The first steps in "depersonalization"  of  the  prisoner  have

            begun. He  has  no  idea what to expect. Ample  opportunity  is

            allotted for him to ruminate upon all the unpleasant or painful

            things that  could  happen  to  him.   He  approaches  the main

            interrogator with mixed feelings of relief and fright.


                                      Page 8


            Surprise is  commonly  used  in  the  brainwashing process. The

            prisoner is rarely prepared for the fact that the interrogators

            are usually friendly and considerate  at first. They make every

            effort to demonstrate that they are reasonable human beings.


            Often they apologize for bad treatment received by the prisoner

            and promise to improve his lot if he, too, is  reasonable. This

            behaviour is not what he has steeled himself for.  He lets down

            some of his defenses and tries to take a reasonable attitude.


            The first  occasion  he  balks  at  satisfying a request of the

            interrogator, however,  he is  in  for  another  surprise.  The

            formerly reasonable  interrogator  unexpectedly  turns  into  a

            furious maniac.


            The interrogator  is  likely  to  slap the prisoner or draw his

            pistol and  threaten  to shoot  him.   Usually  this  storm  of

            emotion ceases  as  suddenly  as it began and the  interrogator

            stalks from  the room. These surprising changes create doubt in

            the prisoner  as  to  his  very  ability  to  perceive  another

            person's motivations correctly. His next interrogation probably

            will be marked by impassivity in the interrogator 's mien.


            A feeling  of  uncertainty  about what is required  of  him  is

            likewise carefully  engendered within the individual . Pleas of

            the prisoner to learn specifically of what he is accused and by

            whom are side-stepped by the  interrogator.


            Instead, the prisoner is asked to tell why he thinks he is held

            and what he feels he is guilty  of.  If  the  prisoner fails to

            come up  with  anything,  he  is  accused  in  terms  of  broad

            generalities (e.g., espionage, sabotage,acts of treason against

            the "people").


            This usually provokes the prisoner to make some statement about

            his activities.   If  this  take  the  form  of a denial, he is

            usually sent to isolation on  further decreased food rations to

            "think over" his crimes. This process can be repeated again and

            again.


            As soon as the prisoner can think of something  that  might  be

            considered self-incriminating,    the    interrogator   appears

            momentarily satisfied. The prisoner  is asked to write down his

            statement in his own words and sign it.


            Meanwhile a strong sense of dependence upon the interrogator is

            developed. It  does not take long for the prisoner  to  realize

            that the  interrogator  is  the  source of all punishment , all

            gratification, and   all   communication.   The   interrogator,

            meanwhile, demonstrates his unpredictbility. He is perceived by

            the prisoner as a creature of whim.


            At times, the interrogator can be pleased very  easily  and  at

            other times  no effort on the part of the prisoner will placate

            him. The prisoner may begin  to  channel  so  much  energy into

            trying to   predict   the   behaviour   of  the   unpredictable

            interrogator that  he  loses  track of what is happening inside

            himself.



                                      Page 9


            After the  prisoner  has  developed the above psychological and

            emotional reactions to a sufficient  degree,  the  brainwashing

            begins in earnest.


            First, the  prisoner's  remaining  critical faculties  must  be

            destroyed.  He  undergoes  long, fatiguing interrogations while

            looking at a bright light. He  is  called  back again and again

            for interrogations after minimal sleep.


            He may undergo torture that tends to create internal  conflict.

            Drugs may  be used to accentuate his "mood swings." He develops

            depression when the interrogator  is  being  kind  and  becomes

            euphoric when  the  interrogator  is  threatening   the  direst

            penalties.


            Then the  cycle  is  reversed.  The prisoner finds himself in a

            constant state of anxiety which prevents him from relaxing even

            when he is permitted to sleep.   Short periods of isolation now

            bring on visual and auditory hallucinations.


            The prisoner feels himself losing his objectivity.   It  is  in

            this state  that  the prisoner must keep up an endless argument

            with the interrogator.  He may be faced with the confessions of

            other individuals who "collaborated" with him in his crimes.


            The prisoner seriously begins  to  doubts  his own memory. This

            feeling is heightened by his inability to recall  little things

            like the  names of the people he knows very well or the date of

            his birth. The interrogator patiently  sharpens this feeling of

            doubt by more questioning. This tends to create a serious state

            of uncertainty  when  the  individual  has  lost  most  of  his

            critical faculties.


            The prisoner  must  undergo  additional  internal conflict when

            strong feelings  of  guilt  are  aroused  within  him.  As  any

            clinical psychologist is aware, it is not at all  difficult  to

            create such  feelings.   Military  servicemen  are particularly

            vulnerable.


            No one can morally justify killing  even in wartime.  The usual

            justification is on the grounds of necessity or self-defense.


            The interrogator  is careful to circumvent such  justification.

            He keeps the interrogation directed toward the prisoner's moral

            code.


            Every moral vulnerability is exploited by incessant questioning

            along this  line until the prisoner begins to question the very

            fundamentals of his own value-system.


            The prisoner must constantly  fight  a  potential breakdown. He

            finds that  his  mind  is "going blank" for longer  and  longer

            periods of  time.  He can not think constructively. If he is to

            maintain any  semblance  of psychological  integrity,  he  must

            bring to  an end this state of interminable internal  conflict.

            He signifies a willingness to write a confession.


            If this   were  truly  the  end,  no  brainwashing  would  have

            occurred.  The individual would simply have given in to


                                      Page 10


            intolerable pressure.    Actually,   the  final  stage  of  the

            brainwashing process  has  just  begun.   No  matter  what  the

            prisoner writes  in  his  confession  the interrogator  is  not

            satisfied.


            The interrogator questions every sentence of the confession. He

            begins to edit it with the prisoner.  The prisoner is forced to

            argue against   every   change.   This   is   the   essence  of

            brainwashing.


            Every time that he gives in on  a point to the interrogator, he

            must rewrite  his whole confession. Still the  interrogator  is

            not satisfied.    In  a  desperate  attempt  to  maintain  some

            semblance of integrity and to  avoid  further brainwashing, the

            prisoner must begin to argue that what he has already confessed

            to is true.


            He begins to accept as his own the statements  he  has written.

            He uses   many  of  the  interrogator's  earlier  arguments  to

            buttress his position. By this  process,identification with the

            interrogator's value-system becomes complete.


            It is  extremely  important  to  recognize that  a  qualitative

            change has  taken  place  within  the prisoner. The brainwashed

            victim does not consciously change his value-system; rather the

            change occurs despite his efforts.  He  is  no more responsible

            for this change than is an individual who "snaps"  and  becomes

            psychotic. And  like  the  psychotic,  the prisoner is not even

            aware of the transition.


       DEFENSIVE MEASURES OTHER THAN ON THE POLICY AND PLANNING LEVEL


          1.  Training  of  Individuals potentially  subject  to  communist

              control.


              Training should provide for the trainee a realistic appraisal

              of what control pressures the communists are  likely to exert

              and what the usual human reactions are to such pressures. The

              trainee must  learn the most effective ways of combatting his

              own reactions to such pressures  and he must learn reasonable

              expectations as to what his behaviour should be.


              Training has  two  decidedly  positive  effects;   first,  it

              provides the trainee with ways of combatting control; second,

              it provides the basis for developing an immeasurable boost in

              morale.


              Any positive  action that the individual can take, even if it

              is only slightly effective, gives him a sense of control over

              a situation that is otherwise controlling him.


           2.  Training must provide the individual with the means of

               recognizing realistic goals for himself.


                  a. Delay in yielding may be the only achievement that can

                     be hoped for. In any  particular  operation, the agent

                     needs the support of knowing specifically  how long he

                     must hold  out  to  save  an  operation,  protect  his

                     cohorts, or gain some other goal.


                                      Page 11


                  b. The  individual  should  be  taught how to achieve the

                     most favorable treatment  and  how  to behave and make

                     necessary concessions to obtain minimum penalties.


                  c. Individual  behavioural  responses   to   the  various

                     communist control pressures differ markedly.


                     Therefore, each trainee should know his own particular

                     assets and    limitations    in   resisting   specific

                     pressures.  He can learn  these  only under laboratory

                     conditions simulating the actual pressures he may have

                     to face.


                  d. Training must provide knowledge of the  goals  and the

                     restrictions placed upon his communist interrogator.


                     The trainee  should  know  what  controls  are  on his

                     interrogator and to what extent he can manipulate

                     the interrogator. For example, the interrogator is not

                     permitted to  fail   to   gain  "something"  from  the

                     controlled individual. The knowledge  that,  after the

                     victim has proved that he is a "tough nut to crack" he

                     can sometimes  indicate  that  he  might compromise on

                     some little point to  help  the interrogator in return

                     for more favorable treatment, may be useful indeed.


                     Above all,  the potential victim of communist  control

                     can gain  a  great  deal of psychological support from

                     the knowledge that the communist interrogator is not a

                     completely free agent  who  can  do  whatever he wills

                     with his victim.


                  e. The trainee must learn what practical  cues  might aid

                     him in   recognizing   the   specific   goals  of  his

                     interrogator. The    strategy   of   defense   against

                     elicitation may differ markedly from  the  strategy to

                     prevent brainwashing.   To  prevent  elicitation,  the

                     individual may  hasten   his   own   state  of  mental

                     confusion; whereas,    to    prevent     brainwashing,

                     maintaining clarity    of    thought    processes   is

                     imperative.


                  f. The trainee should  obtain  knowledge  about communist

                     "carrots" as  well  as "sticks." The  communists  keep

                     certain of their promises and always renege on others.


                     For example,  the  demonstrable  fact that "informers"

                     receive no  better   treatment  than  other  prisoners

                     should do much to prevent this particular evil. On the

                     other hand, certain meaningless concessions

                     will often get a prisoner a good meal.


                  g. In particular, it should be emphasized  to the trainee

                     that, although  little  can  be  done  to  control the

                     pressures exerted upon  him,  he  can  learn something

                     about controlling his personal reactions  to  specific

                     pressures.




                                      Page 12


                     The trainee  can  gain  much  from  learning something

                     about internal   conflict    and    conflict-producing

                     mechanisms. He should learn to recognize  when someone

                     is trying   to   arouse   guilt   feelings   and  what

                     behavioural reactions  can  occur  as  a  response  to

                     guilt.


                  h. Finally, the training must teach some methods that can

                     be utilized in thwarting particular communist  control

                     techniques:


            Elicitation. In  general,  individuals  who  are the hardest to

                         interrogate for  information  are  those  who have

                         experienced previous interrogations.  Practice  in

                         being the  victim  of  interrogation  is  a  sound

                         training device.


            Torture.     The  trainee  should  learn  something  about  the

                         principles of pain and shock. There  is  a maximum

                         to the amount of pain that can actually be felt.


                         Any amount  of pain can be tolerated for a limited

                         period of time.  In  addition,  the trainee can be

                         fortified by the knowledge that  there  are  legal

                         limitations upon the amount of torture that can be

                         inflicted by communist jailors.


            Isolation.   The   psychological   effects   of  isolation  can

                         probably be thwarted best by mental gymnastics and

                         systematic efforts  on  the part of the isolate to

                         obtain stimulation for his neural end organs.


            Controls on  Food  and Tobacco. Foods given by  the  communists

                         will always   be   enough  to  maintain  survival.

                         Sometimes the victim gets unexpected opportunities

                         to supplement  his  diet  with  special  minerals,

                         vitamins and other nutrients (e.g.,"iron" from the

                         rust of prison bars).


                         In some  instances,  experience   has  shown  that

                         individuals could  exploit  refusal  to  eat. Such

                         refusal usually  resulted  in  the transfer of the

                         individual to a hospital where he received vitamin

                         injections and nutritious food.


                         Evidently attempts of this kind to  commit suicide

                         arouse the    greatest    concern   in   communist

                         officials. If   deprivation   of  tobacco  is  the

                         control being exerted. the victim  can  gain moral

                         satisfaction from  "giving  up" tobacco.  He can't

                         lose since he is not likely to get any anyway.


            Fatigue.     The trainee should  learn reactions to fatigue and

                         how to  overcome  them  insofar as  possible.  For

                         example, mild  physical exercise "clears the head"

                         in a fatigue state.


            Writing Personal Accounts and  Self-Criticism.  Experience  has

                         indicated that one of the most effective ways of


                                      Page 13


                         combatting these  pressures  is  to enter into the

                         spirit with an overabundance of enthusiasm.

                         Endless written    accounts   of   inconsequential

                         material have  virtually  "smothered"  some  eager

                         interrogators.In the  same spirit, sober, detailed

                         self-criticisms  of  the  most  minute  "sins" has

                         sometimes brought good results.


            Guidance as  to  the  priority of positions he  should  defend.

       Perfectly compatible responsibilities  in the normal execution of an

       individual's duties may  become   mutually   incompatible   in  this

       situation.


            Take the example of a senior grade military officer. He has the

       knowledge of sensitive strategic intelligence which  it  is his duty

       to protect. He  has  the  responsibility of maintaining the physical

       fitness of his  men  and  serving  as  a  model  example  for  their

       behaviour. The officer may go to the camp commandant  to protest the

       treatment of the  POWs and the commandant assures him that treatment

       could be improved if he will swap  something for it. Thus to satisfy

       one responsibility he must compromise another.


            The officer,  in  short,  is  in a constant state  of  internal

       conflict.  But if  the officer is given the relative priority of his

       different responsibilities, he is supported by the knowledge that he

       won't be held accountable for any  other  behaviour  if  he does his

       utmost to carry  out his highest priority responsibility.  There  is

       considerable evidence that  many  individuals  tried to evaluate the

       priority of their  responsibilities   on  their  own,  but  were  in

       conflict over whether   others  would  subsequently   accept   their

       evaluations. More than one individual was probably brainwashed while

       he was trying to protect himself against elicitation.


       CONCLUSIONS


            The application  of  known psychological principles can lead to

       an understanding of brainwashing.


            1.  There  is  nothing  mysterious  about  personality  changes

                resulting from the brainwashing process.


            2.  Brainwashing   is   a   complex  process.   Principles   of

                motivation, perception,    learning,    and   physiological

                deprivation are needed to  account for the results achieved

                in brainwashing.


            3.  Brainwashing   is  an  involuntary  re-education   of   the

                fundamental beliefs   of  the  individual.  To  attack  the

                problem successfully,  the  brainwashing  process  must  be

                differentiated clearly from general education  methods  for

                thought-control or mass indoctrination, and elicitation.


            4. It appears possible for the individual,through training,to

               develop limited  defensive  techniques against brainwashing.

               Such defensive measures are  likely  to be most effective if

               directed toward thwarting individual emotional  reactions to

               brainwashing techniques  rather  than  to ward thwarting the

               techniques themselves.  15 August 1955



                                      Page 14

       ====================================================================


       (note Declassified)


                                      SECRET


                            CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

                               WASHINGTON 25, D. C.


                                    19 JUN 1964


                                              (Commission No. 1131)



               MEMORANDUM FOR: Mr. J. Lee Rankin

                               General Counsel

                               President's Commission on the

                               Assassination of President Kennedy



               SUBJECT       : Soviet Brainwashing Techniques



               1.  Reference is made to your memorandum of 19 May 1964,

                   requesting that  materials relative to Soviet techniques

                   in mind conditioning and  brainwashing be made available

                   to the Commission.


               2.  At my request, experts on these subjects within the CIA

                   have prepared a brief survey of Soviet  research  in the

                   direction and control of human behavior, a copy of which

                   is attached.  The  Commission  may retain this document.

                   Please note that the use  of certain sensitive materials

                   requires that a sensitivity indicator be affixed.


               3.  In the immediate future, this Agency will make available

                   to you a collection of overt and classified materials on

                   these subjects, which the Commission may retain.


               4.  I hope that these documents will be responsive to the

                   Commission's needs.


                                                       (SIGNED)


             (DECLASSIFIED)                            Richard Helms

               (By C.I.A.)                          Deputy   Director   for

       Plans

           (letter of ___________)

           (---------------------)



           Attachment



           CD  1131                 SECRET







                                      Page 15


       MEMORANDUM


           SUBJECT: Soviet Research and Development in the Field of

                    Direction and Control of Human Behavior.


                   1.  There   are   two   major  methods  of  altering  or

                       controlling human  behavior,  and  the  Soviets  are

                       interested in both.


                       The first    is    psychological;     the    second,

                       pharmacological. The  two  may be used as individual

                       methods or for mutual reinforcement.


                       For long-term control  of  large  numbers of people,

                       the former method is more promising than the latter.


                       In dealing  with  individuals, the  U.S.  experience

                       suggests the pharmacological approach (assisted

                       by psychological   techniques)  would  be  the  only

                       effective method.


                       Neither method would  be  very  effective for single

                       individuals on a long term basis.


                   2.  Soviet   research  on  the  pharmacological   agents

                       producing behavioral effects has consistently lagged

                       about five years behind Western research.


                       They have been interested in such research, however,

                       and are  now  pursuing research on such chemicals as

                       LSD-25, amphetamines, tranquillizers, hypnotics, and

                       similar materials.


                       There is no present  evidence  that the Soviets have

                       any singular, new, potent drugs to force a course of

                       action on an individual.


                       They are  aware,  however,  of the tremendous  drive

                       produced by drug addiction, and PERHAPS could couple

                       this with psychological direction to achieve control

                       of an individual.


                   3.  The  psychological aspects of behavior control would

                       include not  only  conditioning  by  repetition  and

                       training, but such things as hypnosis,  deprivation,

                       isolation, manipulation of guilt feelings, subtle or

                       overt threats, social pressure, and so on.














                                      Page 16


                       Some of the newer trends in the USSR are as follows:


                       a. The  adoption  of  a  multidisciplinary  approach

                          integrating biological,social    and    physical-

                          mathematical research  in  attempts   better   to

                          understand, and   eventually,  to  control  human

                          behavior in  a  manner  consonant  with  national

                          plans.


                       b. The  outstanding  feature,  in  addition  to  the

                          inter-disciplinary approach, is a new concern for

                          mathematical approaches  to  an  understanding of

                          behavior.


                          Particularly notable  are  attempts to use modern

                          information theory, automata theory, and feedback

                          concepts in interpreting the mechanisms  by which

                          the "second  signal  system,"  i.e.,  speech  and

                          associated phenomena, affect human behavior.


                          Implied by this  "second  signal  system,"  using

                          INFORMATION inputs  as  causative  agents  rather

                          than chemical  agents,  electrodes  or other more

                          exotic techniques    applicable,    perhaps,   to

                          individuals rather than groups.


                       c. This new trend, observed in the early Post-Stalin

                          Period, continues. By 1960 the word "cybernetics"

                          was used  by  the Soviets to designate  this  new

                          trend.


                          This new science is considered by some as the key

                          to understanding  the human brain and the product

                          of its    functioning--psychic    activity    and

                          personality--to the  development   of  means  for

                          controlling it   and  to  ways  for  molding  the

                          character of the "New Communist Man".


                          As one Soviet author  puts it: Cybernetics can be

                          used in  "molding  of  a child's  character,  the

                          inculcation of   knowledge  and  techniques,  the

                          amassing of  experience,   the  establishment  of

                          social behavior  patterns...all  functions  which

                          can be  summarized  as  'control'  of  the growth

                          process of   the   individual."   1/Students   of

                          particular disciplines  in  the   USSR,  such  as

                          psychologist and  social scientists, also support

                          the general cybernetic trend. 2/ (Blanked by CIA)


                   4.  In summary, therefore, there is no evidence that the

                       Soviets have any  techniques  or  agents  capable of

                       producing particular behavioral patterns  which  are

                       not available in the West.


                       Current research  indicates  that  the  Soviets  are

                       attempting to develop  a  technology for controlling

                       the development  of  behavioral patterns  among  the

                       citizenry of the USSR in accordance with politically

                       determined requirements of the system.


                                      Page 17

                       Furthermore, the  same  technology can be applied to

                       more sophisticated  approaches  to  the  "coding" of

                       information for transmittal to population targets in

                       the "battle for the minds of men."


                       Some of the more esoteric techniques such as ESP or,

                       as the   Soviets   call   it,   "biological   radio-

                       communication", and  psychogenic agents such as LSD,

                       are receiving some  overt  attention with, possibly,

                       applications in mind for individual behavior control

                       under clandestine conditions.


                       However, we   require  more  information   than   is

                       currently available   in   order   to  establish  or

                       disprove planned or  actual  applications of various

                       methodologies by Soviet scientists to the control of

                       actions of articular individuals.




                                  References


           1.  Itelson,  Lev,  "Pedagogy: An Exact Science?"  USSR  October

               1963,

               p. 10.

           2.  Borzek, Joseph, "Recent Developments in Soviet Psychology,"

               Annual Review of Psychology, Vol. 15, 1964, p. 493-594.


                                      SECRET          CD  1131


               The  first  letter  and  attachment  are   from

               DECLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS  1984  microfilms  under MKULTRA (84)

               002258, published by  Research  Publication  Woodbridge,  CT

               06525.  Some  original  markings were not retyped,  but  the

               content is the same.


               The  second  letter  and  attachment  are  from   the

               Warren Commission  documents.


               Notice should  be  paid to the different tone Helms gives to

               his letter,  keeping in mind  he was found guilty  of  lying

               to Congress.   He  places  greater  emphasis   on   "Soviet"

               practices and  tries  to  diminish  breakthroughs  gained by

               Americans.


               Some  thought   should  be   given  as  to  WHY  the  Warren

               Commission  sought  such documents  (remembering  that ALLEN

               DULLES  was   a   member  of  that  Commission).   They were

               exploring the Manchurian candidate  theory.


               It  was revealed during  the   Church  Committee hearings of

               1975 that  Helms  had been in charge of Project  AMLASH,   a

               program  to  assassinate  Castro (Cuba),Trujillo  (Dominican

               Republic), Diem (RVN), Schneider (Chile) using MAFIA figures

               John Roselli and Santos Trafficante to do the job.


               Care was used to insure  lines  appear  in  same  length and

               order.  Page length will have to be adjusted  if  you desire

               to print  this.  Look  for  other  specials soon. David John

               Moses.

                                       FINIS

                                      Page 18

                                

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