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The birth of soft torture. - By Rebecca Lemov - Slate Magazine
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"Briefing News & Politics Arts Life Business & Tech Science Podcasts & Video Blogs HOME / Science : The state of the universe. The Birth of Soft Torture CIA interrogation techniques—a history. By Rebecca Lemov Updated Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2005, at 5:07 PM ET In 1949, Cardinal Jószef Mindszenty appeared before the world's cameras to mumble his confession to treasonous crimes against the Hungarian church and state. For resisting communism, the World War II hero had been subjected for 39 days to sleep deprivation and humiliation, alternating with long hours of interrogation, by Russian-trained Hungarian police. His staged confession riveted the Central Intelligence Agency, which theorized in a security memorandum that Soviet-trained experts were controlling Mindszenty by "some unknown force." If the Communists had interrogation weapons that were evidently more subtle and effective than brute physical torture, the CIA decided, then it needed such weapons, too. PRINT DISCUSS E-MAIL RSS RECOMMEND... SINGLE PAGE Facebook MySpace Mixx Digg Reddit del.icio.us Furl Ma.gnolia Sphere StumbleUpon CLOSE Illustration of an experiment run by Hull at Yale on university students in 1937. Related in Slate Dahlia Lithwick explained the legal definitions of torture here in 2001, and Brendan I. Koerner addressed the issue three years later here . Information extracted by torture is not very reliable . Is humane torture possible? In January, Chris Suellentrop wrote about senators getting testy as they questioned Alberto Gonzales about torture. Months later, the agency began a program to explore "avenues to the control of human behavior," as John Marks discusses in his book The Search for the Manchurian Candidate . During the next decade and a half, CIA experts honed the use of "chemical and biological materials capable of producing human behavioral and physiological changes" according to a retrospective CIA catalog written in 1963. And thus soft torture "
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