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"Executive Order 13491" redirects here. For full text of the
order see Executive Order 13491 on Wikisource.
Army Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence Lieutenant General John
Kimmons displays the manual on June 6, 2006.
[1][2]
Army Field Manual 2 22.3, or FM 2-22.3,
Human Intelligence Collector Operations, was issued by the
Department of the Army on September 6, 2006. The manual gives
instructions on a range of issues, such as the structure, planning
and management of human intelligence operations, the
debriefing of
soldiers, and the analysis of known relationships and map data. The
largest and most newsworthy section of the document details
procedures for the screening and interrogation of prisoners of war and unlawful combatants.
Political
issues
Drafting of the manual reflected concerns about enhanced interrogation
techniques and/or torture, such as water boarding, that
followed after a 2003 memo by John Yoo determined that the wartime authority
of the U.S. president overrode international
agreements against torture.[3]
Revision of the manual from the previous FM 34-52 Intelligence
Interrogation followed passage of a law in 2005, pressed by
Senator John McCain,
that caused interrogation techniques not included in the manual to
be considered illegal for the U.S. Army, but not for
the CIA.[4][5]
Therefore, the release of the manual was seen to prohibit Army
personnel from methods such as mock executions, sexual humiliation, hooding prisoners and "waterboarding".[6] On
March 8, 2008 president George W. Bush vetoed a bill, supported
by Democrats and opposed by John McCain, which would have
restricted the CIA to the techniques in the manual.[7]
Disputes during the manual's preparation included whether a
section on interrogation techniques would remain classified [4],
and whether the Geneva
conventions ban on "humiliating and degrading treatment" would
be removed.[8]
Executive Order 13491, issued
by Barack Obama on
January 22, 2009 (two days after Obama's inauguration)
revoked Executive Order 13440 of July
20, 2007. It restricted the CIA and other Executive Agencies to
proceed with interrogations "strictly in accord with the
principles, processes, conditions, and limitations [Army Field
Manual 2 22.3] prescribes".[9] Persons
associated with the U.S. government were advised that they could
rely on the manual, but could not rely upon "any interpretation of
the law governing interrogation -- including interpretations of
Federal criminal laws, the Convention
Against Torture, Common Article 3, Army Field Manual
2 22.3, and its predecessor document, Army Field Manual 34
52 issued by the Department of
Justice between September 11, 2001, and January 20, 2009."[10] This
order restricted the CIA and all other U.S. personnel to the same
rules that the military uses in interrogations.[11] Newsweek described the impact
of this and three other executive orders issued shortly after
Obama's inauguration as "The End of Torture", calling
Obama's decision to restrict the CIA to the Army Field Manual
"his most far-reaching and potentially controversial move"
among these, and the subject of internal debate among Obama
advisors.[12]
Others expressed doubt about the policies, citing that in six
months an interagency commission, headed by the U.S. Attorney General, may recommend
"additional or different guidance" for non-military agencies such
as the CIA. The Center for Constitutional
Rights, one group that represents detainees, termed the
commission an "escape hatch" for returning to previous
practices.[13][14] The
Wall Street Journal termed this the "Jack Bauer
exception", saying that Obama was drawing a line where none
really existed, citing that Bush officials have stated that they
used water boarding only against three top al-Qaida officials in
2003, and saying that the real effect was that CIA interrogators
were purchasing legal insurance.[15]
Interrogation methods
The manual permits nineteen interrogation techniques,[16]
Described in Chapter 8 of the manual as "approach techniques" to
help establish a rapport, these are:[17]
- Direct approach. Pertinent questions are asked
directly "as long as the source is answering the questions in a
truthful manner". In almost all HUMINT collection this is the first
approach used, and an alternative approach is chosen once the
source refuses to answer, avoids answering, or answers
falsely.
- Incentive approach. A real or emotional reward
is given, or a real or perceived negative stimulus is removed,
within the limits of what can be delivered and what is permissible
by national and international law.
- Emotional approaches join an emotional
response with some attached incentive. These are:
- Emotional love. "Sincerity and conviction are
critical" for the questioner to be persuasive. "For example, if the
source cooperates, he can see his family sooner, end the war,
protect his comrades, help his country, help his ethnic
group."
- Emotional hate. The questioner persuades the
source that cooperation will harm his enemies. The manual prohibits
the questioner from promising that a unit will be denied a chance
to surrender or that it will be mistreated.
- Emotional fear-up. "The HUMINT collector must
be extremely careful that he does not threaten or coerce a source",
but can rely on justifiable fears such as that the prisoner may be
killed for cooperating unless he receives protection, and can rely
on non-specific fears, such as by asking "You know what can
happen to you here?".
- Emotional fear-down. A fearful subject is
reassured "through verbal and physical actions" to calm him and
cause him to view the interrogator as a "protector".
- Emotional-pride and ego-up. The subject is
"flattered into providing certain information in order to gain
credit and build his ego" using a "somewhat-in-awe tone of voice".
The subject might be complimented on a well-done operation or be
persuaded to begin talking about an aspect of his job at which he
is skilled.
- Emotional-pride and
ego-down. The questioner attacks the subject's
"loyalty, intelligence, abilities, leadership qualities, slovenly
appearance, or any other perceived weakness". If the subject tries
to defend himself he may provide useful information. This must not
"cross the line into humiliating and degrading treatment of the
detainee", and the manual advises that the "experience level" and
intended actions of subordinates be considered before an
interrogation plan is approved using this method.
- Emotional-futility. The questioner uses
factual information to try to convince the source that resistance
is futile. This approach generally must be combined with another,
such as the emotional love approach, to be effective.
- Several other approaches are classed as requiring considerable
time and resources, and as more suitable for detainees.
- We know all. The interrogator "subtly
convinces the source that his questioning of the source is
perfunctory because any information that the source has is already
known" by providing detailed information and answering himself when
the source hesitates. The approach requires the interrogator to
have a large amount of information already, and have committed much
of it to memory.
- File and dossier. The interrogator prepares
himself with a large dossier (padded with paper if necessary)
indexed with tabs for "education, employment, criminal record,
military service, and others" and proceeds as in the "We know all"
approach.
- Establish your identity. The subject is told
that he has been "identified as an infamous individual wanted by
higher authorities on serious charges". In a sincere effort to
correct this mistake, against the interrogator's persistent
denials, he may provide leads for further development.
- Repetition. The interrogator "listens
carefully to a source's answer to a question, and then repeats the
question and answer several times. He does this with each
succeeding question until the source becomes so thoroughly bored
with the procedure, he answers questions fully and candidly".
- Rapid fire. One, two, or more interrogators
"ask a series of questions in such a manner that the source does
not have time to answer a question completely before the next one
is asked. This confuses the source, and he will tend to contradict
himself as he has little time to formulate his answers." The source
may then be persuaded to explain the inconsistencies.
- Silent. The interrogator "says nothing to the
source, but looks him squarely in the eye, preferably with a slight
smile on his face... [he forces the source to] break eye contact
first. The source may become nervous, begin to shift in his chair,
cross and re-cross his legs, and look away. He may ask
questions..." After much delay, the interrogator asks questions
such as "You planned this operation for a long time, didn't
you?"
- Change of scenery. When moved from the formal
environment, "the source may experience a feeling of leaving the
interrogation behind." The interrogator steers conversation toward
the topic of interest, and "the source may never realize he is
still being questioned."
- Two additional techniques require the approval of "the first O-6 in the
interrogator’s chain of command":
- Mutt and Jeff. Two
interrogators who are "convincing actors" are chosen. The first may
"for instance, be very strict and order the source to follow all
military courtesies during questioning. Although he conveys an
unfeeling attitude, the HUMINT collector is careful not to threaten
or coerce the source." The second scolds the first, may offer the
source a beverage or a cigarette, and tries to persuade the source
that they "share a high degree of intelligence and sensitivity".
However, he is very busy and "cannot afford to waste time on an
uncooperative source. He can broadly imply that the first HUMINT
collector might return..."
- False Flag. The goal is to
"convince the detainee that individuals from a country other than
the United States are interrogating him, and trick the detainee
into cooperating with US forces." It may be "effectively
orchestrated with the Fear Down approach and the Pride and Ego
Up".
- The final technique, Separation, is detailed
at much greater length than the others in Appendix M of the manual.
It "may not be employed on detainees covered by Geneva Convention
Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, primarily enemy
prisoners of war." It must be approved by the COCOM Commander for use in
theater, and each specific instance must be approved by "the first
General Officer/Flag Officer (GO/FO) in an interrogator's chain of
command" following approval of the interrogation plan by the
interrogation supervisor's servicing SJA [Staff Judge Advocate]. Extensions of the initial
times given require approval of the servicing SJA. "The purpose of
separation is to deny the detainee the opportunity to communicate
with other detainees in order to keep him from learning
counter-resistance techniques" The approach can be combined with
Futility, Incentive, or Fear Up approaches. The separation "must
not preclude the detainee getting four hours of continuous sleep
every 24 hours." The two forms of separation are:
- Physical separation, which prevents the
detainee from communicating. Limited to 30 days of initial
duration.
- Field expedient separation. "Prolong the shock
of capture" by using "goggles or blindfolds and earmuffs" to
prevent the detainee from communicating for up to 12 hours, plus
the time these are used "for security purposes during transit and
evacuation". "Use of hoods (sacks) over the head, or of duct tape
or adhesive tape over the eyes" is prohibited. The manual states
that the technique shall not amount to sensory
deprivation, a known harmful practice[18]. Khalid Shaikh Mohammed described
disorientation through the use of goggles and earmuffs in 2007.[19]
References
- ^
"DoD News Briefing with
Deputy Assistant Secretary Stimson and Lt. Gen. Kimmons from the
Pentagon". 2006-06-06. http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=3712.
- ^
Donna Miles (2006-06-06). "New Documents Outline
Detention, Interrogation Policies". http://www.defenselink.mil/News/NewsArticle.aspx?id=720.
- ^
John Tran (2008-04-18). "Q&A: Torture and
'enhanced interrogation'". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/apr/18/usa.terrorism.
- ^ a
b
Lolita C. Baldor (2006-06-14). "Pentagon Won't Hide
Interrogation Tactics". http://cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=14530.
(three months
prior to issue of FM 2-22.3)
- ^
Ken Gude (2008-07-15). "The worst of the worst".
The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/jul/15/terrorism.civilliberties.
- ^
Suzanne Goldenberg (2006-06-07). "US confirms existence of
secret prison network". http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/sep/07/usa.guantanamo.
- ^
Ed Pilkington (2008-03-10). "Bush vetoes move to ban water
torture". http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/10/usa.humanrights.
- ^
Julian Borger (2006-06-06). "Pentagon's interrogation
manual dodges Geneva ban". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/jun/06/usa.julianborger.
(three months
prior to issue of FM 2-22.3)
- ^
Barack Obama (2009-01-22). "Ensuring Lawful
Interrogations". White House. http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/EnsuringLawfulInterrogations/.
- ^
Executive Order 13491 "Ensuring
Lawful Interrogations" (Full text on Wikisource). The other three
orders mentioned by Newsweek are presumably Executive Order 13490 "Ethics
Commitments by Executive Branch Personnel", Executive Order 13492 "Review and Disposition of Individuals Detained
at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base and Closure of Detention
Facilities", and Executive Order
13493 "Review of Detention Policy Options"
- ^
Mark Silva. "Obama: Close Guantanamo
within year". Chicago Tribune. http://www.swamppolitics.com/news/politics/blog/2009/01/obama_close_guantanamo_within.html.
- ^
Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball
(2009-01-22). "The End of Torture". http://www.newsweek.com/id/181007.
- ^
Josh Gernstein (2009-01-23). "Why the Gitmo policies may
not change". http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0109/17841.html.
- ^
"CCR praises Obama orders,
cautions against escape hatch for torture".
www.ccrjustice.org. http://www.ccrjustice.org/newsroom/press-releases/ccr-praises-obama-orders%2C-cautions-against-escape-hatch-torture.
- ^
"The Jack Bauer
Exception". Wall Street
Journal. 2009-01-23. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123267082704308361.html.
- ^
Johnathan S. Landay (2009-01-22). "Obama's orders only the start
of a detainee policy overhaul". McClatchy. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/100/story/60563.html.
- ^
"Army Field Manual
2-22.3". U.S. Army. 2006-06-06. http://www.army.mil/institution/armypublicaffairs/pdf/fm2-22-3.pdf.
- ^
Cheryl Welsh (largely summarizing Alfred McCoy (1 2008). "In Contravention of Conventional Wisdom". http://mindjustice.org/wisdom.htm.
- ^
Amy Goodman interviews reporter Jane Mayer (2007-08-08).
"The Black Sites: A Rare Look
Inside the C.I.A.'s Secret Interrogation Program". Democracy Now. http://www.democracynow.org/2007/8/8/the_black_sites_a_rare_look.
External
links