The prisoner had decided to tell his inquisitors anything
(untruthful) to get the torture to stop. "They raise cows and
chickens," he told his interrogator.
Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison?
No, a prisoner of war camp in North Vietnam.
It was during the Vietnam War. The North Vietnamese interrogator
wanted to know from the downed Navy pilot how the American aircraft
carriers were able to stay at sea for six months at a time and feed
a crew of 6,000.
The pilot, having experienced long bouts of excruciating torture at
the hands of his communist captors, gave them a ridiculous
answer--sating the sadistic interrogator enough to end this round
of brutality.
With limited English-language skills and even less knowledge of
American society, the Vietnamese officer had no idea the mammoth
ships might actually hold large refrigeration units, or that
resupply ships kept carriers stocked and hungry sailors fed without
making a port call for months at a time.
No telling how much time and energy North Vietnamese intelligence
wasted in analyzing the pilot's bogus answer. Meanwhile, our
American hero survived another day.
The lesson of this story: Torture or other extreme measures in
interrogation may actually be counterproductive to getting the
information battlefield commanders really need.
There are legal, moral and effective ways to extract useful
intelligence from an enemy prisoner of war that fall well short of
the regrettable efforts at humiliation employed by a few Americans
at Abu Ghraib prison.
Interrogation is the art--and science--of questioning an individual
to collect, in a lawful manner and as quickly as possible, the
maximum volume of usable, reliable information in support of
military operations. The sources of intelligence may include
insurgents, enemy prisoners of war, defectors or even intelligence
agents.
A game of wits
Interrogation is tough work.
A game of wits between the interrogator and the detainee, it often
involves difficult foreign languages and always-challenging
cross-cultural communication. In a combat situation like Iraq,
American lives are on the line every day, and there is pressure to
produce actionable information about the foreign fighters, Al Qaeda
operatives and Iraqi insurgents before they kill again.
A single nugget of brilliant intelligence arising from
interrogation could lead to the arrest of a terrorist or pre-empt
an insurgent's attack, saving the lives of civilians and the
interrogator's comrades. During an open conflict, the stakes are
high in every interrogation session.
Interrogators come from the military intelligence field,
predominantly from the U.S. Army because they are the ones most
likely to have contact with captured combatants. Paramilitary CIA
officers may also become involved in interrogation.
Military police are not interrogators but often come in contact
with POWs because they are responsible for guarding detainees. The
MPs can assist the interrogator by observing prisoners during
captivity and providing information about the detainee's habits and
attitudes to the interrogators.
MPs are not supposed to be used to "soften" prisoners before
interrogation.
An interrogation is not a freewheeling, no-holds-barred exercise.
There are rules bound up in domestic and international law and
custom, most notably the American armed forces' Uniform Code of
Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions.
Force, torture, threats or inhumane treatment are prohibited. To
this end, all members of the American military learn the tenets of
the Geneva Conventions.
Contrary to popular belief, experience shows that force is not
necessary to get detainees to cooperate. In fact, force can produce
information of questionable quality. It encourages the detainee to
say whatever he or she thinks the interrogator wants to hear and
undermines the prospects of success of subsequent collection
efforts because of injury and severe resentment.
Even the threat of violence can be counterproductive, because the
inability to carry out a threat ultimately diminishes the
interrogator's effectiveness should the detainee challenge the
threat. Moreover, one has to wonder how effective the threat of
force would be on a militant Islamic fundamentalist clearly willing
to die and receive eternal salvation in the cause of jihad.
But all is not lost
The interrogator can use non-violent, psychological manipulation to
collect important tactical military information. Most people can
recognize these mind games from experiences in their private
lives.
- Incentivized cooperation. Detention is no picnic regardless of
circumstances. Rewards in exchange for information can meet a
source's needs. A cup of hot tea, a cigarette, an additional
blanket or some extra chow can go a long way toward establishing
rapport with a prisoner and getting him or her to talk about topics
of interest. The detainee also realizes that further cooperation
with interrogators can bring additional short- and long-term
benefits.
- Good cop/bad cop. Right out of a TV show, a first interrogator
may raise his voice, wave his arms or throw a chair across the room
in the presence of a detainee to get him or her to talk. The first
interrogator is then relieved by a second who tells the prisoner
that the first interrogator is a "jerk" and prone to violence. The
second interrogator then uses their perceived mutual dislike of the
blustering interrogator to establish a rapport and get the detainee
to talk, perhaps out of an implied fear that the first interrogator
will return if the prisoner doesn't cooperate with the
second.
- Pushing emotional buttons. We are all motivated by
something--hatred, envy, fear, love or even ideology. These
emotions can be played upon to garner information. For instance,
some enlisted troops hate their officers for a whole host of
reasons. The interrogator could, falsely or not, commiserate with
an enlisted detainee about how they both hate their superior
officers, thereby developing a bond from which communication and
trust can flow, hopefully leading to useful, actionable
intelligence.
- Pumping up the ego. Who doesn't love to be flattered, especially if you are a low- to mid-level member of an organization? A little flattery from an interrogator might be just the thing to seduce a detainee into "proving" that he is the real brains of his insurgent outfit and spilling his guts about how his group is structured and operates.
These techniques--among others--are manipulative, but they aren't immoral or illegal--especially when lives are on the line in a conflict. It takes real leadership and professionalism to keep oneself from going over to the dark side of humiliating and torturing detainees.
Unfortunately, it appears that some U.S. soldiers and contractors crossed that line in Iraq.
Their behavior is inexcusable. Most likely, it also ran at cross-purposes to our intelligence collection efforts, not to mention our efforts to win the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people.
President Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld did the right thing by condemning this behavior as technically and politically unproductive and counter to the values of the American people and armed forces. There are other, far more effective ways to achieve the interrogator's goals.
Peter Brookes is a senior fellow for national security affairs at the Heritage Foundation and a veteran of the CIA and Naval Intelligence.
First appeared in the Chicago Tribune