The Philippine Star

CIA considered using ‘truth serum’ on post-9/11 detainees

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Shortly after 9/11, the Central Intelligen­ce Agency considered using a drug it thought might work like a truth serum and force terror suspects to give up informatio­n about potential attacks.

After months of research, the agency decided that a drug called Versed, a sedative often prescribed to reduce anxiety, was “possibly worth a try.” In the end, though, the CIA decided not to ask government lawyers to approve its use.

The existence of the drug research program – dubbed “Project Medication” – is disclosed in a once-classified report that was provided to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) under a judge’s order and was released by the organizati­on on Tuesday.

The 90-page CIA report, which was provided in advance to The Associated Press, is a window into the internal struggle that medical personnel working in the agency’s detention and harsh interrogat­ion program faced in reconcilin­g their profession­al ethics with the chance to save lives by preventing future attacks.

“This document tells an essential part of the story of how it was that the CIA came to torture prisoners against the law and helps prevent it from happening again,” ACLU attorney Dror Ladin said.

Between 2002 and 2007, CIA doctors, psychologi­sts, physician assistants and nurses were directly involved in the interrogat­ion program, according to the report. They evaluated, monitored and cared for 97 detainees in 10 secret CIA facilities abroad and accompanie­d detainees on more than 100 flights.

The CIA ultimately decided against asking the Justice Department to approve drug-assisted interrogat­ions, sparing CIA doctors “some significan­t ethical concerns,” the report said. It had taken months for the Justice Department to sign off on brutal interrogat­ion tactics, including sleep deprivatio­n, confinemen­t in small spaces and the simulated drowning technique known as waterboard­ing.

The CIA’s counterter­rorism team “did not want to raise another issue with the Department of Justice,” the report said.

Before settling on Versed, the report said researcher­s studied records of old Soviet drug experiment­s as well as the CIA’s discredite­d MK-Ultra program from the 1950s and 1960s that involved human experiment­ation with LSD and other mind-altering drugs on unwitting individual­s as part of a long search for some form of truth serum. These experiment­s were widely criticized and, even today, some experts doubt an effective substance exists.

“But decades later, the agency was considerin­g experiment­ing on humans again to test pseudo-scientific theories of learned helplessne­ss on its prisoners,” Ladin said.

Versed is a brand name for the sedative midazolam, used since the late 1970s and today sold commonly as a generic. It causes drowsiness and relieves anxiety and agitation.

Versed also can temporaril­y impair memory, and often is used for minor surgery or medical procedures such as colonoscop­ies that require sedation but not full-blown anesthesia. It is in a class of anti-anxiety medication­s known as benzodiaze­pines that work by affecting a brain chemical that calms the activity of nerve cells.

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