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The first manual, "KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation", dated July 1963, is the source of much of the material in the second manual. KUBARK was a U.S. Central Intelligence Agency cryptonym for the CIA itself. [10] The cryptonym KUBARK appears in the title of a 1963 CIA document KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation which describes ...
The first manual, "KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation", dated July 1963, is the source of much of the material in the second manual. The second manual, "Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual - 1983", was used in at least seven U.S. training courses conducted in Latin American countries, including Honduras, between 1982 and 1987 ...
In 1963, the CIA had synthesized many of the findings from its psychological research into what became known as the KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation handbook, [145] which cited the MKULTRA studies and other secret research programs as the scientific basis for their interrogation methods. [142]
The Torture Manuals was a nickname for seven training manuals that had excerpts declassified to the public on September 20, 1996, by the Pentagon. One was the 1963 CIA document, KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation , which describes interrogation techniques, including, among other things, "coercive counterintelligence interrogation of ...
Based on psychological research from the 1950s, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) developed an interrogation manual, KUBARK, which included the use of silence and continuous noise. The techniques in the manual were banned after the Vietnam War, but they continued to be taught to American personnel.
The declassified interrogation manual known as “KUBARK” [2] was a manual used by the CIA during Vietnam. [3] Still, many of the things in the manual were seen to be far too similar to the ways that the 316th Battalion committed interrogations . [4]
A former CIA counterterrorism chief is the latest to back President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard. “She has the right experience ...
Historian Alfred W. McCoy, who authored a book on torture in the Philippines armed forces, noted similarities in the abusive treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and the techniques described in the KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation manual published by the United States Central Intelligence Agency in 1963. He asserts that what he calls ...