The Roots and Rationalizations of U.S. Torture in Vietnam

William L. d’Ambruoso
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Abstract

This chapter traces the twin tales of the CIA’s and the U.S. military’s use of torture during the Vietnam War. The CIA’s interrogation program was rooted in the early days of the Cold War, when the agency was founded. U.S. foreign policy elites like Dwight Eisenhower and Allen Dulles were convinced that the Soviet Union’s freedom from norms and laws gave it an edge. As a result, the CIA began researching and practicing behavioral control techniques, using drugs and sensory deprivation to compete with Soviet programs. The agency’s KUBARK interrogation manual (1963) considered physical torture off-limits and ineffective, but recommended “maxim[izing] mental discomfort.” Likewise, CIA interrogators in Vietnam such as Frank Snepp believed isolation and sensory deprivation were both ethically and efficaciously superior to harsher alternatives. While racism and exasperation explain much of the U.S. military’s use of torture, soldiers also used water and electricity because the techniques were “unpleasant” but not “injurious.”
美国在越南的酷刑的根源和合理化
本章追溯了中情局和美国军方在越南战争期间使用酷刑的两个故事。中情局的审讯项目起源于冷战初期,当时该机构刚刚成立。德怀特·艾森豪威尔(Dwight Eisenhower)和艾伦·杜勒斯(Allen Dulles)等美国外交政策精英确信,苏联不受规范和法律约束的自由赋予了它优势。因此,中央情报局开始研究和实践行为控制技术,使用药物和感官剥夺来与苏联的项目竞争。该机构的《KUBARK审讯手册》(1963年)认为身体上的折磨是不允许的,也没有效果,但建议“尽量夸大精神上的不适”。同样,中情局在越南的审讯人员,如弗兰克·斯内普,认为隔离和感官剥夺在道德上和有效上都优于更严厉的选择。虽然种族主义和愤怒可以解释美国军队使用酷刑的大部分原因,但士兵们也使用水和电,因为这些技术“令人不快”,但并不“有害”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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