Anda di halaman 1dari 8

Influencing Behavior and Mental Processes in Covert Operations

Joseph D. Douglass, Jr., PhD

In the early 1950s, U.S. intelligence concluded that the KGB, Soviet intelligence, was
working hard to develop "mind control" and behavior modification drugs. Supporting
evidence included the public "confessions" of numerous high-ranking communist
officials, the high-profile trial in Hungary of Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, who appeared to
have been drugged as he confessed to treasonous crimes, and the unusual behavior of
American POWs during the Korean War. The filmed testimony of American POWs
telling the world that America was evil and that communism was a far superior form of
government was an especially compelling example.
On April 10, 1953, Allen W. Dulles, newly confirmed CIA director, alerted a gathering of
Princeton alumni to the problem. A "sinister battle for men's minds" was underway, he
explained. The Soviets "have developed brain perversion techniques, some of which
are so subtle and so abhorrent to our way of life that we have recoiled from facing up to
them."
In response, the CIA had decided to initiate its own mind control and behavior
modification program. Three days after delivering his wake-up speech, Dulles approved
the top secret program MKULTRA. Its primary objectives included the development of
psychoactive drugs that would:
° "cause mental confusion";
° "alter personality structure";
° "diminish ambition and working efficiency";
° "promote illogical thinking";
° cause a "euphoria with no subsequent let-down";
° induce "amnesia respecting events immediately preceding and during the use of mind
control drugs."
These were in addition to the "truth drugs" (TD) and "loosen-the-tongue" drugs already
in development.
The possible use of such drugs on diplomats was an especially serious concern.
Ambassador George Kennan saw himself as a likely target and, as later reported by
CIA official Peer de Silva, requested and was provided with a suicide pill to use if he
were taken captive or began experiencing a serious personality change.
The serious nature of this concern contrasted strongly with the publicity given to
MKULTRA when it was exposed during the intelligence witch hunts in the mid-1970s.
Then, MKULTRA was portrayed as an internal fiasco featuring the unprofessional
testing of LSD drugs on unsuspecting "volunteers." This information caused
considerable embarrassment and congressional censure. As investigators searched for
more information, they were told that all of the documentation had been destroyed by
direction of CIA director Richard Helms just before he left office in early 1973.
At the time, John Marks and Victor Marchetti were putting the finishing touches on their
book, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, which was about to become the first critical
insider book on the CIA. Evidently intrigued by the rumors of CIA mind-control
programs, Marks submitted a Freedom of Information Act request for related
documents. About two years later, the CIA "found" several boxes of documents ---
16,000 pages --- that they released to Marks. The New York Times commissioned him
to write a book on the CIA mind control efforts. His book, The Search for the
"Manchurian Candidate," was published in 1979. In it, MKULTRA is portrayed as a
collection of unprofessional experiments and LSD tests of a most childish nature. There
is zero indication that anything of value had been accomplished either by the CIA or the
Soviet KGB. The only contrary indications were first, the large number of respected
participating scientific research institutes and medical laboratories and second, two
interesting facts that slipped through the censors: namely, by 1957, six drugs had been
moved into operational use and had been employed against 33 targets. The CIA
refused requests for more information on these data.
To his credit, Marks recognized that his was not the full story. Only a few insiders could
write that story and they would not talk. Marks was not given access to any scientific
records or to the people involved. Most of the documents were incomplete. Almost all
the names had been blacked out with the sole exception of Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, who
was obviously the chosen Agency spokesman. Marks castigated Congress for its failure
to investigate. Specifically, he described the 1977 Kennedy hearings as "ridiculous"
because they did not put any pressure on the CIA to reveal the content of their
research. The Senate Select Intelligence Committee, which originally was a partner in
the hearings, had "withdrawn" its participation in the investigation, at the request of
Senator Goldwater. This was unfortunate because this was the only committee with
oversight responsibility. Accordingly, the hearings never got beyond the primitive LSD
experiments --- and, there was a world of difference between the farcical LSD testing
and the actual development objectives of MKULTRA and the emerging technology.
When MKULTRA was dropped down the memory hole, no one stopped to question
what was really known about the Soviet accomplishments. This was a glaring error
because there was no logical basis for concluding that the Soviet program was a "bust"
and many reasons to lead a prudent person to anticipate just the reverse. The Soviet
program was serious and had the backing of the First Secretary, Nikita Khrushchev,
himself. The Soviets had achieved significant progress as early as 1949, which was
precisely when the new field of psychoactive drugs --- neuropharmacology --- was being
born. The scientists assigned to the KGB program, including those from Czechoslovakia
and Germany, were world-class scientists and were given unlimited resources to use in
their efforts. Most important was the unlimited availability of prisoners, including
prisoners of war (POWs), to use as human guinea pigs at all stages in the development
process.
In the West, the field of psychoactive drugs rapidly expanded. Before the end of the
1950s, several psychoactive drugs were on the market; for example, Lithium,
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine), Imipramine (Tofranil), and Chlordiazepoxide (Librium). The
field was expanding so rapidly that a symposium on "Control of the Mind" was held at
the University of California (San Francisco) Medical School in early 1961 in response to
rising concern among Western physicians and psychiatrists. "Here at our disposal,"
explained Provost Dr. John Saunders in his opening remarks, "to be used wisely or
unwisely, is an increasing array of agents that manipulate human beings...the new
techniques introduce social, ethical, and religious complications of great consequence.
It is now possible to act directly on the individual to modify his behavior instead of, as in
the past, indirectly through modification of the environment."
The idea that the Soviet accomplishments should not have been of even greater
concern in the 1970s than in the 1950s --- especially in light of the sinister nature of
their interests --- is preposterous, as evidenced by the accomplishments of
psychoactive drug development programs in the West. Yet there has been nothing in
the open press respecting the KGB achievements. Even more disturbing, conversations
with various former U.S. officials have led me to conclude there have been no
intelligence reports or warnings to alert top-level U.S. officials and our allies to the
developing KGB capabilities.
This silence is about to be broken. Over the past fifteen years, debriefings of a high-
level Czech defector, Gen. Maj. Jan Sejna, concerning the disappearance of thousands
of American POWs from World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War has
yielded a mass of first-hand information on Soviet mind control program objectives,
accomplishments, and actual operations. The connection between missing POWs and
mind control drugs is simple. American POWs were used as laboratory guinea pigs in
the KGB program. The American POWs were the most valued guinea pigs because it
was most important to learn how the drugs affected the American psyche.
As head of the Defense Council secretariat and Chief of Staff to the Minister of Defense,
Jan Sejna was in a position to know about the Soviet program, in which Czechoslovakia
participated. Over the years, Sejna has been an extremely reliable source, most
unusual because of his unique, high-level access. As stated in writing by Lt. Gen.
Clapper in 1992 when he was director, Defense Intelligence Agency, "The source [Jan
Sejna] has provided reliable information to U.S. intelligence for twenty years." Sejna
also was given a lie-detector test respecting his knowledge of the use of American
POWs in medical experiments during which he "showed no signs of deception" during
more than four hours of hostile interrogation. Moreover, Sejna's testimony about Soviet
mind affecting drugs is buttressed by numerous statements in Soviet and East German
military literature from the late 1960s, by scientific capability assessments, and by
collateral intelligence on the use of American prisoners in testing experimental drugs
during the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
Another source, Col. Dr. Kanatjan Alibekov (aka Ken Alibek), was deputy director of
Biopreparat, a large Soviet biological warfare development program prior to his
defection in 1992. His information in his memoirs, Biohazard, published in 1998,
dovetails with Sejna's. In it, he describes a top secret, covert KGB development
program, code-named Fleta (Flute). He learned about the project but could not
penetrate it because of its extreme secrecy. Nevertheless, he was able to learn enough
to establish its mission: the development of psycho-active drugs and neurotoxins to
"alter personalities and modify human behavior."
Sejna was personally involved in planning and monitoring Czechoslovakia's
participation in this program since 1956. As described by Sejna, the Soviet efforts in
mind control took on a new urgency following WWII. This was when the Soviet
development program first started producing useful drugs. A top Soviet official in the
Main Political Administration told Sejna that the triggering event behind the progress
was the movement to the Soviet Union of German scientists who were involved in mind
control research efforts. This sudden surge in productivity following VE day was also
recognized in U.S. intelligence at that time.
The first operational use of Soviet mind-control drugs described by Sejna was in the
political trials of high-ranking communist officials and religious leaders such as Cardinal
Mindszenty in Hungary and Bishop Trochka in Czechoslovakia. These were the first
generation "confession" drugs. Another family of drugs introduced about the same time
was the "friendship drugs." These were used to help turn people who disliked the
Russians into Russian supporters; for example, the President of Finland and the head
of the Communist Party of Finland. These drugs were also tested on American POWs
during the Korean War and used to turn American soldiers into propaganda tools for the
newsreels referred to earlier.
Thus, the CIA's concerns in the early 1950s were well grounded. What is unknown is
how significantly the CIA's knowledge continued to grow, or whether it stopped in the
mid-1960s, at precisely the time the Soviet program began to enter its major expansion
phase during which all of Allen Dulles' worst fears would be realized. At precisely the
time when the Soviet accomplishments became most frightening, information in the
West seems to have vanished or gone underground.(1)
The growth of the Soviet mind control drug development program took on even more
sinister characteristics in the mid-1950s. This is when Khrushchev revamped Soviet
strategy and made preparations to fight and win a nuclear war the top priority task of the
state. At the same time, the second major thrust of his new strategy was to win the war
against the West without fighting. Drugs were of critical importance in this strategy:
narcotic drugs to weaken the people and mind-control drugs for use against the
leadership.(2) A major intelligence operation in narcotics trafficking was developed and
the mind-control drug development program, previously oriented from counter-
intelligence perspective (that is, truth drugs, friendship drugs, and confession drugs)
was reoriented to support the needs of Soviet foreign policy; that is, to win without
fighting.(3) This shift paralleled the change in the KGB, whose missions also were
shifted from dominantly counterintelligence to support foreign policy and the world
revolutionary movement.
In Czechoslovakia, the change surfaced in 1956 when General Kalashnik from the
Soviet Main Political Administration flew to Prague specifically to impress upon Sejna
and other high-ranking Czech officials the importance of Khrushchev's "new view about
drugs and other chemicals that can affect the minds and behavior of millions of people."
His task was to prepare the Czech officials for an important formal directive that would
be coming from the Soviet Defense Council requesting the assistance of the top Czech
scientists and medical doctors in the experimental drug testing program already
underway in the Soviet Union.
The Soviets had achieved so much progress by 1962 that Nikita Khrushchev stated
informally at a reception of selected top officials from the Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe that "deception and drugs are our first two strategic echelons in the war against
capitalism." This was also the time when scientists from other East European countries
in addition to Czechoslovak scientists became involved in the program. In 1964, the
head of the International Department, Boris Ponomarev, was brought into the program
leadership because of the increased operational role of the drugs in support of foreign
operations that came under the purview of Ponomarev's Inter-national Department. By
1967 the drug operations had become so significant and sensitive that both the
operational and development portions of the program were placed exclusively under the
KGB, whose new boss then was Yuri Andropov. A year later, Khrushchev's successor,
Leonid Brezhnev, would tell a gathering of top Czech officials with enthusiasm that "if
only we had invested ten percent of what we spent on nuclear weapons on [mind-
control] drugs, we would already control NATO."
Sejna defected in 1968, roughly twenty years after the program began its productive
surge. At this time --- over thirty years ago --- he was intimately familiar with the
program from his positions at the Ministry of Defense, Defense Council, Main Political
Administration, and Administrative Organs Department. He knew of over a dozen
families of mind control drugs that were actually being used against diplomats, banking
and business executives, religious leaders, journalists, politicians, political leaders,
military units, academicians, and even Presidents and Prime Ministers. They were used
to advance Soviet views, to facilitate the implementation of their policies, to recruit
agents, to obtain inside information, to make negotiators pliable, and to destroy those
who threatened their programs. Sejna has described to me over fifty intelligence
operations he knew about or participated in, from directed uses against individuals, to
their use in complicated operations involving dozens of targeted people at gatherings of
foreign officials that different ministries, like the Ministry of Defense, hosted during the
year.
To eliminate the influence of religion, the communists decided to shift the allegiance of
Catholic clerics from the Holy See to communism. Friendship drugs were used to help
turn the bishops (e.g., Bishop Trochka) and priests "from the black to the red." This
process worked, but not 100 percent. There still remained a large number of
"reactionary clerics." To eliminate these clerics, drugs that had a strong adverse effect
were used. They would either drive the reactionary clerics to suicide or cause them to
become insane. As described by Sejna, "After two years there were no more
reactionary clerics in Czechoslovakia." The same techniques were used throughout
Eastern Europe, and subsequently were employed selectively in Western Europe.
In these Soviet uses of psycho-active drugs, as a general rule the drugs were only one
aspect of a complex psychological operation. In the case of the friendship drugs in the
above example, the drugs were administered over a period of several days. They
suppressed the target's natural inclinations or defenses and opened the target's mind to
points-of-view that were different from the target's predisposition. After several
applications of the drugs, "friendly" intelligence agents in the target's presence would
repeatedly "advance" the desired point-of-view during conversations. After several days,
if all went well, the target had adopted the new perspective. The drugs were critical, but
so was the accompanying operational work by the "friendly" intelligence agents. In other
cases, such as the pills used to drive the target insane, the pills by themselves were
sufficient.
Mind control drugs were used to recruit almost the entire Indonesian cabinet. They were
first used on Minister Subandrio's wife when she was in Prague for a medical operation.
After she was recruited, with her help and "the little pills," Minister Subandrio was
recruited. This process continued through most of the Indonesian cabinet. By the end of
the 1950s, Indonesia was a Soviet puppet. India's Defense Minister, Khrisna Menon,
was similarly recruited, as were a number of North Vietnamese officials in the 1960s,
most notably Minister Pham van Dong.
A particularly interesting example was the use of drugs to destroy the United Arab
Republic that was being formed by Egypt and Syria. The Soviets did not want a unified
Arab state so they decided to break it up. Because they did not want to risk destroying
their good relations with either Egypt or Syria, Czechoslovakia was given the lead role
in the operation. The approach taken was quite simple. The Egyptians who were in
Syria were repeatedly given drugs that made them aggressive or "imperialist." At the
same time, the Syrians were given drugs that made them suspicious or paranoid. The
resultant mixture was incompatible. An explosion ensued and the Syrians broke up the
UAR because of their concern that the "Egyptians just wanted to dominate them."
Drugs were used in the Middle East to help achieve a variety of Soviet intelligence
tasks. They were used in the process of recruiting people to an interpretation of Islam
that was compatible with communism, in the same sense that Liberation Theology,
which was developed in Moscow in 1960, was used to communize Christianity. Drugs
were used to assist this process and to radicalize Islamic clerics or teachers. Drugs also
were used to recruit potential terrorists and to assist in the process of shaping their
views, including the development of a profound hatred towards the United States.
In thinking over my previous discussions with Gen. Sejna following the terrorist strikes
of September 11, 2001, I was struck by the possibility that the psychoactive drugs he
described (and which the Chinese were also actively developing) could have played a
significant role in recruiting, brainwashing, and controlling the young men recruited for
terrorist operations, and ultimately in helping to assure the reliability and commitment
that was needed to mobilize in synchronicity the large number of suicidal young men
needed to carry out the mission. Moreover, it is hard to understand how it has been
possible to instill such unwavering commitment, intense yet controlled hatred, and
discipline that were demonstrated without some type of artificial assistance. Here, it is
useful also to recall that the Japanese Kamakazi pilots were given psychoactive drugs.
They did not simply commit suicide for the honor of dying for their country. They were
given a decided artificial assist, as were some of the most aggressive and determined
Viet Cong soldiers during the Vietnam War.
The Soviets also had several drugs that changed people's behavior for the worst. Some
of these drugs caused people to become overly aggressive, or paranoid, as indicated
above. Others caused people to "say what was on their minds" without concern for the
political consequences. Other drugs caused people to become confused, or to lose their
ambition or drive. The function of these types of drugs was to cause people to self-
destruct, thus avoiding the necessity to overtly assassinate them. These drugs
eliminated undesirable people by helping them become their own worst enemy. Their
use was superior to assassination because they left in place an ineffective leader and
caused confusion, further destroying the effectiveness of the organization.
Mind control drugs quickly became serious tools in industrial and scientific espionage.
Scientific and technical secrets of interest were identified by teams of intelligence and
technology specialists. communist scientists then identified Western scientists who they
believed most likely to have the desired knowledge. They also identified communist
scientists who understood the critical technical subjects and, thus, would be able to
obtain the desired information while conversing with knowledgeable Western scientists.
The intelligence services then arranged for invitations to attend conferences, preferably
in Europe, to be sent to the knowledgeable Western scientists. The communist
scientists most knowledgeable about the desired technical information would also
attend the conferences, accompanied by intelligence specialists who would arrange for
them to meet the targeted Western scientist and have dinner together. With the help of
drugs covertly administered by the intelligence specialists, an uninhibited conversation
would proceed. For example, this was how the Bulgarians learned in advance from a
British banker that the British were going to devalue the pound.
This is only a small sample of the information provided by Gen. Sejna.(4) Since he
defected, the advances in biochemistry and neuropharmacology have been truly
remarkable. It would be foolhardy not to expect the KGB (and Chinese intelligence)
capabilities --- both drugs and delivery mechanisms --- to be much more sophisticated
today.
It is only realistic to recognize that these capabilities in the hands of the new KGB(5) are
every bit as valuable in post-Cold War intelligence operations as they were during the
Cold War. Effective intelligence methods and means have not been discarded; rather,
the targets and motivations have expanded to address new opportunities and priorities
in business, industry, finance, and politics. Given today's relative East-West freedom to
interact and widespread belief in the West that the Cold War has ended, mind control
drugs could well be far more important in shaping world events today when distrust of
the Russians and Chinese has all but vanished --- especially among those most at risk;
that is, important Western targets.
Thus, it is most disconcerting to find no indication that executives and decision makers,
whether in politics, business, finance, government, science, industry, religion, or
journalism, have been advised about the nature of the Russian or Chinese mind control
drug developments and the tremendous threat they pose. This is especially tragic
because, while the threat may seem frightening, even mind boggling, to a considerable
degree this is just because the information is so new. Information that is both shocking
and new causes confusion. Why were we not well aware of this before? Why has this
information been kept hidden or in locked safes? These questions are in-evitable and as
disturbing as the information itself.
Once the information is assimilated, however, it should become evident that the
situation is not hopeless. There are explanations and, most important, there are
defenses and countermeasures that can be employed. Those people who are most
vulnerable are those who are uninformed about the threat, which by definition is
designed as a covert weapon to be used to affect the minds and behavior of
unsuspecting people.

References/Notes

1. It seems inconceivable that the CIA did not have considerable data that was not
released to Marks or Congress in the mid-1970s. It is also most unlikely that the
intelligence information could have been trashed by Gottlieb insofar as this foreign
intelligence data would not have been under his control.
2. Other intelligence operations of special significance in the new strategy were
international narcotics trafficking, organized crime, international terrorism, and
deception, which included major efforts directed against the news media. See Red
Cocaine: The Drugging of America (London and New York: Edward Harle, 1999),
Decision Making in Communist Countries: An Inside View (Cambridge, MA: Institute for
Foreign Policy Analysis, 1986), and Why the Soviet Union Violates Arms Control
Treaties (Washington DC: Pergamon-Brassey's, 1988).
3. The new development objectives were broad, like the CIA MKULTRA objectives
identified earlier, and also included applications for use against discrete military targets
(e.g. command/control centers) and civilian populated areas through the water supply or
wind-delivered aerosols.
4. For an example of the amount of detail Gen. Sejna has provided, see Red Cocaine:
The Drugging of America. The full details on the use of American POWs by the Soviets
and their associated development of mind-control drugs will be presented in a
manuscript being completed for publication by Dr. Douglass.
5. The KGB is one of the least changed organizations in Russia. The name has
changed, but it remains the same old KGB.

Dr. Douglass is the leading authority on the political use of drugs and author of Red
Cocaine - The Drugging of America and the West (Introduction by Dr. Ray S. Cline,
former Deputy Director for Intelligence, Central Intelligence Agency), Edward Harle
Limited, London and New York, 1999.
Originally published in the Medical Sentinel 2001;6(4):130-133, 136. Copyright © 2001
Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS).

Anda mungkin juga menyukai