70 years of MKUltra, the CIA ‘mind-control’ program that inspired ‘Stranger Things’
Electroshock, hypnosis, sensory deprivation, verbal and sexual abuse, and other forms of torture were also part of the experiments, which sought to develop a drug that could help manipulate an individual’s behavior
Electroshock, hypnosis, sensory deprivation, verbal and sexual abuse, and other forms of torture were also part of the experiments, which sought to develop a drug that could help manipulate an individual’s behavior
CIA Mind Control | CIA Secret Experiments
MKUltra is not referenced explicitly on Stranger Things — the popular Netflix show — but the series seems to be inspired by the controversial CIA program. In the show, a government laboratory is conducting illegal experiments on a young girl and other persons, torturing them, and harnessing their special abilities for their own purposes. This is similar to the goals of the CIA human experimentation project, which was started 70 years ago.
What was MKUltra and how did it start?
MKUltra was a CIA program involving the research and development of chemical and biological agents. According to official documents, it was “concerned with the research and development of chemical, biological and radiological materials capable of employment in clandestine operations to control human behavior.”
Journalist Stephen Kinzer, who spent several years investigating the program, called the operation the “most sustained search in history for techniques of mind control.” He also found evidence of the CIA recruiting World War II Nazi torturers and vivisectionists to continue experimenting on “thousands” of subjects, with some of them teaching CIA officers about the lethal uses of sarin gas, which was being developed as a weapon during the war.
The program was born as a response to rumors of mind control techniques used on U.S. prisoners of war by the Soviet, Chinese and North Koreans. The CIA wanted to develop their own “mind-controlling” drugs for use against the Soviet bloc and other captives, and even planned schemes to drug Fidel Castro, President of Cuba.
MKUltra began with a proposal from the Assistant Deputy Director for Plans, Richard Helms, outlining a “special funding mechanism for highly sensitive CIA research and development projects that studied the use of biological and chemical materials in altering human behavior.” The project said the development of “comprehensive capability in this field of covert chemical and biological warfare give [the CIA] a thorough knowledge of the enemy’s theoretical potential.”
The project began on the order of CIA director Allen Dulles on April 13, 1953, and was headed by Sidney Gottlieb, who also headed the CIA’s 1950s and 1960s assassination attempts. During its duration, the program engaged in illegal activities including the use of U.S. and Canadian citizens as unwitting test subjects, with experiments carried out under the guise of research at more than 80 institutions aside from the military, including hospitals and prisons.
The MKUltra Experiments
One of the first studies was conducted by the National Institute of Mental Health. The purpose was to test various drugs, including hallucinogens at the Addiction Research Center in Lexington, Kentucky, which was a prison for drug addicts. The test subjects were administered hallucinogenic drugs, and — as a reward for their participation — they were provided the drug of their addiction. LSD was one of the drugs tested in the MKUltra program, and according to official documents, the final phase of LSD testing “involved surreptitious administration to unwitting non-volunteers subjects in normal life settings by undercover officials of the Bureau of Narcotics acting for the CIA.”
One notable case is that of Frank Olson, a United States Army biochemist and biological weapons researcher. He was given LSD without his knowledge or consent in November 1953, and died falling from a 13th-story window a week later. His death was described as a suicide that had occurred during a severe psychotic episode. Gottlieb, who had conducted the experiment failed to take into account Olson’s already diagnosed suicidal tendencies which might have been exacerbated by the drug.
Drugs were used primarily as an aid to interrogations, but they were also used for harassment, discrediting or disabiling purposes. By 1957, they had developed sex drugs for operational uses, and they have been used in different operations on a total of 33 subjects. By 1963, the number had increased substantially.
Given that the CIA destroyed most records after MKUltra’s activities, its failure to follow informed consent protocols, the uncontrolled nature of the experiments and the lack of follow-up data, the full impact of the experiments, including deaths or the psychological trauma of those involved may never be known.
The CIA also created secret detention centers where they would put people suspected of being enemy agents and people it deemed “expendable” to undertake several types of torture and human experimentation.
The revelation
In 1973, in the middle of the Watergate scandal, some government agencies started to panic. That was the case of the CIA, whose director Richard Helms ordered all MKUltra files destroyed. Despite this, some 20,000 documents survived and were investigated years later.
In December 1974, The New York Times released an investigation alleging that the CIA had conducted illegal domestic activities, including experiments on citizens during the 1960s. This prompted investigations by the United States Congress, with the Church Committee, and the Rockefeller Commission, which looked into the activities of the CIA, the FBI, and intelligence-related agencies of the military.
In 1975, the reports revealed that the CIA and the Department of Defense had conducted experiments on unwitting and cognizant humans subjects as part of a program to find out how to influence and control human behavior through psychoactive drugs, and other chemical, biological and psychological means. They revealed the death of Frank Olson.
As a result, President Gerald Ford issued the first Executive Order on Intelligence Activities in 1976, prohibiting “experimentation with drugs on human subjects, except with the informed consent in writing and witnessed by a disinterested party, of each such human subject.
Despite the government’s aggressive efforts to evade legal liability, some victims were able to obtain compensation through court orders, out-of-court settlements, or acts of Congress, often with varying degrees of success. Frank Olson family received 750,000 dollars by a special act of Congress.
Operation Midnight Climax
Mission Mind Control (1979) | feat James Thornwell MKULTRA
Operation Midnight Climax was an operation carried out by the CIA as a sub-project of Project MKUltra, the mind-control research program that began in the 1950s. It was initially established in 1954 by Sidney Gottlieb and placed under the direction of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics in Boston, Massachusetts with the "Federal Narcotics Agent and CIA consultant"[1] George Hunter White under the pseudonym of Morgan Hall.[1][2] Dr. Sidney Gottlieb was a chemist who was chief of the Chemical Division of the Office of Technical Service of the CIA. Gottlieb based his plan for Project MKUltra and Operation Midnight Climax off of interrogation method research under Project Artichoke. Unlike Project Artichoke, Operation Midnight Climax gave Gottlieb permission to test drugs on unknowing citizens, which made way for the legacy of this operation.[citation needed] Hundreds of federal agents, field operatives, and scientists worked on these programs before they were shut down in the 1960s.
Results[edit]
Official results of these experiments were not released, but accounts from supervisors of the experiments give little insight to the findings. George Hunter White, an agent at the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, and Ira "Ike" Feldman, a former military intelligence officer, who oversaw San Francisco experiments, noticed that subjects spoke far more freely when under the influence of a combination of drugs and sex.[3] "No one knows where they [human test subjects] are now, or what effects they may have suffered."[4]
Background[edit]
History[edit]
Operation Midnight Climax started in 1954 and consisted of a web of CIA-run safehouses in San Francisco at 225c Chestnut Street, San Francisco, CA, and Mill Valley, California, as well as New York City.[3][5] The safehouses were dramatically scaled back in 1963, following a report by CIA Inspector General John Earman which strongly recommended closing the facility. The San Francisco safehouses were closed in 1965, and the New York City safehouse soon followed in 1966.[6] Operation Midnight Climax and Project MKUltra were considered to be so secretive that few people, even in the highest government positions, knew Gottlieb existed, let alone was conducting these experiments. However, some senior officers in the CIA knew enough about him to connect his work to LSD.[3]
Objectives and methodology[edit]
Operation Midnight Climax was established in order to study the effects of LSD on non-consenting individuals. Prostitutes on the CIA payroll were instructed to lure clients back to the safehouses, where they were surreptitiously plied with a wide range of substances, including LSD, and monitored behind one-way glass. The prostitutes were instructed in the use of post-coital questioning to investigate whether the victims could be convinced to involuntarily reveal secrets. The victims were sometimes fed subliminal messages in attempts to induce them to involuntary actions, including criminal activity such as robbery, assault, and assassination. Many of the CIA operatives involved in the experiments voluntarily indulged in the drugs and prostitutes for recreational purposes.[3] Additionally, information from Wilmington News Journal on October 15, 1978, reports from a FOIA request that, "the spy agency purchased two pounds of Yohimbine hydrochloride... by Dr. Robert V. Lashbrook, the chief aide to Dr. Sidney Gottlieb." The role of Dr. Lashbrook was to, "monitor and approve materials for Operation Midnight Climax."[7]
Senate investigators were told that the goals of these experiments were to study mind control and sexual behavior.[8] More specifically, to learn about the secrets of brainwashing to gain control over enemy spies and protect U.S. agents. Other objectives included finding drugs that could incapacitate entire buildings via poisoned food, which would create "confusion-anxiety-fear,"[4] and other symptoms such as headaches and earaches. These drugs could also have amnesia effects, which were intended for use on foreign spies following interrogations and retiring CIA agents.[4] Another aspect they tested was the effect of combining LSD and isolation, where the subjects would be dosed and isolated for months at a time with minimal food and water.[3]
Ethical concerns[edit]
In 1947, the CIA was prohibited on behalf of President Truman, due to fears of political abuse, from spying against American citizens, but these actions contradict the adherence to this prohibition.[9] These acts were illegal and several significant operational techniques were developed in this theater, including extensive research into sexual blackmail, surveillance technology and the possible use of mind-altering drugs in field operations.[10] Furthermore, the CIA operatives in charge of administering these experiments were told by superiors that the results of the experiments would be beneficial to the country. There is currently a debate over how ethical George Hunter White's actions were, with some arguing that if his motive was to legally make people suffer, he was unethical, while others argue that if he believed that the experiments would benefit national security, his actions could be justified.[3] The subjects of Gottlieb's experiments also included mentally disabled children.[3] Operation Midnight Climax program was soon expanded, and CIA operatives began dosing people in restaurants, bars, and beaches along with signing up to use the drugs themselves.[10][3] The extent to which this widespread exposure of the public to mind-altering drugs contributed to the rise of the counter-culture movement in the late 1950s and 1960s is unknown, although Ken Kesey has attributed his role in the genesis of the influential San Francisco Bay Area psychedelic social scene that developed in the 1960s to his participation in Project MKUltra LSD experiments at the Menlo Park, California, VA Hospital.
Public sphere and U.S. government response[edit]
In 1974, the New York Times journalist Seymour Hersh published a story exposing the CIA's illegal spying on U.S. citizens and how the CIA had conducted non-consensual drug experiments. His report started the lengthy process of bringing long-suppressed details about MKUltra to light.[10] Project MKUltra came to light in the spring of 1977 during a wide-ranging survey of the CIA's Technical Services Division. John K. Vance, a member of the CIA inspector general's staff, discovered that the agency was running a research project that included administering LSD and other drugs to unwilling human subjects.[11] Additionally, several CIA FOIA requests revealed a collection of documents from several news sources in the late 1970s reporting information on Operation Midnight Climax.[12]
There were a handful of newspaper articles released in the 1970s by the San Francisco examiner, Wilmington News Journal, the Washington Post, and the Washington Star revolving around these revelations and elaborated on what the CIA was doing, but they fail to include much of the motive and explicit details as the CIA never released most of the findings and the information never went public.[13]
In 1975, President Ford set up the United States President' Commission on CIA Activities. The purpose of this commission, which is commonly referred to as the Rockefeller Commission, was to investigate possible illegal activities being performed by the CIA. Project MKUltra, Operation Midnight Climax, and other similar projects were a part of the investigation. According to the Rockefeller Commission Report, the CIA was charged with various illegal activities such as large-scale spying on American citizens, engaging in illegal wire-taps, and aiming their illegal activities at Americans who openly disagreed with the government. As a result of these findings, President Ford signed an Executive Order in 1976 that prohibited "experimentation with drugs on human subjects, except with the informed consent, in writing and witnessed by a disinterested party, of each such human subject."[14] This attempted to prevent unethical projects from occurring in the future.
In 1977, Senator Edward Kennedy conducted congressional hearings investigating MKUltra. Many ex-CIA employees were brought in for questioning; Congress interrogated them about "who oversaw these programs, how participants were identified, and if any of these programs had been continued."[15] After the incident came to light, the United States government was compelled by their constituents to find out the reasoning for these unethical experiments on the United States citizens. As a result, four subpoenas were issued by Senator Edward M Kennedy, one by his subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research.[16] A former CIA employee, whose name is known as Walter Pasternak, was noted for "hiding from investigators"[16] stating that he would return after 24 hours. The documents that the senate investigation committee revealed showed receipts signed by the former CIA employee for "52,000 $100 bills that were distributed to persons involved in "Operation Midnight Climax."" [16] Pasternak, the CIA employee, also provided the subcommittee with an account of how the activities were in relation to the CIA-funded research group that conducted human behavior experiments.[16] Other CIA employees who were subpoenaed were Dr. Sidney Gottlieb and Robert Lashbrook and the consultant who was subpoenaed was a former Georgetown University professor, Dr. Charles Geschickter.[17][16] Unfortunately, when the hearing date came around, "all four of them made the decision independently not to testify" [17] The senate committee continued to investigate the issue and were able to get testimony from Pasternak, yet the information from him and others related to the project wasn't considered the most accurate, resulting in a lack of action taken by the U.S. government against the CIA.
The CIA's LSD experiments continued until 1963 before being shut down. In 1963, John Vance, a member of the CIA Inspector General's staff, learned about the projects "surreptitious administration to unwitting nonvoluntary human subjects."[15] Though the MKUltra directors argued for the continuation, the Inspector General insisted the agency follow ethical research guidelines, which brought the programs testing on non-consenting volunteers to an end.[15]
The paper records of the operation were destroyed, and during the trials, many agents claimed they could not remember details about it and there were no records for congress to verify, thus, leading to no noted convictions or justice for the CIA and individuals involved.[14]
Possible death[edit]
One possible death associated with Project MKUltra and Operation Midnight Climax was the death of Frank Olson. Frank Olson was a scientist who worked for the CIA and for the United States Army Biological Warfare Laboratories. Frank Olson allegedly committed suicide in 1953 by jumping out the window of his hotel room in New York City. This occurred after Olson drank a cocktail that had been secretly spiked with LSD while on a CIA retreat. His family did not believe it was suicide and had a second autopsy performed in 1994.[18] The second autopsy revealed injuries that occurred before he fell, which has caused his death to become a debate between murder and suicide. The Olson family sued the government for the wrongful death of Frank Olson and were awarded a $750,000 settlement, as well as personal apologies from President Ford and then CIA Director William Colby.[18]
Popular culture[edit]
The operation inspired Neal Bell's 1981 play Operation Midnight Climax.[19]
Charles E. Wharry (Darkbird18);
The world of secret police and spy agencies around the world the American CIA is the most powerful notorious for doing very dark and occult events. The CIA Secret Experiments MK ULTRA CIA Mind Control, and Midnight Climax, are just two examples of the CIA black projects that the US citizens are just now finding out about and most can't believe that this happen because we our self's are under similar mind control using news media and education religious institutions. CIA Mind Control project were design to control the human mind so that they can use these people to do undercover assassination and espionage around the world to keep in control of the world power they used the very powerful psychedelic drug, LSD (Acid Lysergic acid diethylamide) to bring this control about but this drug turn out to very hard to control and a lot of the test subject go insane or because very happen and were useless for spy operations. Mind control is a very bad and unethical practice that the power elites are always using to keep control of the human population for their our dark purpose.
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