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Conflicts

"No one shall be subjected to torture!"

August 21, 2020

After September 11, 2001, the USA used torture as an interrogation method in the fight against terrorism. Less well known is that the CIA began researching torture methods shortly after the Second World War...

Symbolbild Guantanamo
Image: Getty Images/J. Moore

Allen Dulles, then the new director of the CIA, described the "abhorrent torture methods of the Soviets" at an alumni meeting at Princeton University in 1953. What he did not tell his former fellow students in his lecture, however, was that he himself was already planning an extensive research program at that time that would make it possible to achieve mind control during interrogations.

Today's psychological interrogation techniques, such as torture through sensory deprivation, are based on the results of this work. They are called "white" or "clean torture" because, unlike physical torture, they leave no visible traces.

Using archive material and current documents, as well as interviews not only with historians, intelligence experts and political scientists, but also with victims of medical torture experiments, the documentary examines the history of the first research programs at McGill University up to the use of the practices in Afghanistan, Iraq and now also within the US. The film highlights the torture scandal in Abu Ghraib prison and the practice of solitary confinement in Guantanamo, where prisoners had to live in cages for years without seeing daylight.
 

Broadcasting Hours: 

DW English

WED 21.10.2020 – 01:15 UTC
WED 21.10.2020 – 05:15 UTC
THU 22.10.2020 – 09:15 UTC
SAT 24.10.2020 – 02:15 UTC
SUN 25.10.2020 – 08:15 UTC

Cape Town UTC +2 | Delhi UTC +5,5 | Hong Kong UTC +8
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DW Deutsch+

THU 22.10.2020 – 09:15 UTC
SUN 25.10.2020 – 08:15 UTC 
Vancouver UTC -7 | New York UTC -4 | Sao Paulo UTC -3 

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