There are already many divergent opinions over the role US
psychologists should play in military interrogations. The actions of
psychologists have been called into question lately as investigations and
reports conducted at detention centers found that some of the methods used by
them may have violated the American Psychological Association’s policies.
It is known that psychologists have played a major role in
the military and CIA interrogation of detainees, but now members of the
American Psychological Association are considering whether to make any
involvement in military interrogations a violation of their ethics code, The
New York Times reported.
“Torture and abuse are always unethical and prohibited,”
said Stephen Behnke, who directs the association’s ethics office, according to
the same source.
A report prepared by the Justice Department revealed the
rough methods and harsh interrogation tactics that were used on detainees in Guantánamo Bay, Afghanistan and Iraq. The
inspector general found that FBI agents and military psychologists participated
in interrogations using harsh interrogation tactics that would not have been
permitted in the Unites States. These tactics included “prolonged constraint,”
“exposure,” and “sleep deprivation.”
This problem has been one of the key issues at the American
Psychological Association’s annual convention this week in Boston, where members of the association
denounced such work as unethical by definition. On the other hand, some of them
said that the vast majority of military psychologists know the ethics code and
the debate should focus only on the individual psychologist behavior.
However, the American Psychological Association’s most
recent ethics amendments ban direct or indirect participation in 19 forms of
torture including mock execution, rape, use of drugs, and exposure to extreme
temperatures.
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