Noted Retired Army Psychologist Speaks Out on CIA Investigation Plan

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Tue Sep 1, 2009 2:38pm EDT

Retired colonel served tours at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib as Joint Task Force
Psychologist




DAYTON, Ohio, Sept. 1 /PRNewswire/ -- The former Army senior psychologist who
was deployed to Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay to improve the operations
involving interrogation of detainees said the newest decision by the Obama
administration to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate CIA techniques
may not be helpful to the intelligence community.

"To reopen cases that were adjudicated as legal may be harmful to the mission
and morale of the intelligence community," said Col. (Ret.) Larry James, now
the Dean of the School of Professional Psychology at Wright State University.
"That said, I agree with President Obama's statement several months ago to
'turn the page' and move on with regard to the interrogation of detainees of
the Global War on Terrorism."

He said the outcome of appointing the special prosecutor could have negative
repercussions on the intelligence-gathering function.

"Being an interrogator is a stressful, challenging and dangerous job," he
said. "If there is new evidence that suggests crimes have been committed, then
it would make sense to move forward with an investigation. However, since at
the time of the interrogations they were deemed legal and acceptable by that
sitting administration, I do not believe the investigation is warranted or
necessary. I advise the president to be supportive of our current mission and
be very careful as he moves forward in this sensitive area."

While at Walter Reed, Colonel James was tapped to serve two tours at
Guantanamo Bay where he was asked to teach young interrogators how to
interview detainees without abuse, and, later, was brought into Abu Ghraib to
fix the debacle exposed by the notorious photos. He later wrote the book
Fixing Hell, in which he chronicled his journey into the darkness of the
infamous prison. 

Timing being everything, he is hosting a two-day workshop in October at Wright
State's Institute of Defense Studies and Education (IDSE) www.wright.edu/idse.
That workshop, aptly titled The Psychology of Terrorism, digs deeply into the
minds of terrorists and what makes them become the people they are. His
experiences at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib are the foundation for his workshop.
He will be joined by other nationally recognized terrorism experts. 



SOURCE  Institute of Defense Studies and Education at Wright State University

Randy Dunham, +1-937-631-0329, Randy.dunham@wright.edu
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