Scienziati pazzi: Sidney Gottlieb e MK-ULTRA (1 gennaio)

Non è possibile capire l'enorme inquinamento della scienza avvenuto durante la guerra fredda se non si studiano gli scienziati che in quel periodo hanno fatto scuola. Cominciamo la carrellata con Gottlieb, il precursore dello speciale programma virus-cancro (poi diventato virus-leucemia ed infine virus-immunodeficenza, grazie a Robert Gallo e ad altri personaggi insani). L'unico modo per uscirne è creare una commissione internazionale di riappacificazione con la realtà-reale che sia aperta anche alla cittadinanza. Se ciò sarà fatto, con la diligenza del buon padre di famiglia, non ci sarà più bisogno di nessun scudo, stellare o meno.

DR. SIDNEY GOTTLIEB, as chief of TSS, ran the infamous MK-ULTRA, in which many civilians were subjected to terrifying mind control experiments and tortures: drugs, electroshock, sensory deprivation, and other techniques were used. TSS also created assassination pills and devices, coordinated the CIA's use of bio-chemical agents, etc. etc.

Many of Gottlieb's most sensitive projects had the involvement of RICHARD HELMS, who worked with him as field agent, deputy director and ultimately as DCI. By his own admission, during the Watergate crisi HELMS personally destroyed some 80 percent of the CIA's most damaging files. Most of these had something to do with programs run by Gottlieb.



January 01, 2001
Questions on drink are dull, but the underlying story isn't
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,245010963,00.html?
By Jack Kilpatrick

  The legal questions offered to the Supreme Court in Kronisch vs. U.S. may be dishwater dull. The underlying story is something else. This is a case haunted by the ghosts of a time gone by.

  The time was October 1952; the place was the Cafe Select in Paris. Stanley Milton Glickman, a promising young artist, had been drawn to the cafe by an acquaintance who wanted him to meet some American friends. For several hours they engaged in contentious debate on political issues. U.S. Circuit Judge Jose A. Cabranes tells the story:

  "As Glickman prepared to leave, one of the men offered Glickman a drink as a conciliatory gesture. Rather than call over the waiter, the man walked to the bar to get the drink, at which point Glickman observed that he had a clubfoot. Halfway through the drink, Glickman 'began to experience a lengthening of distance and a distortion of perception,' and he observed that 'the faces of the gentlemen flushed with excitement as they watched the execution of the drink.'

   "Glickman left the cafe and experienced distortions of color and other hallucinations. When Glickman awoke the next morning, he was hallucinating intensely. . . . He was taken to the American Hospital of Paris, where he was examined and given electric shock treatment. Over the next 10 months, Glickman remained mostly in his studio, experiencing 'stress, terror, hallucination and difficulty eating, which reduced his body to a feeble quality.'

  "Back in the United States, in July 1953, Glickman was treated by a doctor. He saw psychiatrists on a few occasions. His physical condition began to improve, but his mental condition did not. Over the next 25 years, he held various odd jobs but never painted again and never led a normal social life. He died on Dec. 11, 1992."

  The core allegation in the pending case is that Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency, was the man with the clubfoot. Gloria Kronisch, Glickman's sister and executor of his estate, charges that on that night in 1952, Gottlieb laced her brother's drink with LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) as part of a surreptitious testing program. The CIA admits the program but says it can find no record of Glickman's unwitting participation. The records that might establish his sister's claim were destroyed in 1973 at Gottlieb's direction.

   In the 1970s, two Senate committees conducted separate hearings on the CIA's activities in drug research. An agent testified that in 1950 the CIA received reports that the Soviet Union was engaged in intensive efforts to produce LSD as a tool for interrogation. In response, the CIA launched a project that involved the surreptitious administration of LSD "to unwitting nonvolunteer subjects at all social levels, high and low, native American and foreign." The CIA's purpose was to develop defensive techniques for resisting interrogation and to evaluate the offensive uses of drugs as a tool for its own "unconventional interrogation techniques."

   As chief of the chemical division of the CIA's Technical Services Division, Gottlieb was the man in charge. He drafted an undercover agent of the Bureau of Narcotics to assist in clandestine experiments with LSD in New York. He himself took charge of experiments abroad. The CIA acknowledges that Gottlieb performed interrogations on foreign nationals, but not in France and not until 1953, a year after the alleged incident at the Cafe Select.

   Even before the story broke wide open before the Senate committees, Glickman had been trying to learn what had happened. His letters to the CIA drew unresponsive responses. Finally in 1983 he brought suit in U.S. District Court against Gottlieb and CIA Director Richard Helms under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The suit bounced up and down in federal courts until May 1999, two months after Gottlieb's death, when Glickman's case was dismissed on a motion of summary judgment. The case went up to a panel of the Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit.

  Cabranes affirmed in large part. He dismissed Kronisch's basic suit against Helms and the United States as barred by the applicable statute of limitations. He left open the estate's slim chance of recovery by preserving a right for Glickman's executor to pursue a personal action against Gottlieb's estate. The claim must be limited to the allegation that Gottlieb himself administered the LSD-laced drink that night in Paris nearly 50 years ago.

  I doubt that the Supreme Court will take the case. It does not involve intra-circuit conflicts, and it presents no novel questions of statutory or constitutional law. Even so, skeletons in a closet make for good reading. Tom Clancy? John LeCarre? There's a spy story waiting to be written.



Comments:

 Oak Ridge had access to these CIA LSD experiments and persons at Y-12 studied these files extensively.    At Y-12 were other club footed persons that designed the Y-12 chemical processes, persons like Googin.

Yep-----Gottlieb was one of the crooks that violated the human experiments code. Oak Ridge has long known all of Gottlieb's experiments and the CIA's applications.

The LSD is also the favorite technique of harrassment against nuke and fluoride activists.   LSD is skin absorbable and usually impregnated into paper.

One of the tricks is to mix the LSD into black shoe polish and apply it to black pants of targetted persons.  The stuff then time releases with temperature kinda like the shell no pest strips.   This is also the nickname for the technique.

The other trick is smear it onto furniture.

It drives the targetted person nuts---------unless they happen to know that trick.  Still takes a while to figure it out.

Combinations of fluorides and LSD make targetted spies forget who they are----which is why the CIA likes it.   It is also known to cause suicides with persons panicking, sometimes jumping out windows.   Some suspect this is what happened to Forrestal after he visited Area 51 and learned of the cover ups connected to 47 nuclear tests with live indigenous humans in lenticular German designed airfoiles.

This cover up of this human experimentation continues today with the help of many planted activists and lawyers helping DOE and DOD hide this.



Posted at 06:58 a.m. PDT; Monday, April 5, 1999
Chief concocter of CIA tools, Sidney Gottlieb, dies
by Elaine Woo
Los Angeles Times

James Bond had Q, the scientific wizard who supplied 007 with dazzling gadgets to deploy against enemy agents. The CIA had Sidney Gottlieb, a Bronx-born biochemist whose job was to concoct the tools of espionage - disappearing inks, poison darts, toxic handkerchiefs.

Mr. Gottlieb, former head of the CIA's technical-services division, died March 7 in Washington, Va. He was 80. His family did not divulge the cause of his death.

Mr. Gottlieb once mailed a lethal handkerchief to an Iraqi colonel and personally ferried a deadly bacteria to the Congo to kill Prime Minister Patrice Lamumba. It wasn't his potions that eventually did in the two targets, but Mr. Gottlieb, once described by a colleague as the ultimate "good soldier," carried on.

His sole preoccupation during 22 years with the CIA was not the poisons and the darts, however. He labored for years on a project to unlock and control the mysterious powers of LSD. Could it be a potent spy weapon to weaken the minds of unwilling targets?

In the 1950s and 1960s, answering that question was one of Mr.Gottlieb's missions. By the early 1950s, the CIA, fearful that LSD would fall into Soviet hands, had cornered the market on the drug, which in minute doses could produce overwhelming sensations, from kaleidoscopic acuity to temporary insanity.

The agency also started to fund research, covertly funneling hundreds of thousands of dollars to academics in prestigious institutions around the country who tried the drug themselves and reported the results to Mr. Gottlieb.

Mr. Gottlieb and his associates in MKULTRA also went on "trips," although the concept of tripping would not enter the American lexicon for another decade. They laced coffee with LSD and served it to each other without warning, then observed each other's reactions.

Later Mr. Gottlieb expanded the field tests to subjects outside the agency - drug addicts, prostitutes, prisoners, mental patients - people who were unlikely to complain and even less likely to be believed if they did. Among those dosed were hookers and their clients in a CIA-sponsored brothel in San Francisco.

In the early 1960s, Mr. Gottlieb was promoted to the highest deputyship in the technical-services operation. By 1967, he had risen to the top of the division, guided by his longtime agency mentor, director Richard Helms. By that time, LSD was not a secret anymore.

It was not until 1972 that Mr. Gottlieb called a halt to the experiments with psychedelics, concluding in a memo that they were "too unpredictable in their effects on individual human beings. . . to be operationally useful." He retired the same year, spending the next few decades in eclectic pursuits that defied the stereotype of the spy.

He went to India with his wife to volunteer at a leper hospital. A stutterer since childhood, he got a master's degree in speech therapy. He raised goats on a Virginia farm. And he practiced folk dancing, a lifelong passion despite the handicap of a clubfoot.

Copyright © 1999 Seattle Times Company



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