to report, APA’s ethics director Stephen Behnke worked with a military psychologist to draft the organisation’s public policy statements and also received a Pentagon contract to train interrogators.
The report said he did not tell the APA board about his involvement in training defence department staff.
Responding to the findings, the APA — the largest professional psychology organisation in the country — said late on Friday it would review its policies and urge a ban on its psychologists from participating directly in interrogations.
“The organisation’s intent was not to enable abusive interrogation techniques or contribute to violations of human rights, but that may have been the result,” said Nadine Kaslow, who led an independent review committee that commissioned the report.
“We profoundly regret, and apologize for, the behavior and the consequences that ensued.”
The independent review was led by attorney David Hoffman of Sidley Austin law firm.
It was commissioned by APA’s board of directors and took seven months to complete.
The report said that in 2005, the APA created a task force to review the association’s ethical guidelines that determined when its psychologists could participate in interrogations.
A subsequent report from the task force found there were no ethical violations of psychologists’ participation in the government’s “enhanced interrogation” program — which included techniques such as waterboarding, forced “stress positions” and sleep deprivation.
Behnke reportedly “collaborated behind the scenes about the eventual content of the task force’s report,” the review said.
Critics cited in the report said the APA’s decisions “were intentionally made to help the government commit torture.”
The report found that the ethical guidelines “prioritized the protection of psychologists — even those who might have engaged in unethical behavior — above the protection of the public.”
The review also found that two former APA presidents sat on CIA advisory committees, and one of them told the intelligence agency he did not think that sleep deprivation constituted torture.