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Cold War Ground Zero: Medicine, Psyops and the Bomb

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2009

Abstract

This essay takes a history-of-ideas approach to place American medicine and psychiatry within the context of the Cold War. Rather than focus on physical science and technology (as is often the case in studies of science and the Cold War), the essay shifts attention to the human sciences in order to consider the ways in which medical and psychiatric research was caught up in concerns over national defence. Various arguments have proposed that US research involving human subjects between the late 1940s and the mid-1960s contravened the Nuremberg Code, which was established in 1948 to formalize the ethical boundaries of medical research and prevent any repeat of the human experimentation widely practised in Nazi concentration camps. The essay focusses, particularly, on two phases of the Cold War: the medical and genetic testing linked to the dropping of the atom bomb in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the psychological tests (often referred to as “psyops”) beginning in the World War II years but developing rapidly during the Korean War. The aim of the essay is to link a phenomenological approach to the Cold War – in which the figures of the “zero” and “cipher” frequently arose – with a discussion of the interrelationship between US national defence issues and American medical research.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

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References

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39 Ed Murrow, See It Now conversation with Oppenheimer, Institute of Advanced Study, Princeton University (CBS, 4 Jan. 1955). The extended forty-five-minute discussion was intended for use in universities, but edited for broadcast. The complete recording is available in the Motion Picture Reading Room, Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

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48 See Ron Robin, The Making of the Cold War Enemy: Culture and Politics in the Military–Industrial Complex (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), 101–23; and Harvey M. Weinstein, Psychiatry and the CIA: Victims of Mind Control (Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, Inc., 1990), xviii, 132.

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52 Ibid., 228.

53 There are other arguments to suggest that Western POWs in Korea behaved no differently to those captured in other wars, as initial disorientation and blankness of response often wore off after repatriation. But Lori Bogle and other critics counter this by pointing to the twenty-one American prisoners (as well as one British and over three hundred South Korean POWs) who made the decision to stay in communist China after being released. See Bogle, The Pentagon's Battle for the American Mind, 119–26. Eisenhower dismissed these experiences as a symptom of inadequate preparation for war and encouraged the military to raise patriotism by pressing for a Code of Conduct in 1955.

54 Lifton, Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism, 421.

55 Ibid., 425.

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61 John H. Popham, “Atom Held ‘Feeble’ in Light of Science,” New York Times, 11 Oct. 1949, 33. Naomi Klein uses the phrase “science of fear” in The Shock Doctrine, 38–46.

62 Jung interview broadcast on Face to Face: Professor Jung (BBC, 1959). Lifton, Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism, 459.

63 Norman Mailer, “The White Negro” (1957), in Advertisements for Myself (London: Flamingo, 1994; first published 1959), 282.