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CIA Project MK-ULTRA: The KUBARK Interrogation Manual (Part 5)

CIA Project MK-ULTRA: The KUBARK Interrogation Manual (Part 5)

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(00:00:00) CIA Project MK-ULTRA: The KUBARK Interrogation Manual (Part 5) (00:00:01) The Interrogation Room (00:03:13) The Art of Controlled Environment (00:04:03) The Kubark Manual: A Guide to Interrogation (00:06:29) The Interrogator's Role and Personality (00:11:59) Understanding the Subject's Personality Types (00:23:53) The Evolution of Interrogation Techniques (00:25:36) The Controlled Environment: Architecture of Control (00:31:40) Mutt and Jeff: A Two-Act Approach (00:34:54) Debility, Dependency, and Dread (00:40:33) The Nosenko Case: A Failure of Kubark By 1963, the lessons of Cold War mind control had been typed into procedure.No dungeon. No blood on the floor. No theatrical cruelty. Just a manual, a room, an interrogator, and a method for turning fear, isolation, dependency, and dread into instruments of control.Welcome back to The Fairshake Files, where the official record ends… and the real one begins.In Chapter 5 of our MK-ULTRA investigation, we enter the world of KUBARK: the CIA’s 1963 Counterintelligence Interrogation manual.This was not a rumor, a theory, or a whispered claim from the margins. It was a classified guide, written in the language of procedure, designed to teach interrogation as a disciplined system.This chapter examines how KUBARK transformed the lessons of Korea, Montreal, sensory deprivation, isolation research, and Cold War “brainwashing” fears into a portable method for control.We look at the manual’s language, its cryptonyms, its personality categories, its treatment of the interrogation room as an instrument, and its use of techniques such as Mutt and Jeff, Debility, Dependency, Dread, and Alice in Wonderland.We also follow one of the clearest human examples of the danger behind the method: Yuri Nosenko, the Soviet KGB officer who defected to the United States in 1964, only to be held by the CIA for 1,277 days in a custom-built isolation vault at Camp Peary. KUBARK promised control.But control is not the same thing as truth.CHAPTERS 00:00 - Inside the CIA Interrogation Room04:00 - The KUBARK Manual & The Operator11:32 - The 9 Personality Vulnerabilities23:49 - Brainwashing Origins: Korea & Montreal25:57 - Weaponizing the Room & Mutt and Jeff35:50 - DDD: Debility, Dependency, and Dread40:38 - Yuri Nosenko: 1,277 Days in a CIA Vault46:49 - KUBARK’s Legacy: Control Is Not TruthSOURCES & MATERIALSPrimary / Official / Archival RecordCIA: KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation, July 1963CIA Reading Room: Counterintelligence Interrogation declassified recordsNational Security Archive: Prisoner Abuse: Patterns from the PastU.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence: Project MKULTRA, The CIA’s Program of Research in Behavioral Modification, 1977Joint Hearing House Select Committee on Assassinations: Oswald in the Soviet Union: An Investigation of Yuri NosenkoCIA / Studies in Intelligence: DCI John McCone and the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy: The Nosenko CaseCold War Interrogation / Coercion Research Albert D. Biderman: Communist Attempts to Elicit False Confessions from Air Force Prisoners of War, 1957 Lawrence E. Hinkle Jr. & Harold G. Wolff: Communist Interrogation and Indoctrination of “Enemies of the State”I.E. Farber, Harry F. Harlow & Louis Jolyon West: Brainwashing, Conditioning, and DDD: Debility, Dependency, and Dread, 1957Additional Context National Security Archive: CIA KUBARK release materials and later declassification notesChristian Science Monitor: A Cold War Case of CIA DetentionStill Echoes Declassified JFK/Nosenko records held through the National Archives and related HSCA volumesDisclaimer: The following is an exploration of historical records, declassified materials, and documented claims. The goal of this channel is to examine the evidence presented for all sides, not to endorse any single conclusion. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-fairshake-files--6771179/support.Thank you for listening to The Fairshake Files.If this investigation stayed with you, leave a review, share the episode, or send it to someone interested in history, intelligence, Cold War secrecy, and the machinery behind official stories.The full video version, with visuals, is available on YouTube and Spotify:@thefairshakefilesThe Fairshake Files is independently produced.Every listen, view, review, and share helps keep the work moving.This episode includes AI-generated content.
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