Truth is stranger than fiction. After the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) was dissolved, the CIA transformed the lethal pill, or "L-pill," that the OSS had developed into a suicide silver dollar,
It had a tiny needle that delivered saxitoxin and/or botulinum toxin to the agent, giving them a fast and very painful death.
AFAICT, there's no public record of how many of these were given out and how many people used them. But we do know of one famous case where someone didn't use it — Gary Powers. He had one of these silver dollars and he refused to use it. He chose capture and torture instead.
For me, personally, there's something very funny about the CIA turning one of the country's most recognisable symbols, the dollar, into a suicide pact.
I just looked up Gary Powers and it feels ridiculous that the CIA would ask or expect him to kill himself because his photography machine was shot down. He lived another 17 years and may have had a full life if he didn’t die of a helicopter accident.
I believe Powers said that the decision of whether to take the pill was up to him, though the public did apparently think he should have killed himself to avoid the diplomatic incident.
If you throw rocks at a military unit and then chase them as they try to retreat, you’re fair game. Throwing rocks is no small matter. A single blow from a rock can kill a man. Not to mention that this was part of a series of demonstrations that had already devolved into outright rioting.
However, no less than future President John Adams defended the British soldiers in court! And of the eight British soldiers charged with manslaughter, Adams got six acquitted and two got the minor (for the time) punishment of branding their thumbs.
It's surprising how far the "American" version of the revolutionary war has spread, but it's probably because the British didn't care that much and afterwards not pissing off a friendly partner was more important.
Much of what is "taught" about the revolutionary war is obviously one-sided bullshit.
I was talking to some American friends the other day about the Boston Tea Party. It was recently propped up by the ACLU as a proud heritage moment of American protest. But my understanding is that it was a riot involving theft and destruction of property. I don’t think the seizure and destruction of the contents of, say, an Amazon Delivery Van would be seen the same way.
As a non-American with no real motivation to see any specific narrative be promoted, it feels like American history often leans heavily on “the ends justify the means.”
There is a difference between targeted violence and destruction of property as a means to exert economic pressure on a trading entity, and untargeted violence and destruction of property as a means to express your displeasure with current life. The historical claim of the Boston Tea Party rioters is that they broke a padlock and paid for a new one, as the padlock was personal property; the rest of the cargo was dumped into the harbor and ruined deliberately.
If someone was protesting Amazon, or the government's protection of Amazon, and as part of their protest they seized and destroyed the contents of an Amazon delivery van, they would be demonstrating a viable and possibly effective method of hurting Amazon (although you'd have to destroy a lot of delivery vans.)
The fact of the matter is that there are no governments that exist by the full consent of the governed. The only way for a "fully justified" government to exist is for no government to exist. The American revolution was no more or less justified than the formation of the Ottoman empire, or of Egypt during the time of the pharaohs.
Most Americans have absolutely no idea about what happened during the Boston Massacre except "British Bad", which is exactly what the propaganda wanted.
I think their acquittal says more about the court system than of the incident that led to the trial. With a good lawyer, you have always been able to get away with murder.
It's not that Powers was obliged to kill himself. Powers had a choice, either take the suicide pill, or don't talk if you're captured. He chose option 3, he talked.
Having to make such a choice is certainly not an enviable position to be in, but Powers never had to take this job. I certainly never would have accepted it, I think most people wouldn't.
> the public did apparently think he should have killed himself
this makes me feel again that there's a recurring phenomenon with humanity, where spending the assets (life, in this case) of others is seen as selfishly strategic
One game theory result I remember is the hypothetical situation of two people dropped onto a grid with radios who must rendezvous. Apparently the game theoretical optimal strategy is to establish contact, inform the other person of one's location and the fact that one is destroying one's radio, then actually destroy the radio...
I suspect that the game theory aspect of the u2 spying wasn't as well thought out. At least, they probably didn't think that anyone would actually survive being shot down from that height. Forget about how the pilot might act when captured.
I imagine to force the other person to have to come find you. If they think they can still talk to you, they might delay going to your location in the hopes that they can convince you not to make them do all the work.
This seems short sighted. Maybe the other person didn't understand you properly, and even if they're motivated enough to go to you, they won't find you, because you were not clear about your location on that single radio call.
cyanide is an enzyme poison - it stops all sorts of enzyme chains reactions from operating. as to why is it painful? well, that comes back to the question of why anything is painful.
Cyanide inhibits cellular respiration. It prevents your body's cells from using the oxygen in your blood to produce energy.
My understanding (I am not an expert, please feel free to correct me) is that this produces neurological signals that you're not getting enough air. So you feel like you're choking or drowning; you're gasping for breath, your whole body is screaming at you that you need to breathe, but you are breathing and it doesn't help. That's not a pleasant way to go.
According to my biology teacher, the urge to breathe is from receptors that detect a higher concentration of carbon dioxide (in blood I suppose), not an absence of oxygen. She also said if you placed cyanide in your mouth, it would kill on contact with the tongue, before you managed to swallow it.
Your biology teacher might have been correct, but I had a science teacher confidently tell my class (in an affluent, otherwise science-respecting school) that humans don't land on the dark side of the moon because they would float away due to gravity working the other direction (hence the name).
Cyanide blocks both the mitochondrial ability to take in pyruvate and its ability to generate power, which means the cell can still attempt to use the excess pyruvate to generate energy by fermentation, resulting in lactic acid which stimulates pain receptors.
Carbon monoxide poisoning on the other hand only interferes with oxygen delivery, which shuts down the mitochondrial ability to generate power but critically does NOT stop it from taking in pyruvate. Since there would be no excess pyruvate in the cell outside the mitochondria to undergo fermentation, there would be less lactic acid, and less pain.
most kinds of things that fail in the body cause pain, especially if the failure is being caused by an outside agent.
Why? Well one popular just-so story is that pain exists to let us know something is wrong so we will do our best to stop the pain, if the thing that is damaging the body is some sort of external agent then it seems reasonable under this explanation that there should be pain to get you to stop that external agent in some way.
I think the more reasonable question is why did they develop a poison that was really painful?!?
I expect this is less a case of them "developing" the specific poisons as much as looking at the pharmacopeia, and choosing something that was readily available, well understood, and efficacious/unrecoverable.
maybe this is the spycraft version of designed by a developer! hmm, yes we need to make a poison that people will take to keep from being captured and tortured for years before potential release.
Ok, well I reused these components and it is cheap and easy to make! Also unimaginably painful but hey, there's always a tradeoff.
some years later, huh, research shows nobody wants to use our unimaginably painful poison to escape being tortured. Users are stupid and incomprehensible.
I think you're best off extracting the amygdalin from the apple seeds and letting the digestive tract hydrolyze the amygdalin into hydrogen cyanide, glucose, and benzaldehyde.
It feels obvious, but, how do something stopping existence cause signals rising? Do they have molecular scale system heartbeat monitoring, or what? I don’t see data to draw conclusions from.
My understanding is that it stops oxygen uptake from your blood to your cells, so it feels like you're not getting enough air, like you're choking or drowning. But I'm not an expert.
I've accidentally passed out from breathing helium from a 10-foot weather balloon. It's not painful at all, actually slightly pleasant. A lack of oxygen absorption doesn't directly cause discomfort.
Increased blood CO2 is the main cause of discomfort from holding your breath for a long time. This is why hyperventilating to bring your CO2 level down helps you hold your breath longer. (The light headedness from hyperventilation is a consequence of low CO2.)
I don't believe cyanide particularly increases blood CO2 prior to loss of consciousness. Also, I'm told carbon monoxide poisoning isn't particularly uncomfortable, and also interferes with oxygen transport. So, your proposed mechanism seems unlikely.
Someone else here mentioned that cyanide poisoning is painful due to lactate production: that muscle burn from working out, but presumably worse, building until death.
Other tissues besides muscles may also have lactate receptors; I'm not sure. If that's the case, your whole body may have that workout burn.
> For me, personally, there's something very funny about the CIA turning one of the country's most recognisable symbols, the dollar, into a suicide pact.
An additional bit of funny is that the silver dollar in that photo is known as a Peace Dollar.
It is not like the agents will know if it is agonising or not.
You just tell them it is painless. It is not like they are going to test it on themselves.
If someone somehow ends up whitnessing a usage and they complain you tell them “this is very concerning, we are going to investigate. Maybe a bad batch? Or enemy action?” and then you classify the whole thing for 150 years.
If there is such a widespread leak that you can’t do the above (for example one of your agents swallows poison direct on camera broadcast publicly) then you say to your agents: “Turns out it is not working as painlessly as we thought. Obviously we are not monsters, we couldn’t test it on live subjects. Discontinue old formulation, new painless formulation is being distributed.” And then you give them new pills with the same or nearly the same poison and visibly new packaging/concealment. But that is a last resort, only if there is too much grumbling amomg the rank and file.
- the actual use of poison pills is very rare. If our agents need to pop them all the time we suck and our organisation is hemourhaging valuable resources and we need to improve our trade craft.
- things done in missions are murky, especially murky when the mission went so horribly wrong our agents commited suicide. Most often the agency notices that something went this wrong by an agent failing to report in. It is not like the agent who died a painfull/painless death will complain about it at the “illegal undercover agents anual ball”. Information spreads slowly by default under these circumstances and through unreliable narrators.
- the business of inteligence agencies is to keep information compartmented and on a need to know basis. They have processes with teeth to enforce this. Keeping information available to one part of the organisation away from other parts of the organisation is their bread and butter. Keeping the truth about a possibly painfull poison pill is not a special case there, you can use the same aparatus to keep this info locked down you use to keep other information within the agency.
In either case, the actual information on whether it is painless is immaterial to the choice. The only thing that can factor into an agent's decision is the information that he learns about the suicide agent, and the agency has a lot of control over that information.
It would be pretty easy to tell a plausible lie, though, especially if you can think of a plausible less-painful poison to pretend you used. Tell them it's something moderately painful, so you can still tell them, "look, it's still better than torture". Just don't remind them about the edge-case scenarios where it really has to be fast and reliable, and they probably won't question it too hard...
"I work for an agency that routinely gains people's trust in order to betray it, but I trust them and they would never betray me" seems to be the default belief for this lot, so maybe it isn't so far fetched.
> Painless, compact, reliable? Doesn’t need to be that fast.
I thought the point was to remove you from enemy torture and questioning. If you're dying slowly, then the enemy is just going to torture and question you while the poison acts slowly, or possibly even find a way to ‘cure’ you well enough that the torture can go on for a long time … which defeats the point, doesn't it?
Opiate overdoses are easily reversible with naloxone. I suppose it’s possible that carfentanyl is strong enough that it would take an unreasonable amount of naloxone to reverse.
In the 1980s, I read that the GRU issued an injector they called "blissful death". The source was unreliable, but that's a starting point for research.
Riffing on another comment, perhaps the poisons used have no known antidotes and that is why they are chosen even though they are painful. Otherwise they would probably be pointless since you could be revived.
I guess you don't want that, because it may give people too much of an easy way out, giving up too soon when survival was still preferable for mission success.
I assume the suicide option is an option for the prospective torturee - not for the agency.
If the pill causes pain, that's an unwanted side-effect. It's unlikely to be as painful as the actions of your torturer, whose goal is to cause as much pain as possible, and who may also want to stretch it out for weeks. And there's a good chance your torturer will kill you anyway.
Sometimes torture is used for punishment or repression, not to obtain information. Arguably that's always the purpose; "information" obtained through torture isn't very reliable.
The psychological pain (weight) of even carrying such a suicide pill/coin as part of your mission pack-out. Perhaps the person has a strong Judeo-Christian belief that God finds suicide and self-harm abhorrent. Or "Dr. Ellie Arroway"-non religious beliefs of the same. Maybe it's a big question mark how those beliefs are tested in the moment of being tortured. Maybe nobody involved likes the option, but it's there because we do not know about that moment, or what happens after we die, but we do know how utterly horrifyingly people can behave in war.
Plus, the last thing the State would want is for their asset to have second thoughts about taking the suicide pill─“They may torture me soon and it will probably be extremely painful... but the pill will certainly be extremely painful! Maybe I should risk it”
First, if they are detained, they will be strip searched long before any torture takes place. You either take it early or not at all - odds are everything will be taken away.
Second, the last thing you want in such situation is ambiguity - people don't just commit suicide willy-nilly. Instructions must be very clear.
Thirdly, either the agent has secret information that cannot be divulged, or they don't. This is known upfront before the mission. Any agent at high risk of capture is kept away from sensitive information, to minimise possible damage. Every spy and reconnaissance organisation work like that. As soon as agent is captured, damage control is put in place.
Lastly, orders to commit suicide are not legally possible.
>First, if they are detained, they will be strip searched long before any torture takes place. You either take it early or not at all - odds are everything will be taken away.
Aleksandr Ogorodnik was able to get the KGB to give him his pen, which had a suicide pill in it, to write his confession.
"If you do not comply with our request for your suicide, we cannot guarantee the safety of your children, Samantha, currently in 3rd grade in Glaveston Primary, and John, named after your father, who is a star quarterback on Washington High's team. We trust you do what is necessary."
This is over the top even for the CIA, but they were definitely capable of being monsters. In the case of Gary Powers the agency fought hard to avoid a prisoner exchange and even internally claimed he had defected intentionally. His wife was even committed to a psychiatric institution: not so much to threaten Powers, but just to keep her from embarrassing the agency with her drinking. Ultimately they went ahead with the exchange partly out of fear that Powers would learn what they’d done to his wife.
Imagine joining a government agency to protect your country and your family... And the government not only betrays you personally but also threatens your wife and children.
Surely even the CIA has limits on the atrocities they are willing to commit?
> Lastly, orders to commit suicide are not legally possible.
Obviously you don’t order it. You play up the cruelty of the enemy tortourers. This probably is not hard, every secret service probably have enough nightmare fuel on hand to do if they want to. And then you provide the means and let your agent know they can use it uppon capture.
Were the agents told that the death will be painful? I believe that organization such as the CIA would rather lie to its own agents to make sure they would poison themselves.
Suicide mechanisms are used after the mission has failed, either they are captured or about to be captured. Agents aren't going to use a suicide option while still able to operate. (Although an actor free to operate but for which there isn't a survival option may choose a suicide attack. There was an American kamikaze in WWII, he wasn't going to make it back to the carrier, the only possible rescue was the very fleet he was attacking.)
When it comes down to a quick death by a suicide agent vs being tortured and then likely an unmarked grave it can be a reasonable option. Agents which aren't so likely to be put through the wringer and might be exchanged are another matter--Gary Powers had little reason to use his suicide option. He didn't have great secrets to be tortured for.
>… Ogorodnik offered to write a full confession and asked for his pen. When the interrogator handed him the pen with a cleverly hidden cyanide pill in the cap, Ogorodnik bit on it and died soon after. He was said to have died before he hit the floor.
According to his son he wasn't physically tortured, but subjected to psychological torture that we'd probably call 'enhanced interrogation' these days.
I was about to ask what possible conspiracy theory could people come up with to doubt the story of: Guilty verdict, drink liquid from small bottle, die of poison...
But then I remembered that conspiracy theorists are often inspired by a muse that other people don't have access to. So best to just shake my head and find something else to read :-)
At another point in the documentary it is mentioned that they fought a battle with the capsule in their mouth as they were very close to being taken by the enemy.
Given that Alexey Leonov had to partially manually deflate his suit in order to get back in the capsule, and hypoxic death is actually euphoric, a suicide pill doesn't seem to make much sense.
So many questions: did he tape the pill to the inside of his helmet some place he could reach it with his tongue? I presume it's impossible or nearly impossible to pull your arm out of the sleeve of a Soviet space suit without remove part of the suit. Was the plan that he could remove his space suit helmet in the middle of space, so that he could place the pill in his mouth? Was he expected to hold the suicide pill in his mouth for the duration of the spacewalk and be very careful to not accidentally swallow it or choke on it?
This made me think of a story I came across the other day of some domestic terrorists that had planned to take out the power grid. They had obviously conceived that they might be captured, so they thought up a similar device. Their idea was to put fentanyl into a capsule and then wear this as a necklace.
When the first conspirator was randomly stopped by the police and he tried to use it to spare his partners. They got him to the hospital. He's in prison currently.
The CIA's idea doesn't seem any more grounded in reality than theirs.
Many people carry Narcan (the most common form of naloxone, is used to counteract opioid overdosing). It is a nasal spray. It is standard equipment for paramedics. Since I'm a patient at a pain clinic, I have to have some in my house and my family (also roommates, if I had any) know where it is and how to use it.
Critically, Narcan is pretty safe to use on most people who aren't suffering an opioid overdose, so it's likely to be administered before bloodwork gets back.
this is fairly tangential, but if you follow the article’s link to a Wired article about the use of Hydrogen Cyanide, that article links to a liveleak video of a lawyer committing suicide in a courtroom using cyanide. through this I found out that liveleak is dead
I never really used liveleak - I’m not one for gory videos - but I liked that it existed. and now it’s just another example of the anodisation of the internet: anything vaguely controversial is gone. look at reddit. reddit isn’t even publicly traded and they are still bowing to the pressures to ban controversy. with those bans huge chunks of modern culture and history; tumblr banned porn and it’s not coming back[1]; stable diffusion and dall-e have the American idea of morals baked into them
the internet used to be a place of freedom of thought and expression, and now, thanks to censoring powers of mastercard and visa, it’s not. now it’s like television, or film, or any other old media censored before release. it’s incredibly fucking sad and I hope the obsessive archivers of this world have made a dent into saving these things
I think liveleaks more rebranded itself than was pushed out. The replacement, itemfix, still has a video called "construction accident" on it's homepage. I also dislike gore so won't do anymore research.
the guy who runs/owns it basically said that they were forced to rebrand because it was too hard to keep running in that form. I presume that means they were having trouble taking payments
>stable diffusion and dall-e have the American idea of morals baked into them
And even then only for a particular intersection of ranges on the political and socioeconomic class spectrums.
This is part of why people love tiktok. They can like and see more content from "their people" and the people that are running around trying to get this and that shut down for not being too far out there in any given direction are little the wiser to the content they don't see.
Yeah, it's nuts how many news sources refuse to show the drinking or even describe what happened. It's a real historical event, it deserves to be documented in full.
In that movie "The Hunted" they used a snorted substance. Like what you put up your nose when you're feeling congested. Administered via a plastic squeezy injector thing.
Not sure about suicide cyanide teeth, but the pill version was very real. A whole bunch of high-ranking Nazi's left the stage using exactly this. Among them Hitler (slightly disputed about whether he simply shot himself right after biting a pill or just shot himself and didn't bother with pill), Himmler (definitely, in front of eyewitnesses shortly after being identified), and Goering while awaiting execution in his jail cell.
if you enjoy these types of state hijinks, "Directorate S" is a good book that goes over a lot of traditional spycraft. Plenty of simple gags. turn a corner, jump out of the passenger seat, and have the driver put up a cardboard cutout the same shape as you to lose a tail, that's one I remember.
Leaving aside for a moment who is and is not civilized, there's at least one point where a person's self interest and their government's interest in secrecy might align in suicide: when the agent is faced with torture. The agent would want to avoid serious pain that might end in their being killed anyway, and the government would like to keep what secrets they might reveal. Without fanaticism, there is pain I would die to avoid.
As far as the West being an enlightened civilization, Alberto Gonzalez' defense of U.S. torture relevantly suggests to me that civilization only goes so far.
https://www.spymuseum.org/press/press-archive/2019-press-rel....
It had a tiny needle that delivered saxitoxin and/or botulinum toxin to the agent, giving them a fast and very painful death.
AFAICT, there's no public record of how many of these were given out and how many people used them. But we do know of one famous case where someone didn't use it — Gary Powers. He had one of these silver dollars and he refused to use it. He chose capture and torture instead.
This is what his suicide dollar probably looked like, https://images.seattletimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/a...
For me, personally, there's something very funny about the CIA turning one of the country's most recognisable symbols, the dollar, into a suicide pact.