Politics | Joint Chiefs of Staff White House 'Duped' General Into Torture: Book Myers 'hoodwinked' into permitting harsh techniques By Rob Quinn Posted Apr 19, 2008 7:54 AM CDT Copied Former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, left, and former Joint Chiefs Chairman Richard Myers, right, talk on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 1, 2007. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) The Bush administration "hoodwinked" one of the country's top military men in order to establish harsh interrogation techniques on Guantanamo Bay prisoners, according to revelations in a new book reported in the Guardian. Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Richard Myers was misled by White House aides into abandoning the military's long-standing ban on inhumane treatment of prisoners, according to London law professor Phillipe Sands in his book Torture Team. The professor discovered that the general thought techniques like hooding and sensory deprivation had come from the military's own field manual—but they actually breached the military's rules, and some had been thought up by young officers inspired by the TV series 24. "As we worked through the list of techniques, Myers became increasingly hesitant and troubled," the professor writes. Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was "able to run rings around him." Read These Next New batch of Epstein files contains more eyebrow-raising claims. Why Walmart is pushing velvet chairs and pastel appliances. Joshua trees' early blooms are a big problem. Quitting Ozempic can be a risky proposition. Report an error