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Psychiatric Times.
CONFERENCE NOTES 

Symposium on Psychology and National Security at the Italian Embassy

By Enrico Suardi, MD, Erminia Scarcella, MD, and Ranieri Guerra, MD | February 20, 2013
Dr Suardi is the President of the Washington Psychiatric Society, DC Chapter. Dr Scarcella is the founding chair of the Washington Psychiatric Society Embassy Preparedness Program and the Designated Physician of the Italian Embassy in Washington, DC. Dr Guerra is the Scientific Attaché of the Italian Embassy.

Terrorists, National SecurityThe Embassy of Italy in Washington, DC recently hosted the first of 2 workshops on Leaders and Terrorists: Psychological Perspectives on National Security.

The well-attended symposium drew upon the growing interest in exploring and utilizing all the elements of national power, including so-called “soft power”—the ability to attract and persuade others in order to influence their behavior and obtain desired outcomes. A high-level panel highlighted the role of psychological insights in promoting national security and peace, and how understanding human behavior is key to preventing and mitigating the consequences of the worst human behavior.

In his opening remarks, the Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission, Minister Luca Franchetti-Pardo, emphasized the close collaboration of Italy and the US in the complex scenarios of global and domestic security.

The impact of personal and group dynamics in the decision-making process of terror groups and the U.S. Government in the era of the “War on Terror” was the subject of the keynote speech given by the Hon. Richard Danzig, PhD, JD, Secretary of the Navy under President Clinton, presently Chairman of the Center for a New American Security, a member of the Department of Defense Policy Board and of President Obama’s Intelligence Advisory Board.

Psychological profiles of Saddam Hussein, Bashar al-Asad, and the North Korean Kim dynasty rulers were provided by Jerrold Post, MD, Professor of Psychiatry and International Relations at George Washington University, previously the founding director of the CIA Center for the Analysis of Personality and Political Behavior, in his talk on Tailored Deterrence: The Requirement for Nuanced Leader Profiles in the Post Cold-War Era.

Ronald Schouten JD, MD, discussed The Role of Behavioral Science in Understanding Threats to National Security, offering a sobering review of the strengths and limitations of the field. He is the Director of the Law and Psychiatry Service at Massachusetts General Hospital and Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, a member of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence Biological Sciences Expert Group.

In Sirens, Scylla and Charybdis: Navigating National Security through the Straits of Critical Incident Analysis, Gregory Saathoff, MD, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Public Health at the University of Virginia Medical School, Executive Director of the Critical Incident Analysis Group, a consultant to the FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit, underscored the importance of team work and interagency coordination.

Reporting on the outcomes of programs aimed at terrorist reeducation and rehabilitation Arie Kruglanski, PhD, presented The Quest for Significance as the Underlying Motivation for Terrorism. Dr Kruglanski is Distinguished Professor of Psychology and co-principal investigator at the National Center for the Study of Terrorism and the Response to Terrorism at the University of Maryland.

In The Grey Zone: Aiding and Abetting Terrorism. A Comparative Analysis on Behaviours and Legislations, The Hon. Judge Giannicola Sinisi, Attaché for Legal Affairs at the Embassy of Italy and a former Member of the Italian Parliament, utilized his philosophical and legal knowledge to address the fundamental issue of balancing liberty and security.

In conclusion, Mr Guido Olimpio, author and journalist, senior international correspondent from Washington, DC, for the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, shared observations and perspectives based on over 30 years of experience in the field around the world.

The authors of this article organized the symposium.

 

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