11.13.09

The real reason Hasan was dressed to kill

Posted in Uncategorized at 6:40 am by Andrea Elizabeth

Even before the shooting in Ft. Hood, I have been increasingly concerned with the plight of soldier combat fatigue in America’s War on Terror. The media attention I’ve listened to, mostly local, has turned this shooting into a renewed war-cry against Muslim terrorism. I do not doubt that there is plenty of incitement for Muslim extremists to give their all, but should this story be totally cast in that light? This article by Mark Benjamin tackles media ineptitude and bias.

As someone who’s been asked to talk about the shootings because of my work covering the poor psychological care given to returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, I’ve had a front-row seat on the way preconceived biases are distorting the debate.

First, the ongoing factual unraveling of the narrative. As the New York Times reported this Thursday, initial information seized on by talk shows that Sgt. Kimberly Munley, a petite police officer, bravely brought down Hasan in a hail of gunfire in which she was also wounded was, well, also not true. Munley, it seems, just got shot. Senior Sgt. Mark Todd actually shot Hasan to the ground and cuffed him after Munley had already been wounded.

He talks about other things that have been reported about the tragedy that are dubious, like that it came about because of political correctness in the military, and then settles on the “real reason” he thinks it happened,

Hasan was a military psychiatrist toiling in an overburdened, desperate Army healthcare system that will hold onto any warm body with a medical degree. Remember the Walter Reed scandal? The horrific treatment of traumatic brain injury and PTSD that has gone on for years? Army medicine has been dropping the ball on these issues for a long time. Given that history, it’s not hugely surprising they’d miss warning signs with Hasan and just let him go on being a doctor.

Army medical officials, at least to my knowledge, haven’t been asked even the most basic questions. Why, for example, was Hasan allowed to continue counseling troops suffering stress from combat in Iraq and Afghanistan after, for example, delivering a PowerPoint presentation in June 2007 at Walter Reed warning of “adverse events” if Muslims were forced to kill other Muslims in battle. It’s hard to imagine Hasan being particularly empathetic with his patients. Imagine coming back from Iraq with mental problems from combat, and this is the psychiatrist who is supposed to help you heal? So far, the only reaction from Army medical officials to these issues seems to have been the decision to move him to the war front in Afghanistan, so he could be even closer to the troops when they suffer adverse mental reactions. That’s odd.

As for Hasan getting promoted to major, the Washington Post Thursday suggested a more likely scenario than political correctness. They need more bodies. The Army is short 2,000 majors and the dearth is particularly acute in Army medicine. As the Post put it, “virtually all Army captains are being promoted to major.”

The passionate determination to hang the “terrorist” label on Hasan, or rail against “political correctness” in the military, are just more symptoms of media stars more excited about hot-headed debate than covering the real story. And the real story may be sadly familiar: It looks like Army medicine blew it, once again.

Lord have mercy.

3 Comments »

  1. debd said,

    interesting.

    You may enjoy some of the reporting and talk going on at NPR. I am often impressed with Michel Martin at Tell Me More. Here’s one on this topic specifically:

    http://www.npr.org/templates/player/mediaPlayer.html?action=1&t=3&islist=true&id=46&d=11-12-2009

  2. The Army should have questioned Hasan six months ago, when it learned that he had posted terrorist-type suicide bombings on the Internet. To have questioned him at that time, may have prevented Hasan’s killing of more than a dozen innocent soldiers.

  3. Deb,

    I think I heard the tail end of that interview this week. I agree with the above article that it was less about eggshell, tightrope walking political correctness, but about a real lack of upper level professionals in the army to handle the overwhelming psychological needs of our soldiers, and thus a willingness to look the other way when one of the too few disqualifies himself.

    I see two problems with any approach to handle these needs that are perpetuating themselves under the existing conditions. One, there is no second-guessing in the army that these psychological problems associated with combat are too devastating to justify our current strategies. There are countless walking wounded out there with internal wounds. Why is this less important than suicide bombings in this country? They win either way.

    Second, I’m not sure that even with more professionals in the army with better methods that these wounds can be healed. Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome affects people and their families their whole lives.

    I don’t know enough about real threats out there, but this shows that it isn’t just about Muslim extremest plotters in Iraq and Afghanistan, but about the overwhelming need for psychological help for the soldiers as well as respecting Muslim fundamentalists worldwide enough to take them at their word. Religious and psychological sensibilities are too “invisible” to be seriously taken into account in this materialistic, results-oriented world.


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