| Thursday, November 10, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the Washington  Post reports remains of the fallen were dumped by the Air Force into a landfill,  the Air Force Chief of Staff appears today at a Senate committee hearing but  only two senators felt the need to bring the issue of the landfill with remains  of the fallen up, arrests continue in Iraq, and more.   Today Jon Swaine (Telegraph of London)  reports , "US Air Force officials admitted that from 2003 to 2008, body parts  sent from war zones to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware were burned before being  handed to a private contractor for disposal in Virginia. Family members of the  dead troops were not aware of the practice, which emerged amid anger over  earlier disclosures that remains were also lost and mishandled by mortuary  officials at the base." Craig Whitlock and Greg Jaffe (Washington  Post) broke  the story: "Air Force officials acknowledged the practice  Wednesday in response to inquiries from The Washington Post. [. . .] Asked if it  was appropriate or dignified to incinerate troops' body parts and dispose of  them in a landfill, [Lt Gen Darrell G.] Jones declined to answer directly."   Julian E. Barnes (Wall Street  Journal) adds , "The revelation that a landfill was used for the remains  came a day after the Air Force released the results of an extensive  investigation into complaints that body parts were lost in 2009 in at least two  cases at the mortuary at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, which handles the  bodies of all service members killed in action oversees. The use of a landfill  for some of the partial remains was not connected to the cases of missing body  parts."   The issue was raised today in a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing  into whether or not the Chief of the National Guard should be a Joint-Chief of  Staff.  Appearing before the Committee was the Defense Dept's General Counsel  Jeh Johnson, Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen Martin Dempsey, Vice Chair  of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm James Winnefeld Jr., the Army Chief of Staff  Gen Ray Odierno, Chief of Naval Operations Adm Jonathan W. Greenert, Commandant  of the Marine Corps Gen Jame Amos, Chief of Staff of the Air Force Gen Norton  Schwartz and the National Guard Bureau Chief Gen Craig McKinley.  Senator Carl  Levin is the Chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee.    In his opening remarks, Chair Levin noted, "I believe that this hearing is  a first -- the first time that we have had every member of the Joint Chiefs of  Staff at a single hearing.  Each of them has appeared before us individually and  in different combinations, but never all together."  The plan was to cover the  hearing in tomorrow's snapshot since tomorrow is Veterans Day.  We're going to  stick to that with the exception of the issue of remains of the fallen being  dumped into landfills.  A number of senators weren't present for this full  Committee hearing.     Senator Kelly Ayotte: General Schwartz, on a different topic and I  just feel the need to ask -- ask about this.  Uhm, I'm deeply troubled by the  reports about what happened at the mortuary at the Dover Air Force Base. And I'm  sure you would agree with me this is outrageous that remains of our soldiers  would be put in a landfill and not treated with the appropriate dignity and  honor which they deserve. Can you tell me, uh, where we are with this? And how  we're going to ensure that this never happens again?  And, most importantly,  that those who have participated in this outrage are going to be held  accountable?     Gen Norton Schwartz: Senator Ayotte, first of all, let me clarify  the allegation about putting remains in a landfill.  These were portions, prior  to 2008, which were sent away from the Dover mortuary to a funeral home for  cremation -- which is an authorized method of dealing with remains, particularly  those that are separated from the larger portions of remains returned to the  family.  After that, the results of the cremation came back to the mortuary were  sent to a  medical support company for incineration.  So you had cremation, then  incineration and it was at that point that this medical support organizations  placed the residuals from that effort to a landfill.  In 19 -- In 2008, the Air  Force came to the conclusion that that was not the best way to deal with those  remains and so it is now done in a traditional fashion of burial at sea.  It has  been that way since 2008. It will continue to be that way in the future and let  me just conclude by saying the Secretary of the Air Force, Mike Donley  [Secretary of the US Air Force] and I take personal responsibility for this. Our  obligation is to treat our fallen with reverence and dignity and respect and to  provide the best possible support and care for their families. That is our  mission. The people who did not fulfill our expectations were disciplined and  there's no doubt what our expectations are today.   Senator Kelly Ayotte: Well I -- General Schwartz, I appreciate your  updating on that and, uh, when I think about the fact that we have Veterans Day  tomorrow, this is so important, obviously, that we treat the remains of our  fallen with dignity and respect and I know that you share that concern as well.   And please know that members of this Committee will be there to support you in  any way to make sure that the families know that we certainly won't allow this  to happen again.     Let's examine Schwartz' statement.    Senator Ayotte, first of all, let me clarify the allegation about  putting remains in a landfill. These were portions, prior to  2008, which were sent away from the Dover mortuary to a funeral home for  cremation -- which is an authorized method of dealing with remains, particularly  those that are separated from the larger portions of remains returned to the  family.  After that, the results of the cremation came back to the mortuary were  sent to a  medical support company for incineration.  So you had cremation, then  incineration and it was at that point that this medical support organizations  placed the residuals from that effort to a landfill.     So remains were dumped in a landfill.  You didn't clarify a damn thing, you  did try to pretty up what happened and make it seem formal and dignified.   Dumping ashes of the fallen into a landfill will never pass for "formal,"  "dignified" or "proper" unless that is in fact what the service member specifies  for their remains in writing.      In 19 -- In 2008, the Air Force came to the conclusion that that  was not the best way to deal with those remains and so it is now done in a  traditional fashion of burial at sea.  It has been that way since 2008.     What's the deal with 2008?  In the next section, he'll note himself and  Michael Donley and 2008 again.  What's the deal?      It will continue to be that way in the future and let me just  conclude by saying the Secretary of the Air Force, Mike Donley and I take  personal responsibility for this. Our obligation is to treat our fallen with  reverence and dignity and respect and to provide the best possible support and  care for their families. That is our mission. The people who did not fulfill our  expectations were disciplined and there's no doubt what our expectations are  today.     But does it?   No, it doesn't.  He may have come on board after the policy was changed but  he was in charge when whistleblowers who stepped forward on the loss and damage  to remains took place.  Tuesday David Martin (CBS Evening News -- link has  text and video) reported  that three whistle blowers (Mary Ellen Spera, Bill  Zwicharowski and James Parsons) had been subject to retaliation for coming  forwarded with Zwicharowski being put on administrative leave and James Parsons  being fired.  Martin notes that they have their jobs today because "a federal  office created to protect whistle blowers stepped in."  That was under Schwartz  watch.  He takes responsibility?    Tom Bowman (NPR's Morning Edition -- link  has text and audio) reported yesterday on Schwartz Tuesday remarks to the  press including that the families who were given fallen remains -- partial  remains -- due to body parts being 'misplaced,' would have been notified but  that, due to the issue of the whistleblowers, they were unable to tell families  per the Office of Special Counsel.  From Bowman's report:   CAROLYN LERNER: That's patently false.   BOWMAN: Carolyn Lerner is the special counsel. She says her office  urged Air Force lawyers back in March to talk with the families, and they did so  again recently.   LERNER: We asked them again, why hadn't you notified them? Their  response was that these families, some of them had blogs; they couldn't be  trusted - that they might go to the media.   BOWMAN: The special counsel's report, which is now with the White  House and Capitol Hill, says the Air Force is still unwilling to acknowledge  culpability.    You didn't notify the families?  And you lied about why you didn't?  Or, to  be kind, you didn't actually know why you didn't? And you're claiming you take  responsibility?  Seems like you need to be out the door right now to demonstrate  that there is accountability. I'm thinking back on US House Rep Phil Roe who is  a doctor and a hearing about the Miami VA Medical Center (the October 12th House Veterans Affairs Committee  hearing covered in the October 20th snapshot ) and it's failure to contact  service members potentially exposed to diseases while receiving care due to the  medical center's lack of proper care of medical instruments.  Dr. Roe was  appalled to find out that calls weren't made.  He talked about how he made  mistakes in his practice and when he did he picked up the phone himself as the  director of the Miami VA Medical Center should have done.  Roe has spoken of  this in other hearings as well.  If Schwartz had appeared before the House  Veterans Affairs Committee, it would be very likely that, based on past  Committee record, US House Rep Phil Roe would have raised that issue and pursued it.   Today one senator did bother to raise it.  In doing so, she became on the  second senator in the hearing to note the disrespect for the remains of the  fallen.  Yes, both times it was women who had to do the heavy lifting in the  hearing.     Senator Claire McCaskill: I want to specifically, for a minute,  General Schwartz, go to the situation at Dover and I don't want to dwell on how  hard this has to be for you and the leadership at the Air Force. No one needs to  convince me that you want to get this right at Dover. I'll tell you what I do  want to bring to your attention and I've did so with a letter today and that is  with the finding of the Office of Special Counsel.  And so people understand  what the Office of Special Counsel is. It's an investigatory and prosecution  oriented agency whose primary responsibility under our law is to be independent  of all of the agencies and protect whistle blowers. And what I am concerned  about is their investigation into what the Air Force did in response to the  whistle blowers. And specifically the fact that the IG of the Air Force, they  failed to admit wrong doing in their report. And while I understand people have  been moved around as a result of the problems that have occured because of  mishandling of the sacred remains of the fallen, I'm not sure that they have  been held as accountable as what we saw happen at Arlington in connection with  that heart breaking incompetence.  And what I want to make sure is that there is  an independent investigation as to whether or not the IG shaded it a little bit  [Chair Carl Levin began nodding his head in vigrous agreement with what  McCaskill was saying] because everyone was feeling a little bit protective of  the institution for all the right reasons. The vast majority of the people who  serve at Dover and who do this work, I'm sure, do it with a heavy heart but with  a passion for getting it right. But when we have a circumstance like this arise,  I want to make sure the Inspector Generals are not so busy looking after the  institution that they fail to point out wrong doing -- which was not ever  acknowledged -- and that there is accountability for the people involved.  And  so, I want you to address the Special Counsel's report as it relates to the Air  Force investigation.   Gen Norton Schwartz:  Senator McCaskill, there was -- There were --  Clearly were unacceptable mistakes made.  Whether they constitute wrong doing is  another matter entirely. And when you look at a situation like this, you look at  the facts of a case, as an attorney might say.  You look at the context in which  the event or the mistakes occurred.  And you also consider the demands that are  -- are placed on individuals and-and organizations.  With respect to  accountability, we also had an obligation to ensure that the statutory  requirements for Due Process were followed. We did that precisely.  I can only  speak for the case of the uniformed officer. But the uniformed officer received  a letter of reprimand.  We established an unfavorable information file. We  removed him from the command list and his anticipated job as a group commander  at Shaw Air Force Base was red-lined. This is not a trivial sanction.     Senator Claire McCaskill:  Well I - I understand that's not a  trivial sanction but I-I-I'm worried that there was a conclusion that there was  not an obligation to notify the families in these instances and obviously this  deals with more than uniform personnel and obviously the Secretary of the Air  Force is also copied on the letter that I sent today calling for this  independent investigation. What happened at Arlington, nobody was intentionally  mismarking graves.  They were mistakes too. And I just want to make sure that we  have really clear eyes while we have full hearts about the right aggressive need  for investigations by Inspector Generals in circumstances like this. And thank  you very much and thank all of you for being here today.      McCaskill's call for an independent investigation has been picked up by the  head of the Department and  Charles Hoskinson (POLITICO) explains  US  Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta has stated, "None of us will be satisfied  until we have proven to the families of our fallen heroes that we have taken  every step necessary to protect the honor and dignity [of the fallens' remains].  This department has to be fully accountable in what we intend to deliver on this  matter."   Disclosure: I know and like Leon Panetta.  How he handles this will reflect  on his tenure as Secretary of Defense and should.  And whether or not the sexual  assault rate within the ranks drops is also a part of how his tenure should be  graded.  But Leon's only been in this position since the summer.  Is anyone  going to go back and 'regrade' Robert Gates who was Defense Secretary during  this?  No.  Of course not, they didn't grade him the first time, they just  praised him and -- judging by the off-the-record photo-op we covered here in  real time -- they praised him for all the interviews and access he gave them.   The military sexual assualt rate did not decline despite his telling Congress  over and over that he was taking the issue seriously and addressing it.  The  military suicide rate did not show a significant drop.  Somehow on his Never  Ending Farewell Tour, Gates managed to pick up non-stop press about what a  'great' job he'd done with no one ever stopping to actually grade him on what  his job was.  I like Leon, but when he's done serving as the Defense Secretary,  the press doesn't need to gush.  They need to grade.  If he's done a great job,  praise him.  That's fine.  But if he hasn't accomplished anything on the suicide  rate or the sexual assault rate, then he hasn't done his job.  Gates granting  the press access didn't stop one military suicide or one military sexual  assault.    Let's stay with the issue of military suicide because Diane Rehm explored  it and veteran suicide on the first hour of The Diane Rehm Show (NPR -- link has  audio and transcript options -- transcript is provided by the program for  free, accessible to all who can surf the web and not just those who can benefit  from streaming audio).  Her guests were Give An Hour's Barbara van Dahlen,  RAND's Rajeev Ramchand, VA's Jan Kemp and DC's Dept of Mental Health's Elspeth  Cameron Ritchie.  Excerpt.   Diane Rehm: Elspeth Ritchie, talk about the risk factors in the  military and for veterans. Are they different from the risk factors in the  general population?    Elspeth Ritchie: Yes, absolutely. As you know, Diane, I retired  from the Army last year and -- after spending 28 years in the Army and looked  very closely at risk factors for especially Army soldiers. And we published a  paper recently on the prevalence and risk factors associated with Army suicides.  And, basically, Army suicides are very different from the suicides in the  civilian population. In the civilian population, it is usually people with  psychiatric disease who are prone to kill themselves. In the Army, the risk  factors are pretty simple: the breakup of a relationship, and they are also  getting in trouble at work and having a legal problem. And in the Army, if you  have a legal problem, you have an occupational problem. And what we've seen over  time is that these precipitants -- often very humiliating events are what  precipitate a suicide. The other thing that's very important to talk about, and  people don't in general, is that about 70 percent of Army suicides are committed  by gun, by either the personal weapon back here or the service weapon in  theater. And I believe that we don't do nearly enough discussion about how  dangerous it is to have the -- what I call the gun in the nightstand, the easily  available gun there at a time when you might be having a fight with your wife or  just found out that you're going to get in trouble.    Diane Rehm: Now, as I  understand it, a third of all suicides in the military are among those who have  yet to deploy. What are the factors at work there?    Elspeth Ritchie: What I  believe is the most important factor there is not the individual deployment  history, but the unit deployment history. So our bases with the highest, what we  call up tempo, operations tempo are also those with essentially the highest  suicide rate. So where we've had a high suicide rate for a number of years: Fort  Carson, Fort Stewart, Fort -- not Fort Bragg so much anymore, Fort Campbell,  Fort Riley. Those are all bases, and others, where the troops are constantly  coming and going. And what the leaders told me, when we went down to investigate  suicides, is they don't know their troops anymore 'cause they're just so busy.  They get back from theater, and, shortly after that, they're going to different  deployments or different schools or different units. And so the new kid who  comes in, that in the old days were being integrated with picnics and barbeques  and unit runs, now isn't integrated in the same way 'cause it's just going so  quickly.    The Veterans Crisis Hotline is  1-800-273-8255. That is the same number that active duty service members will be  referred to.  And we'll also note one of Diane's callers from today's program,  Deb:   Yes, Diane. I'm calling  because I feel like the suicide problem in the military extends beyond the  soldiers, to the families of the soldiers, specifically in our family. My  husband's son was killed in Afghanistan a number of years ago. And this morning,  we just came back from a counseling session through the VA. And I can't tell you  how many times I have had concerns for my husband's safety. And I think that the  problem right now is there's a ripple in a pond. And when a soldier is either  wounded or killed, it not only affects the soldier but all of those in his  circle who love him.      Moving to Iraq, Azzaman reports  Joe Biden, US Vice  president, is expected to discuss a number of issues with Nouri al-Maliki, prime  minister and thug of the occupation, when he visits Iraq and notes he met over  the weekend in DC with the KRG's Prime Minister Barham Salih. Dar Addustour  is an Iraqi paper in  Arabic. On their home page they have a poll currently asking whether Iraq should  grant US troops immunity after December 31, 2011. The results? 55% (746 votes)  have said yes. It's not a scientific poll, it's not in any way limited to  Iraqis. But it is surprising that one of Iraq's leading papers would have a poll  on that topic and get that sort of result. Yes, a small tiny group -- even one  outside Iraq -- could skew the poll. But so could a group on the other side and  the percentages really aren't changing this week -- the poll's been up all week  and, in fact, went up last week. In other news, Michelle Tan (Army Times) reports :Soldiers from 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry  Division have been "remissioned" and will move from Iraq to Kuwait for the  remainder of their 12-month tour, the brigade commander announced  Wednesday. The announcement from Col. Scott Efflandt was posted on the unit's  Facebook page.
 "Troops and families of the 1st Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division  are being notified that [the unit] will likely be repositioned within the  [Central Command] area of responsibility for the remainder of their 12-month  deployment," according to Efflandt's note. "This force will function as a  reserve in the region to provide maximum flexibility for response to  contingencies. It also demonstrates our lasting commitment to regional stability  and security, and the robust security relationships we maintain with our  regional partners."
 
 Tan explains that the White House is  working to secure a deal to use Kuwait as a staging platform for several  thousand US troops. Meanwhile, UPI notes  the CIA's not leaving  Iraq, "The Central Intelligence Agency, which until recently operated outside  the military establishment, is expected to stay on in various guises within the  17,000 U.S. personnel who will remain under State Department jurisdiction." Walter Pincus (Washington Post) addressed   yesterday how the US government will be using security contractors in Iraq: "The  latest example comes from the Army, which said in a recent notice that it has  increased the number of contracted security teams hired to escort convoys of  food and fuel coming in from Kuwait." And this use of contractors is happening  while the State Dept refuses to present Congress or the SIGIR with any hard  numbers or other facts leaving the American tax payer at risk of more tax  dollars wasted on corruption and graft. And at a time when the Commission on  Wartime Contracting -- whose salaries were paid for by US tax payers -- had  declared it's not sharing its work. From the October 4th  snapshot :Over the weekend,  Nathan Hodge (Wall St. Journal)  reported on the Commission on Wartime  Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan, "The internal records of a congressionally  mandated panel that reported staggering estimates of wasteful U.S. wartime  spending will remain sealed to the public until 2031, officials confirmed, as  the panel closed its doors on Friday." They've finished their study and they've  closed their books. And, if you were at the hearing today, you learned just how  wrong that is as Co-Chair Shays waived around the Commission's published  findings and declared, "Our problem with Mr. Tieffer was that this book would  have been three times as thick if we'd let him put in everything he wanted to  put in so we limited him to 40 cases. But it could have been many  more."Great, so US tax payer money  went down the drain again. The Commission unearthed tons of things but decided  just to publish 40 of them. Because they didn't want their book to be too thick.  Right. We covered the Commission's  public hearings. It was always a waste of time which describe the Commission  itself and those members of Congress that pushed for it. The only value the  Commission could have had was in making public its records now while the wars  continue in the hopes that contract waste and abuse could be caught and some  money saved. However, that's not going to happen with the Commisson's records  being sealed and the published report only focusing on a small number of cases  of fraud and abuse. As noted before, the Commission's purpose was never to find  fraud and abuse. The purpose was to distract outraged Americans from what was  being done with their money. The Commission had no powers. No charges have been  filed over fraud. The Commission has wrapped up their business.  Erik Slavin (Stars and Stripes) reports   today:Two U.S. senators slammed a  request by the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan to seal  its records for 20 years and called on higher officials to publicly release  them, according to a statement released Thursday.Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., and Sen. Claire McCaskill,  D-Mo., co-signed a Nov. 7 letter to Archivist of the United States David S.  Ferriero calling on him to overrule the commission's request, which would  effectively prevent the public from learning the details of an investigation  into a massive misuse of taxpayer dollars.AP adds , "Webb and McCaskill  sponsored the legislation that created the commission." And it should be noted  that the intent was not for the commission to be a private study group fiercely  guarding their findings.  The intent was for it to be open and for it to provide  resources allowing for lessons to be learned. Writing for Jordan's As-Sabeel, the  Washington Institute's Michael Knights estimates  the US State Dept will be  using approximately 14,000 contractors and that as many as 5,000 of those will  be armed security contractors.  So this will be a large number and, the  weaponization of diplomacy being a new thing, the State Dept has no training in  this area.  Knights also notes that the Defense Dept will provide 157 personnel  (in addition to the 763 contractors) to the Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq  and that in Defense Dept personnel (military or civilian) would be covered with  immunity via the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations -- and that this is  agreed to by Nouri al-Maliki who was pushing for this understanding when there  was talk of 200 to 300 US forces staying in Iraq beyond 2011. And on why an  immunity deal wasn't reachable (so far at least), Omar (Iraq The Model) offered this  argument at  the start of last month:   The cause of this deadlock is rooted in the disagreements on  power, land and money. All the Iraqi political leaders (except the Sadrists) are  willing to vote in favor of immunity, but they will not give this to PM Maliki  for free. Specifically, Iraqiya wants the Policies Council and Defense Ministry,  while the Kurdistani Alliance wants a friendly oil and gas law [there is  coordination on this issue with Iraqiya to reach a mutually accepted draft] and,  eventually, some progress on disputed territories. If the Kurds and Iraqiya get  these some of these demands, they will support Maliki's request for parliament  to give immunity to US troops.
      Aswat al-Iraq reports that Dr. Hom  al-Khishaly, Iraqi Army Doctor, is being held in Diyala Province as a  'terrorism' suspect. Basaer News notes  that Nouri's  security forces have arrested over 1,000 Iraqi citizens in the last month. The  Association of Muslim Scholars notes that many were arbitrary with the most  arrests taking place in Diyala Province (277) and Nineveh having the second  highest arrest rate (163).   |