Oct 8, Editorial Column About VCS-VUFT Lawsuit Against VA: The New Suspect Class – Tragically, Our Veterans

Spring, 2008 Edition – One of the most obscure discrimination issues existing today relates to our country’s treatment of its veterans, a group that hardly qualifies under the legal definition of a “suspect class” as currently conceived. Nevertheless, it remains a fact that veterans are the most prominent remaining class of persons who suffer from invidious forms of institutionalized discrimination.

It is veterans who are the subject of a judicially crafted exception to government tort liability under the Federal Torts Claims Act, as a result of the Supreme Court’s Cold War – era decision in Feres v. United States, 340 U.S. 135 (1953), where the Supreme Court in effect legislated an exception to the waiver of sovereign immunity contained in that act. Our veterans (1) cannot pay a lawyer any sum whatsoever for legal assistance on any types of claims filed with the agency of original jurisdiction, the regional offices (ROs) of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA); (2) have to face VA adjudicators who act as both the opposition and the trier of fact; (3) cannot subpoena VA doctors (or any other VA employees) to testify, e.g., to obtain testimony to support a diagnosis or challenge a misdiagnosis; or (4) cannot obtain any redress for denials of medical care or treatment, for there is no procedure available.

Even with respect to judicial review, each veteran, like Sisyphus, must climb a mountain to obtain relief even as to patently illegal policies or procedures of the VA, as there is no class action procedure, no ability to obtain injunctive relief, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (Veterans Court) lacks the ability to enforce any of its decisions at the RO level, as its former Chief Judge Frank Nebeker repeatedly decried in his “state of the court” speeches.

What We Learned from VCS

Veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan have served upon a stage where the effects of these legal niceties are played out every day, as chronicled in the recent trial of Veterans for Common Sense [and Veterans United for Truth] v. Peake, Case No. 07-03758 (N.D. Cal.). The court heard systemic evidence concerning the VA’s programs for treating veterans, disputes arising out of medical care or treatment (administered by the Veterans Health Administration), and the adjudication system that processes claims for service-connected death and disability compensation (administered by the Veterans Benefits Administration).

   To learn more about the lawsuit, please go to: www.veteransPTSDclassaction.org

With respect to both the medical and adjudication systems, the plaintiffs in VCS emphasized the VA’s handling of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injuries (TBI), the signature injuries sustained in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The picture that emerged was not a pretty one, as an internal VA study, never previously released, found that veterans under VA care were attempting suicides at a rate of about 1,000 per month and succeeding an average of eighteen times every day. Thus the total number of veteran suicides in a single year eclipsed the number of combat deaths in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars combined. Our nation’s newspapers and local television news reports are filled with poignant and tragic stories of the families of veterans torn apart by suicide and other events that they cannot control and often cannot really comprehend.

Other highlights from VCS included:

    * A Washington state VA emergency room doctor testified to the unfolding “tsunami of medical need” among veterans returning from recent conflicts. Studies by the VA and other institutions point to highly elevated suicide rates among veterans, as much as 7.5 times the national average.

    * A RAND Corporation study released in 2008 estimates that 300,000 U.S. soldiers who served in Iraq or Afghanistan suffer from PTSD or major depression, and nearly 320,000 report experiencing a TBI. “Roughly half of those who need treatment for these conditions seek it, but only slightly more than half who receive treatment get minimally adequate care,” RAND reported. And the availability of that inadequate care for PTSD is dwindling. Despite the exponential increase in veterans diagnosed with it, a March 2008 report by the VA confirms that the average number of visits per veteran in PTSD mental health programs has actually rapidly decreased.

    * Although the VA has a “sacred mission” to provide medical care for veterans – free for life in the case of those with PTSD or suicidal tendencies – there were 3,800 unfilled mental health positions at the VA as of October 31, 2007, despite the fact that the VA is currently operating under budget, according to one official at trial. Approximately 2,400 nursing and 1,400 doctor positions remain unfilled.

    * Delay times preceding care is a critical problem. In 2006 the VA’s former deputy undersecretary for Health and Health Policy Coordination said, “In some communities, VA clinics do not provide mental health or substance abuse care or waiting lists render that care virtually inaccessible.” As of April 2008, more than 85,000 U.S. veterans are waiting over thirty days for an appointment.

    * Evidence produced at trial also showed that VA timeline statistics were “fudged,” and that the true waiting times that veterans encounter for medical care or disability claim decisions are even longer than those the VA reports.

Much of the blame for the suicide epidemic lies with the VA, which had, somewhat belatedly in 2004, developed the Mental Health Care Strategic Plan (MHC Plan), to tackle the mental health care problems it expected to occur amongst the global war on terror veterans. Tragically, when James Nicholson replaced Anthony Principi as the Secretary for Veterans Affairs, the chief author and proponent of the MHC Plan, Dr. Francis Murphy, was fired, and critical elements of the MHC Plan were either scrapped or put on the back burner. Even today, most of the key elements of the MHC Plan are still only at the pilot stage. The outcome of the MHC Plan reflected a recurrent theme throughout the trial: the divergence between appearance and reality. Programs look good on paper but often are never implemented or enforced.

Major Problems in Handling Veterans Claims

At the same time, the VA’s adjudication system for handling death and disability compensation claims is being choked by a huge influx of claims by veterans and their survivors, leading to unprecedented delays throughout the system. Currently, more than 600,000 veterans await decisions from VAROs, a number that is expected to increase to close to one million by 2008, as a recent study by Linda Bilmes of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University predicted under the surge scenario.

The situation at the Board of Veterans Appeals (BVA), the body within the VA that handles internal appeals from RO decisions, is even more dire, as the backlog of initial appeals of denied claims has swelled to over 40,000, leading to delays averaging 1,419 days (3.89 years) for an appeal to be heard. The next level of appeal is to the Veterans Court, where Chief Judge William M. Greene, according to the paper record, faces a backlog of over 6,000 appeals – and veterans face an additional wait of almost four years.

Further delays are caused by the need to remand many claims, some of them multiple times, because the VAROs frequently make mistakes in developing the record, creating a recycling problem and extending the average claim decision time to 1,957 days. When multiple remands and appeals to the Veterans Court or Federal Circuit are factored in, we are at the point where the complete claim cycle exceeds ten years for most claims and as long as twelve to fifteen years in more complicated claims, such as those involving PTSD and TBI.

The evidence shows that the VBA undersecretary made a policy decision to deemphasize the processing of appeals, and hence thousands of veterans die each year while they wait in line to have their appeals decided. In fact, there are currently no statutory or regulatory time limits imposed on the VA during any step of the adjudication process for benefits. However, the VA does impose time limits on veterans, and a veteran’s failure to meet certain time limits within the appellate process results in a jurisdictional dismissal of the veteran’s appeal.

One other startling revelation during VCS was that hearings “almost never” occur at the RO stage, despite the facts that veterans obtaining hearings had higher success rates, that it is more difficult to overturn an adverse decision than to obtain a favorable decision in the first instance, and that VA regulations guarantee claims a hearing “at any time on any issue.” Was the absence of hearings a product of lack of access to counsel or veterans’ frustrations with lengthy delays to obtain hearings (fifteen months or longer) or was it evidence of a more systematic and diabolical scheme to deprive veterans of their hearing rights? In an earlier case, National Association of Radiation Survivors v. Turnage, No. C-83-1861-MHP (N.D. Cal. 1983), discovery had disclosed a concerted effort to deprive veterans of the right to predecisional hearings that was based upon the VA’s claim of lack of resources.

At the same time, VA error rates are unprecedented. The BVA reverses RO decisions 21 percent of the time and remands another 41 percent of the cases; the cumulative error rate on VARO decisions is over 90 percent. By the VA’s own calculations, 44 percent of the reasons for remand by the BVA are “avoidable,” meaning that had the RO fulfilled its duties to the veteran in the first place, the case would not have needed to be appealed. Seventy-five percent of the remanded cases return to the BVA a second time, and 27 percent of those cases are remanded once again. This creates a system where veterans claims essentially “churn” in the VA system, in some cases, for decades.

Perhaps the most disturbing revelation was that of the military’s program to discharge thousands of soldiers exhibiting signs of PTSD and TBI, including combat soldiers and victims of sexual assault, as having preexisting personality disorders, a category of mental illness that develops in juveniles. The almost inevitable outcome is that the veterans are found ineligible for either medical care or disability compensation. The story of Jon Town, a combat veteran from Iraq injured by a rocket-propelled grenade, was compellingly told by Joshua Kors in a series of articles written earlier this year for The Nation. Just as tragically, these veterans’ DD-214 discharge forms show the personality disorder discharge, making it extremely difficult for them to obtain employment.

Who Is to Blame?

What has led our nation to this national predicament? Many of the veterans’ civil rights issues are vestigial ones associated with the history of veterans benefits dating back to the Civil War and these are now coupled with an entrenched bureaucracy that is very resistant to change. But more than ever it is now a cost that is dictating policy, a factor that a U.S. Department of Justice lawyer alluded to in arguing the VA’s motion to dismiss the VCS case when he rationalized the VA’s institutional shortcomings as inevitable in a system of “mass justice,” by which he seemed to mean the truncated form of justice appropriate for large numbers of what we might call the “little people” – those without the means to assert their rights or defend themselves.

Nor can we really place the blame at the foot of Congress, which has consistently given the VA the money it said it needed – or even more – to do the job. Yet if you probe further, you will find that the VA budgets submitted by the Bush administration in FY2005 and FY2006 produced huge deficits just as large numbers of our troops assigned to the global war on terror began to return home and become veterans. This, we later learned, was primarily due to the VA’s decision, apparently under pressure from the Bush administration, to use prewar assumptions regarding the number of veterans the VA would need to treat and the incidence of particular types of medical problems. These were coupled with assumptions about phantom cost savings, leading to deficits of over $1 billion, as found by the Government Accounting Office in a recent investigation.

Relatively early in its tenure, the Bush administration had highlighted its policy direction to reduce personnel costs and increase funding for armaments, as reflected in the candid interview of David Chu, undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness. Greg Jaffe, Balancing Act: As Benefits for Veterans Climb, Military Spending Feels Squeeze, WALL ST. J. Jan. 25, 2005. Just recently, President Bush vetoed the VA budget passed by Congress. To honor the words of Abraham Lincoln, whose words form the motto of the VA – “For him that shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan” – would require both leadership from the president and Congress – and further increases in the VA budget. This is the elephant in the room that crowds out the voices of our disabled veterans.

In the end, neither the repeating of platitudes, nor laying a wreath on Memorial Day, nor displaying a “Mission Accomplished” banner can constitute a true barometer of respect for the sacrifices made by our veterans in defense of our country. The only true measure of our devotion to those who have borne the battle is the degree to which we follow up with action to try to make whole their lives and those of their loved ones.

Gordon P. Erspamer is a senior counsel in the San Francisco office of Morrison & Foerster and focuses his practice on litigating complex civil actions in state and federal court. He was lead counsel for the plaintiffs in Veterans for Common Sense v. Peake.

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Pakistan Government Facing Bankruptcy

October 6, 2008 – Officially, the central bank holds $8.14 billion (£4.65 billion) of foreign currency, but if forward liabilities are included, the real reserves may be only $3 billion – enough to buy about 30 days of imports like oil and food.

Nine months ago, Pakistan had $16 bn in the coffers.

The government is engulfed by crises left behind by Pervez Musharraf, the military ruler who resigned the presidency in August. High oil prices have combined with endemic corruption and mismanagement to inflict huge damage on the economy.

Given the country’s standing as a frontline state in the US-led “war on terrorism”, the economic crisis has profound consequences. Pakistan already faces worsening security as the army clashes with militants in the lawless Tribal Areas on the north-west frontier with Afghanistan.

The economic crisis has already placed the future of the new government in doubt after the transition to a civilian rule. President Asif Ali Zardari has faced numerous but unproven allegations of corruption dating from the two governments led by his wife, Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated last December.

The Wall Street Journal said that Pakistan’s economic travails were “at least in part, a crisis of confidence in him”.

While Mr Musharraf’s prime minister, Shaukat Aziz, frequently likened Pakistan to a “Tiger economy”, the former government left an economy on the brink of ruin without any durable base.

The Pakistan rupee has lost more than 21 per cent of its value so far this year and inflation now runs at 25 per cent. The rise in world prices has driven up Pakistan’s food and oil bill by a third since 2007.

Efforts to defer payment for 100,000 barrels of oil supplied every day by Saudi Arabia have not yet yielded results, while the government has also failed to raise loans on favourable terms from “friendly countries”.

Mr Zardari told the Wall Street Journal that Pakistan needed a bail out worth $100 billion from the international community.

“If I can’t pay my own oil bill, how am I going to increase my police?” he asked. “The oil companies are asking me to pay $135 [per barrel] of oil and at the same time they want me to keep the world peaceful and Pakistan peaceful.”

The ratings agency Standard and Poor’s has given Pakistan’s sovereign debt a grade of CCC +, which stands only a few notches above the default level.

The agency gave warning that Pakistan may be unable to cover about $3 billion in upcoming debt payments.

Mr Zardari is expected to ask the international community for a rescue package at a meeting in Abu Dhabi next month.

This gathering will determine whether the West is willing to bail out Pakistan.

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‘My Daughter’s Dream Became a Nightmare’: The Murder of Military Women Continues

October 6, 2008 – “My daughter’s dream became a nightmare,” sadly said Gloria Barrios, seven months after her daughter, US Air Force Senior Airman Blanca Luna, was murdered on Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas.

On March 7, 2008, Senior Airman Luna, 27, was found dead in her room at the Sheppard Air Force Base Inn, an on-base lodging facility.  She had been stabbed in the back of the neck with a short knife.  Luna, an Air Force Reservist with four years of prior military service in the Marine Corps including a tour in Japan, was killed three days before she was to graduate from an Air Conditioning, Ventilation and Heating training course.

When she was notified of her daughter’s death, she was handed a letter from Major General K.C. McClain, Commander of the Air Force Personnel Center, which stated that her daughter “was found dead on 7 March 2008 at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas, as the result of an apparent homicide.” When her body was returned to her family for burial, Barrios and other family members saw bruises on Blanca’s face and wounds on her fingers as if she were defending herself. One of the investigators later told Mrs. Barrios that Blanca had been killed in an “assassin-like” manner. Friends say that she told them some in her unit “had given her problems.”

Seven months later, Luna’s mother made her first visit to the base where her daughter was killed to pry more information about her daughter’s death from the Air Force. Although the Air Force sent investigators to her home in Chicago several times to brief her on the case, she was concerned that the Air Force would not provide a copy of the autopsy report and other documents, seven months after Luna was killed. The Air Force says it cannot provide Mrs. Barrios with a copy of the autopsy as the investigation is “ongoing.” Mrs. Barrios plans to have an independent autopsy conducted.

She was accompanied by her sister and six persons from a support group in Chicago and by several concerned Texans from Dallas, Fort Worth and Denton.  The Chicago support group, composed of long time, experienced social justice activists in the Hispanic community, also included Juan Torres, whose son John, an Army soldier, was found dead under very suspicious circumstances in 2004 at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.  Because of his battle to get documents from the Army bureaucracy on the death of his son four years ago, Torres has been helping the Barrios family in their effort to gain information about the death of Luna. 

When Mrs. Barrios and friends arrived on the Air Base they were greeted by five Air Force officials.   Mrs. Barrios requested that her support group be allowed to join her in an Air Force conducted bus tour of the facilities where her daughter went to school and the lodging facility where she was found dead, but the request was denied. Mrs. Barrios then asked that her friend and translator Magda Castaneda and retired US Army Colonel Ann Wright be allowed to go on the bus and attend the meeting with the base commander and investigators. 

After consultation with the base public affairs officer, the deputy Wing Commander Colonel Norsworthy decreed that only Mrs. Barrios’ sister and Mr. Torres could accompany her.  Neither Mrs. Barrios, her sister or Mr. Torres is fluent in English.  Mrs. Barrios told the Air Force officers she did not feel comfortable with having translators provided by the Air Force and again asked that Mrs. Castaneda be allowed to translate for her as Mrs. Castaneda had done numerous times during Air Force briefings at her home.  She asked that retired US Army Colonel Ann Wright be allowed to go as she knew the military bureaucracy.

In front of the support group, the Air Force public affairs officer George Woodward advised Colonel Norsworthy  not to allow Mrs.Casteneda  and Colonel Wright to come on the base and attend the meetings as both were “outspoken in the media and their presence would jeopardize the integrity of the meeting with the family.” 

Mrs. Castaneda countered that during a previous meeting with the Air Force investigators in Chicago, she had been told by one investigator that she asked too many questions.  Could that be the reason that she unable to accompany Mrs. Barrios, she asked?  Mrs. Barrios also reminded the officers that after she was interviewed for an article about her daughter that was published in July in the Chicago Reader “Murder on the Base”  (http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/murderonthebase/), she was warned by an Air Force official not to speak to the media again.  

Mrs. Castaneda demanded that Woodward provide her a copy of the article on which he based his decision to recommend to the deputy base commander that she not be allowed on the base and translate for the family.  Several hours later Woodward gave Castaneda an article from Indy media in which she was quoted as the translator for Mrs. Barrios in which she had translated Barrios’ statement that “Luna a four year Marine veteran.”

While Colonel Wright (the author of this article) has written numerous articles concerning the rape and murder of women in the military, she reminded the officers that she holds a valid military ID card as a retired Colonel, that she had not violated any laws or military regulations by writing and speaking about issues of violence against women in the military and that most families of military members who have been killed are at a disadvantage in dealing with the military bureaucracy in finding answers to the questions they have about the deaths of their loved ones. She reminded the officials that the parents of NFL football player Pat Tillman, who after three Congressional hearings on the death of their son in Afghanistan in 2002, still don’t have the answers to the questions of who killed their son and why hasn’t the perpetrator of the crime been brought to justice.  Families of “ordinary” service members, and particularly families limited knowledge of the military and with limited financial means find themselves at the mercy of the military for information.

The base Catholic Chaplain and the Staff Judge Advocate, both colonels, were silent during the exchange.  One would have thought that perhaps a chaplain who watched as Mrs. Barrios, a single mother whose only daughter had been killed and whose English was minimal, broke down in tears and sat sobbing on the curb as the public affairs officer described her friends as “outspoken and a threat to the integrity of the meetings” would have been sensitive to a grieving mother’s need for a family friend who had translated in all the previous meetings with the Air Force investigators-but he was silent.  Likewise, the senior lawyer on the base who no doubt had handled many criminal cases, would have recognized that a distraught mother would need someone who could take notes and understand the nuances of the discussion in English during the very stressful discussions with the investigators-but he was silent.  Instead, the colonels bowed to the civilian public affairs officer’s advice that “outspoken” women were a threat to the “integrity of the meeting.”

Eventually, Mrs. Barrios, her sister Algeria and Juan Torres met with Brigadier General Mannon, the commander of the 82nd Training Wing and with three members of the Office of Special Investigations.  Mrs. Barrios said they were given no new information about the investigation and questioned again why her friends, who over the past seven months have been a part of the briefings from the Air Force, had been kept out of meetings where the Air Force officials knew they were not going to provide any new information.

Since 2003 there have been 34 homicides and 218 “self-inflicted” deaths (suicides) in the Air Force and in 2007-2008 alone, 5 homicides and 35 “self-inflicted” deaths according to the Public  Affairs office of the 82nd Training Wing at Sheppard Air Force base.

On the same day Mrs. Barrios went to Sheppard Air Force Base, October 3, 2008, the US Army announced that a US Army woman sergeant had been killed near Fort Bragg, North Carolina by a stab wound in the neck.  Sergeant Christina Smith, 29, was stabbed on September 30, 2008, allegedly by her US Army husband Sergeant Richard Smith who was accompanied by Private First Class Matthew Kvapil.

Smith was the fourth military woman murdered in North Carolina in the past 9 months.

On June 21, 2008, US Army Specialist Megan Touma, 23, was killed inside a Fayetteville, NC hotel, less than two weeks after she arrived at Fort Bragg from an assignment in Germany.  She was seven months pregnant. Sergeant Edgar Patino, a married male soldier assigned to Fort Bragg whom Touma knew from Germany and who reportedly was the father of the unborn child, has been arrested for her murder.

On July 10, 2008, Army 2nd Lt. Holley Wimunc, an Army nurse at Fort Bragg, was killed.  Her estranged husband, Marine Corporal John Wimunc of Camp Lejeune, NC has been arrested in her death and the burning of her body and Lance Corporal Kyle Alden was arrested for destroying evidence and providing a false alibi.

Marine Lance Cpl. Maria Lauterbach had been raped in May 2007 and protective orders had been issued against the alleged perpetrator, fellow Marine Cpl. Cesar Laurean. The burned body of Lauterbach and her unborn baby were found in a shallow grave in the backyard of Laurean’s home in January 2008.  Laurean fled to Mexico, where he was captured by Mexican authorities. He is currently awaiting extradition to the United States to stand trial. Lauterbach’s mother testified before Congress on July 31, 2008, that the Marine Corps ignored warning signs that Laurean was a danger to her daughter .
On Wednesday, October 8, at 11:30am, a vigil for the four military women and all victims of violence will be held at the Main Gate at Fort Bragg followed by a discussion on violence against women at the Quaker Peace Center in Fayetteville, NC and a wreath laying at Lafayette Memorial Park. The events are sponsored by the Coalition to End Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault in the Military, Veterans for Peace and the Quaker Peace Center. 

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30 Civilians Died in Afghan Raid, U.S. Inquirty Finds

October 7, 2008 – An investigation by the military has concluded that American airstrikes on Aug. 22 in a village in western Afghanistan killed far more civilians than American commanders there have acknowledged, according to two American military officials.

The military investigator’s report found that more than 30 civilians – not 5 to 7 as the military has long insisted – died in the airstrikes against a suspected Taliban compound in Azizabad.

The investigator, Brig. Gen. Michael W. Callan of the Air Force, concluded that many more civilians, including women and children, had been buried in the rubble than the military had asserted, one of the military officials said.

The airstrikes have been the focus of sharp tensions between the Afghan government, which has said that 90 civilians died in the raid, and the American military, under Gen. David D. McKiernan, the top American military commander in Afghanistan, which has repeatedly insisted that only a handful of civilians were killed.

The report was requested by General McKiernan on Sept. 7, more than two weeks after the airstrikes, in response to what he said at the time was “emerging evidence” about the raids. While American commanders in Afghanistan have contended that 30 to 35 militants were killed in the raid, the new report concludes that many among that group were in fact civilians, the military officials said.

According to the new report, fewer than 20 militants died in the raid, which was conducted jointly by American and Afghan forces, and in subsequent airstrikes carried out by an AC-130 gunship in support of the allied ground forces.

The revised American estimate for civilian deaths in the operation remains far below the 90 that Afghan and United Nations officials have claimed, a figure that the Afghan government and the United Nations said was supported by cellphone photos, freshly dug grave sites and the accounts of witnesses who saw the dead bodies.

But General Callan’s findings ran counter to those of the earlier American investigations. American Special Operations forces conducted an initial battlefield review, including a building by building search, and four days later, military investigators traveled to the vicinity of the raid. General Callan found that the people who conducted those investigations did not or could not do what was necessary to establish the full extent of the civilian killings, the military officials said.

In contrast, military officials said, General Callan was able to review the scene of the airstrikes more extensively. They said his team interviewed villagers, which the other military units had not done before, and examined new evidence, like cellphone videos and other images showing the bodies of women and children that were not available previously.

The report sticks to the military’s assertion that the compound was a legitimate target, a finding that is likely to rekindle tensions with the government of President Hamid Karzai. As a result of that finding, the report does not single out any individual for blame or recommend that any American troops be punished.

The report’s general findings were described by two American military officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the report has not yet been made public, and Afghan officials have not yet been briefed on the matter.

In recent days, both General McKiernan and Lt. Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the acting commander of the military’s Central Command, who appointed General Callan on Sept. 9 to investigate the episode, have received briefings on the report’s findings.

The New York Times on Sept. 8 described freshly dug graves, lists of the dead, and cellphone videos and other images showing bodies of women and children in the village mosque seen on a visit to Azizabad. Cellphone images a Times reporter saw showed at least 11 dead children, some apparently with blast and concussion injuries, among some 30 to 40 bodies laid out in the mosque.

Afghan and United Nations officials backed this accounting of a higher civilian death toll, putting them in direct conflict with the American military’s version of events. In that account, American Special Forces troops and Afghan commandos called in airstrikes after they came under attack while approaching a compound in Azizabad, a village in the Shindand district of Herat Province. Among the militants killed, the military said at the time, was a Taliban leader, Mullah Sadiq.

By the next day, Afghan officials complained of significant civilian casualties and President Karzai strongly condemned the airstrikes. American military officials rejected the claim, saying that extremists who entered the village after the bombardment encouraged villagers to change their stories and inflate the number of dead.

The initial investigating officer, an Army Special Forces major, visited the village after the airstrikes. Guided by aerial photographs, he visited six burial sites within a six-mile range of the attack, a military spokesman said; only one had any freshly dug graves, about 18 to 20. Afghan villagers said there were other burial sites that the Americans did not visit.

One of the military officials who agreed to discuss the new report said the Special Forces troops who had called in the strikes could conduct only a limited assessment of the damage and casualties afterward because they were forced to leave the village soon after the strikes, fearing retaliation from the villagers.

“We were wrong on the number of civilian casualties partly because the initial review was operating under real limitations,” said one of the military officials, who said of the Special Forces soldiers, “They were definitely not welcome there.”

Even before he requested the more senior investigator, General McKiernan issued orders on Sept. 2 tightening the rules about when NATO troops in Afghanistan were authorized to use lethal force. The new rules emphasized putting Afghan forces out front in searches of homes and requiring multiple sources of information before attacking targets.

General McKiernan told reporters in Washington last week that one of his “top challenges” was “to try to make sure we have the right measures in place to minimize the possibility of civilian casualties.”

He said the American military was trying to work with the Afghan authorities to ensure that further allegations involving civilian casualties would be investigated jointly rather than separately.

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Pentagon Asks Troops to Rate Health Care

October 3, 2008 – The Pentagon is asking wounded, ill or injured service members and their families to rate their medical care in an anonymous poll that officials hope will encourage candor.

The Defense Department on Thursday posted questionnaires on the Web site of the Military Health System, which has struggled to meet unprecedented demand because of the two ongoing wars on Iraq and Afghanistan.

The system serves some 9 million people — not only soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines, but their dependents, as well as retirees and their dependents.

“Support for the wounded and their families has been enhanced and improved on a continual basis since” the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, said S. Ward Casscells, assistant secretary of defense for health affairs.

“Yet we know there is still more that can be done,” Casscells acknowledged in a message on the web site. “In some locations we hear that things are going very well, in other locations we hear that things need to be improved.”

The two questionnaires — one to be completed by services members who have been sick, wounded or injured and the other to be completed by their families — asks how they would rate their doctors as well as the ease with which they get appointments, medical equipment, rehabilitative services and other care.

The questionnaires must be completed by Oct. 15

“By listening to service members and their families, the Military Health System will be in a better position to meet their needs and expectations,” said Cynthia Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoman.

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DoD Develops Compensation & Benefits Handbook

October 6, 2008 – DoD announced today it has developed a comprehensive handbook describing compensation and other benefits service members and their families would be entitled to upon separation or retirement as a result of serious injury or illness.
 
            “The Compensation and Benefits Handbook is the one source of information that covers everything a seriously ill and injured service member will need during his or her recovery, rehabilitation and reintegration,” said Ronald A. Winter, principal deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force for manpower and reserve affairs.
 
            The handbook was compiled in cooperation with the Departments of Veterans Affairs, Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education and the Social Security Administration. Additionally; there are references to assistance provided by other governmental and non-governmental agencies and organizations.
 
            “The handbook describes the disability eligibility process, various program qualifications, application procedures, and numerous resources with associated contact information,” said Sharon Gunselman, policy and resource analyst for the Department of Defense.
 
            Web sites and toll-free numbers are provided, and the electronic version includes hyperlinks. The electronic version of the handbook will be updated frequently and the hard copy of the compensation and benefits handbook will be updated annually.
 
            The electronic version of the handbook can be found on the five Web sites listed below:
 
            http://turbotap.org
            https://www.nko.navy.mil
            http://www.npc.navy.mil
            https://www.aw2.army.mil
            https://www.my.af.mil/gcss-af/USAF/AFP40/d/1073755231/Files/C&BHandbook

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Mind Training Helps Troops with Combat, Then PTSD

October 7, 2008, Camp Lejeune, NC – The explosion of practice mortars sent Army Spc. Kade Williams into panic attacks, and nightmares plagued his sleep. The ravages of post-traumatic stress had left the veteran of the war in Afghanistan vulnerable, and he was desperate for help.

But sitting silently on the floor with his eyes closed while listening to a soft-spoken instructor tell him to find a focal point by pressing on his lower stomach as guitar music hums in the background? That seemed a bit far-out.

Until he tried it.

“I will be the first one to admit that I was wrong,” Williams said.

Warriors have long used such practices to improve concentration and relaxation – dating back more than 1,000 years to the techniques of the samurai. Here at coastal Camp Lejeune, 100 miles inland at the Army’s Fort Bragg and at several bases in California, such meditation now comes with a name: Warrior Mind Training.

The course is catching on in military circles as a way not only to treat both post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injuries, but to improve focus and better prepare soldiers and Marines for the rigors of combat. It can also improve shooting range performance and raise training test scores, said Sarah Ernst, a senior Warrior Mind instructor.

At North Carolina’s Camp Lejeune, the Marine Corps’ main base on the East Coast, the courses are offered through the post naval hospital’s “Back on Track” program, which helps wounded sailors and Marines recover mental health issues.

“This is a way to turn off your thoughts and get razor-sharp attention. We kind of work out the muscles, before our troops ever see action, so that they have the mental skill set to stay focused in the heat of battle – and to be able to leave the horrors of war behind when it’s time to come home,” Ernst said.

“Our motto is, ‘Take the war to the enemy, but leave the battle on the battlefield.'”

Ernst started practicing relaxation techniques at Georgetown University 15 years ago. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the beginnings of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Ernst read news stories about the rising number of soldiers with post-traumatic stress disorder or those committing suicide.

Using what she learned at Georgetown – such as the ability to relax and manages stress – Ernst said she developed a program specifically for the military. Although it sounds similar to common meditation and relaxation techniques, such as yoga, Ernst said Warrior Mind Training also encompasses ancient training techniques used by samurai, including an emphasis on living in the moment. Ernst said the samurai handled the carnage on the battlefield by only focusing on it during the fight.

“At the end of the day, a yellow ribbon bumper sticker is not going to cut it,” she said. “If this is something that will help some of our soldiers, we should do it.”

She and three other instructors started the Warrior Mind Training program at Camp Lejeune and Camp Pendleton, Calif. The program is free to service members and funded by the instructors. It has grown to two courses a week at Camp Lejeune and Fort Bragg. At Camp Pendleton, the course is taught three times a week at several places on base and continues to expand as Ernst trains new instructors.

Williams, the Army specialist, went to his first class in June, three months after he returned from Afghanistan. He now attends regular classes and practices alone three mornings a week. He says he feels safe for the first time since he returned.

“Many of our patients have expressed very positive feelings, including a sense of relief to be able to relax,” said Lt. Cmdr. Erin Simmons, a clinical psychologist who heads the Back on Track program at Camp Lejeune. “Many have said that they have better control of their triggers as a result.”

Petty Officer 1st Class Adam Credle learned about the classes from a flier. Credle, a Camp Lejeune-based instructor who trains his fellow Coast Guardsmen to operate speed boats, thought the classes might help him concentrate.

“Being able to focus on the here and now is pretty relevant when the boat is going 40 knots, because you are talking about a catastrophe if something goes wrong,” Credle said.

Credle’s first class took him into an exercise room at a gym on Camp Lejeune. Ernst, in jeans and a black blazer, sat at the front next to her iPod and speakers. She told the students to place two fingers just under their bellybutton, close their eyes and concentrate on that spot. Use the music, she said, as a focal point to clear the mind of all other thoughts.

Credle and three other students closed their eyes. For the next few minutes, the only sound was guitarist Joe Satriani’s fingers dancing across his strings. Slowly, Credle’s mind cleared.

Silence. Quiet. But only for a moment. Thoughts about the song and what he had to do the next day crept back into Credle’s head. He quickly forced them out, then they flooded back in.

Ernst said it takes time to consistently reach a quiet place, but even being clear for a moment or two can have a significant shift on the day’s mind-set. When she finally clears her mind, a huge toothy smile is plastered across her face.

The day after class, Credle tried it again alone in his office. After only five minutes, his mind was clear and he was calm – but only for a second, he said. Still, he wants to keep attending class and practicing on his own.

“It gets you in the right place,” he said. “I am more focused today than I’ve been in a long time.”

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Iraq Veteran Relays the Trauma, Tragedy of War

October 7, 2008 – Tuesday night, Iraq War veteran Kristofer Goldsmith tried to describe what a dead human body smells like to a wide-eyed audience of more than 50 students, professors and community members.

“I can tell you that it doesn’t smell like a raccoon that got run over a week ago. It doesn’t smell like road kill. There is a very, very distinct smell to a dead human.”

He said he experiences this smell every time he sees gore in a movie like “Saw.”

“The smell isn’t just your nose. You can taste it. You can taste the iron of the blood floating in the air,” he said.

Goldsmith, 23, came to Brown as a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, a group that advocates for veterans’ rights and the end of U.S. involvement in the war in Iraq, to speak about his traumatic experience serving in the U.S. Army’s 3rd Infantry between 2005 and 2007. The talk was sponsored by anti-war group Operation Iraqi Freedom, Students for a Democratic Society, Brown Democrats, Rhode Island Mobilization Committee, Active Minds and Brown American Civil Liberties Union. It took place in MacMillan 115.

Goldsmith, a Long Island native, joined the army when he was 18 in response to the Sept. 11 attacks. He was first deployed to Iraq in January 2005. By the time he returned to the United States in December 2006, he had developed post-traumatic stress disorder and severe alcoholism.

“I didn’t feel human anymore,” Goldsmith said.

His contract, which was set to expire in May 2007, was extended indefinitely as part of the troop surge announced by President Bush in January 2007. On Memorial Day of that year, the day his infantry was set to redeploy to Iraq, he attempted suicide.

“You’re looking at someone who couldn’t even get killing himself right. I took enough Percocet to kill a f*cking cow. I don’t know how I survived,” Goldsmith said.

Goldsmith was critical of the army’s mental health services. He had sought mental health counseling prior to his suicide attempt and was diagnosed with adjustment disorder, a mental disorder similar to PTSD but with fewer healthcare benefits. He was only diagnosed with PTSD by a Veterans’ Affairs hospital four months after being kicked out of the army for “malingering,” or faking a mental illness. The army also took away his college benefits, he said.

Goldsmith vividly described the horrors of war in Sadr City, the slums of Baghdad, from the perspective of an on-the-ground intelligence reporter tasked with documenting major events in the area. He showed photos he had taken of giant puddles of sewage that filled streets, surrounding hospitals and polluting elementary schools. According to Goldsmith, the American military had destroyed every sewage and water treatment plant in Sadr City during the invasion.

As an intelligence reporter, it was his job to photograph the faces of tortured and murdered Iraqis found in mass graves for identification purposes. He placed the pictures of these mutilated faces in a neat row on the desk in front of him for all the audience to see.

“Every one of these pictures in its most intimate detail was burned into my head the second that I saw that flash,” Goldsmith said.

Goldsmith said he was lucky because Iraq Veterans Against the War gave him the opportunity to help people better understand all veterans, including those who are less open about their war experiences.

This May, Goldsmith became the youngest person – “and the only person with a mohawk” – to ever testify on the state of war before Congress. He said he has spoken with politicians such as Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, about the need for withdrawal from Iraq. He criticized both presidential candidates for voting against increased funding for the Veterans’ Affairs hospitals.

Students said they were deeply affected by Goldsmith’s lecture.

“He has such a unique and harrowing story to tell. I had no idea what I was getting into,” said Will Lambek ‘09.5, who saw an IVAW member speak at Brown two years ago. “Every chance that one has to hear from somebody who has been directly affected is an opportunity to really humanize one’s own opposition and one’s own resistance to the war.”

“I think (the lecture was) a little bit overwhelming,” said Daniel Patterson ’12, “but in the best way possible.”

Rick Ahl ’09 of Operation Iraqi Freedom was pleased with the turnout. “Nothing is quite as personal as this,” he said. “I think we need to be listening to more veterans tell their stories without the filters of other media sources.”

Ahl said that Operation Iraqi Freedom plans to have Camilo Mejia, another veteran, speak at Brown on Oct. 30.

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Oct 7, VCS Mentioned in Editorial Column About Torture: Even Blind Justice Sees Through the Bush Administration

October 6, 2008 – Justice may be blind, sometimes deaf and too often dumb, but every once in a while it still gets something right.

The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit recently ordered the government to release photos documenting abuse of prisoners in Iraq and Afghanistan. The decision was part of a case brought against the current administration by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) that featured a bizarre and unintentionally humorous argument from the people who brought you Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo.

The ACLU, along with the Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for Peace, filed a Freedom of Information Act request back in 2003 to release documents and records pertaining to what were then sporadic reports of torture and rendition.

Other than alerting the public as to what our government has been doing in its overseas prisons, what renders this recent case noteworthy is the reasoning the administration used to fight the case. The government spent years denying detainees in the “War on Terror” rights and protections under international or U.S. law, and explicitly denied that detainees held without trial or due process – defined by the administration as “enemy combatants” – had any recourse to the Geneva Conventions. The government claimed that it did not have to release the photos because – wait for it – that would violate the detainees’ rights under the Geneva Conventions.

The government’s argument was not only without merit, but completely nonsensical as well. The Geneva Conventions stipulate that prisoners cannot be made open to “insults and public curiosity,” such as parading them through the streets or putting them in cages in a public square. Among other arguments, the Bush Administration claimed that releasing the photos, even with the faces of prisoners blocked out, would violate the prisoners’ privacy rights and by extension the Geneva Conventions.

Of course, the administration also claimed that the Geneva Conventions applied neither to the “War on Terror” nor to the torture carried out in its name. Thankfully, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit saw through the administration’s weak defense and ordered the release of the photos (similar to those that we have already seen in the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal).

It is sometimes easy to think that nothing changes in the world and that the American government has pretty much been the same because it has always represented the same interests.

However, this court case belies that notion, as we see the change from a government that championed the release of pictures detailing prisoner abuse by the Germans and Japanese in World War II as a way to prove the righteousness of U.S. participation in that war. Now here we are 60 years later and our government is on the other side of the razor wire fence, arguing the righteousness of its “War on Terror” by withholding information from the public. They must think there is no better way to foster trust than lies and misinformation.

With yet another release of photos depicting torture and abuse, we can see through the administration’s flimsy claim that abuse is the result of “a few bad apples.” The picture that has been developed is one of widespread, systematic use of torture against people denied rights and justice. That the abuse is so broad in scope is an indictment against the execution of the “War on Terror” and its architects. The ACLU hopes that the ruling and photographs will help prevent further abuse of prisoners.

We might be able to take accountability a step further by extending the reach of justice into corners of the world that have not been touched for far too long. Would justice prevail if high administration officials were taken to secret prisons where they would undergo “heightened” interrogation? It might help them comprehend why the Geneva Conventions are so necessary. Experience, most would agree, is the surest path to understanding.

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Oct 6 Weekly Update: Reminder to Register to Vote

VCS Speaks at Sarasota and San Francisco Events, and VCS Reminds Everyone to Register and Vote

October 6, 2008 – First, some great news from our recent VCS road trips. On Saturday, October 4, more than 150 people turned out to hear Professor Juan Cole and me. Juan spoke about the history of the Iraq War, and I spoke about our lawsuit against VA plus other issues impacting our veterans.

VCS thanks Gene Jones at Florida Veterans for Common Sense and Bill Newton at Florida Consumer Action Network for organizing a successful event. These groups are fantastic, and they do lots of wonderful work for our veterans in the Sarasota area. The event they organized was a tremendous success.

On Saturday, September 27, more than 200 top attorneys from the National Organization of Veterans Advocates received an update from VCS about our lawsuit against VA. VCS thanks Wade Bosley, Katrina Eagle, and Rich Cohen at NOVA for inviting us to meet many of the most dedicated and knowledgeable legal minds in the country and share some of our ideas for reforming VA.

Second, here is some important news about voting. For some states, today may be your last chance to register to vote. If you moved or changed your name, then please take the time today and be sure to update your voter registration so you can vote.

This is important: if your state has early voting, consider taking advantage of the short lines by voting today.

VCS is concerned about voting rights because VA, until recently, banned non-partisan voter registration drives at VA nursing homes. In addition, a new and disturbing report released by the Brennan Institute reveals as many as 13 million voters were purged from voting lists. The result, is a “nationwide process [that is] “chaotic,” “shrouded in secrecy”, “riddled with inaccuracies”, “prone to error” and “vulnerable to manipulation.”

There is good news. The Pentagon launched a get out the vote campaign for all troops serving overseas. However, the McCain campaign lost a challenge to absentee ballot procedures in Ohio that could have harmed our service members in the war zones.

In the midst of the election frenzy, VCS needs your help so we can continue meeting with veterans around the country. We receive a large percentage of our funding from members like you. Please click here to give $100 to VCS today.

We want you to know that all your hard work is paying off! Thanks to our landmark lawsuit against VA, plus our Congressional testimony, plus our press coverage, VCS grew by over 2,000 members this year.

VCS asks you to pass this message on to a friend. We want to keep growing, and we want to make sure our message is spread far and wide! Your personal endorsements of VCS to your friends and family keeps VCS fighting for our veterans, our civil liberties, and our national security.

Thank you,

Paul Sullivan, Executive Director

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