Illinois Starts Warrior Assistance Program

February 11, 2008 – The Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs is proud to introduce the Illinois Warrior Assistance Program, a new program launched by Director Tammy Duckworth and Governor Blagojevich to provide confidential assistance to Illinois Veterans and their families as they transition back to their everyday lives after serving our country. 

The goal of the Illinois Warrior Assistance Program is to help service members and their families deal with the emotional and psychological challenges they may be facing after combat.  The Program offers a 24-hour, toll-free helpline at 1-866-554-IWAP (4927) to assist Veterans with any of the symptoms associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and provides screening for a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).

The program works in three major parts: 

–First, it offers a 24-hour, toll-free helpline at 1-866-554-IWAP (4927), which is staffed by health professionals to assist Veterans, day or night, with the symptoms associated with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). 

–Second, it provides Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) screening to all interested Illinois Veterans.  The TBI screenings are available over the phone via the helpline or through Illinois Department Veterans Affairs VSOs who have been training on the screening tool.

–Third, it makes TBI screenings mandatory for all returning members of the Illinois Army National Guard and Air National Guard. 

Not only will the Illinois Warrior Assistance Program help service members and their families deal with the emotional and psychological challenges they may be facing after combat, but if a Veteran has a positive screening for PTSD or TBI and is uninsured or underinsured, the Veteran could be eligible for additional diagnostic review and treatment through the Program.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Illinois Starts Warrior Assistance Program

McCain Promises Healthcare for Every Veteran

February 9, 2008 – WICHITA – Following on the heels of Mike Huckabee, Sen. John McCain stopped at Mid-Continent Airport three hours after Huckabee spoke at Col. Jabara Airport.

Held at the Hawker-Beechcraft hanger, McCain’s event was low-key compared to the appearances of other presidential candidates in Kansas.

McCain was introduced by Kansas Senator Sam Brownback, who had been seeking the Republican nomination until dropping out several months ago.

“We’ve got a real treat today. We’ve got the gentlemen who’s going to be the next president of the United States,” Brownback said.

On Friday, McCain was booed by some at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Some believe McCain is not conservative enough.

Brownback responded to the criticism directly.

“He has stated time and again he will not raise taxes,” Brownback said.

Brownback said McCain was the most qualified candidate since Dwight Eisenhower.
 
“He doesn’t need on-the-job training foreign policy,” Brownback said.

Stepping up to the podium, McCain praised Brownback.

“I’ll be proud to have him by my side in any capacity,” McCain said.
 
McCain clarified that didn’t necessarily mean the vice-presidency and spoke of the importance of not electing a Democrat for president.

“We all know what would happen if the wrong party won in November,” McCain said.

Speaking directly to Kansans, McCain said he would open up markets worldwide for aviation to benefit places like Wichita.
 
On veterans, McCain said he would get them “the healthcare they need and deserve.”

“I’m going to get every one of our veterans a plastic card to take to their doctor or healthcare provider to get the care they need,” McCain said.

McCain touted his stance as a fiscal conservative.
 
“I will veto any bill that comes across my desk that has an earmark project,” McCain said.

McCain then focused on the war in Iraq and terrorism.

“The challenge of the 21st century is this transcendent – this terrible evil – that’s radical Islamic terrorism,” McCain said.
 
That challenge also includes finding Osama Bin Laden.

“If I have to follow him to the gates of hell, I will get Osama Bin Laden,” McCain said. “Al Qaeda is on the run, but they’re not defeated.”

While the country is divided over the war, McCain spoke about the shared support for the troops.
 
“Thank God none of us are divided in our support of our brave men and women,” McCain said.

Concluding his speech, McCain compared himself to Ronald Reagan.

“My friends, I will inspire another generation of Americans to serve a cause greater than themselves,” McCain said.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on McCain Promises Healthcare for Every Veteran

Veterans Shed Light on Iraq Service

February 12, 2008 – In the middle of a quiet student lounge at UNC Asheville last week, a group of women sat chatting quietly. Suddenly, a group of soldiers burst into the room, pulling the women out of their chairs and demanding they get down on the floor.

The room was in chaos as the soldiers took the three women to one end of the lounge, barking questions at them and cursing.

The soldiers put hoods over the women’s heads, zip-tied their hands behind their backs and pushed them out the door as they protested that they didn’t have any information.

As the scene quieted down, one of the soldiers came back into the room and stood near where two members of the U.S. Marine Corps had set up a recruiting table.

“My name is Jason Hurd, and I’m with Iraq Veterans Against the War,” he said.

The women were part of the demonstration, which Hurd said was a way to explain that American soldiers are called to interrogate civilians this way, and anyone who enlists and is sent to Iraq likely will have to interrogate people the same way.

Hurd is passionate about telling people what life really is like in Iraq since the American invasion in 2003. He spent a year there with the Tennessee Army National Guard and now works to educate people by telling his story.

He and three other members of Iraq Veterans Against the War from Western North Carolina are planning to attend Winter Soldier, an event in Washington March 13-16, where Iraq veterans will tell their stories. It is named for an event staged by Vietnam Veterans Against the War in 1971.

The local chapter of IVAW will hold a dance Thursday evening to raise money to attend the gathering, where each veteran will tell his or her story. Iraq Veterans Against the War expects several hundreds veterans from around the country to attend.

For some veterans, telling the story dredges up the pain of their experiences. Others find talking about it helps them.

Steve Casey, who was in Iraq for 15 months in 2003 and 2004, has trouble talking about what he saw and experienced there. He has nightmares every night and he has divorced since he came back because he was not the same person who went to war.

“I watched our guys shoot at innocent people and then brag about it,” Hurd said. “If people knew what war is really like, they would demand we get out of Iraq immediately.”

Mike Robinson, another of the demonstrators, said he came home injured and unable to cope with life. With severe depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, he couldn’t hold a job and wound up living on the street for a time. He credits his 3-year-old daughter, Sara, for giving him the ability to get up every morning and helping him to return to some semblance of normalcy.

“I was lucky. I got wounded,” Robinson said. “I see people going back three and four times. What kind of life is that? What kind of marriage can you have?”

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Veterans Shed Light on Iraq Service

Homeless Veterans Are in the Lurch

February 12, 2008 – A dilapidated shelter for homeless veterans is set to be leveled to make way for development on the sprawling grounds of the Armed Forces Retirement Home in Northwest Washington, leaving a nonprofit veterans group scrambling to find a new place for 50 men and women to live by the end of next month.

Employees of U.S. Vets, which operates the shelter, were notified by retirement home officials shortly before Christmas that they would have to vacate the building by the end of this month, when their lease expires. Late last week, the home granted a one-month extension but said no further reprieves will be given.

“We’re not evicting them. Their lease is up,” said Christine Black, a communications consultant for the home. “They have known this all along.”

But shelter officials said they expected the retirement home to find another spot for the homeless veterans on its large campus. “At no time over the course of four-and-one-half years did we anticipate being displaced,” said Stephanie Buckley, regional director of the U.S. Veterans Initiative, the nonprofit group that runs U.S. Vets as a collaboration with Cloudbreak Development, a California-based special-needs housing developer. “We never thought we’d be faced with that.”

U.S. Vets has been working “arduously” to find a new location elsewhere in the city, thus far without success, Buckley said.

Black said the group has ignored past deadlines to move, and she pointed to a critical audit that she said “raised a real red flag” about the veterans group and its connections with the for-profit Cloudbreak.

Caught in the middle of the dispute are 50 veterans living at Ignatia House, all of them with honorable discharges, many of them with substance-abuse problems, Buckley said. Some said they never felt quite welcome on the edge of the retirement home.

“They never wanted us, anyway,” said Maurice Tucker, 53, an Air Force veteran who said he has been living at Ignatia for two years as he recovers from drug and health problems. “We never felt welcome here. They don’t fix the boilers. We’ve kind of been freezing here.”

Under a plan awaiting final approval, the 50-year-old building would be demolished in preparation for developing a 77-acre parcel at the home with a mix of condominiums, apartments, medical office space and a boutique hotel. The income generated by the project would pay for improved medical and living facilities for the 1,100 veterans who reside at the historic 155-year-old retirement home, officials said.

The home receives no direct money from the federal government and instead relies on a trust fund drawn from service members’ pay checks to operate. Faced with bankruptcy in recent years, the home developed a master plan allowing the development of large parcels of the 272-acre property.

That plan will come before the National Capital Planning Commission this spring. If approved, demolition and other work could begin this summer on the 77 acres.

The plan includes a requirement to build a 100-bed shelter for homeless veterans. U.S. Vets is seeking to be part of the redevelopment and had expected to be able to move from Ignatia into that or another facility on the property. “Every time we thought a deal was imminent, something came up,” Buckley said.

Ignatia House, once a nunnery for sisters caring for veterans and later a guest house, was rented to U.S. Vets at a discounted rate on an “as is” basis, which meant that the home was not responsible for maintaining the building. U.S. Vets did not want to spend money on improvements in a building meant as a temporary home.

The building has sunk into disrepair, with an elevator out of commission for weeks, darkened hallways and little heat.

“Ignatia House was always intended as a step into entering into a long-term lease” in one of the other properties on the campus, said Thomas R. Cantwell Jr., a founder and former executive director of the U.S. Veterans Initiative.

Cantwell also heads the for-profit Cantwell-Anderson and its subsidiary Cloudbreak, which holds the lease on Ignatia House. An audit last year by the Corporation for National and Community Service, which oversees AmeriCorps and other networks of nonprofit service organizations, said the vets group has had a number of “less-than-arms-length transactions” with Cantwell-Anderson. The audit also questioned whether $500,000 in grant money was spent and accounted for properly in 2006.

Black said the retirement home is aware of the audit. “It raises concerns that they’re not following the rules,” she said. “We don’t think it’s good responsibility when they ignore deadlines.”

Cantwell said steps are being taken to address the concerns raised by the audit. “It certainly has nothing to do with the situation in the District of Columbia,” he said.

U.S. Vets describes itself as the largest nonprofit organization in the country dedicated to helping homeless and at-risk veterans. “U.S. Vets tonight will have 2,000 veterans in beds in six states,” Cantwell said. “This is solely because of the huge leverage that the private sector has raised.”

He said it was “unconscionable” that the retirement home could not find room for 50 homeless veterans. “It seems fundamentally wrong. Veterans are veterans.”

Black said no other sites are available on the campus and suggested it was unfair for U.S. Vets to paint the home as the villain. “It’s very frustrating to have them point the finger of blame at the Armed Forces Retirement Home, which has bent over backwards to help,” she said. “No good deed goes unpunished.”

For veterans at Ignatia House, the dispute leaves them facing an uncertain future after March 31.

“Once you fall through the cracks, it’s hard to get back up,” said Grover Miller, 65, a Navy veteran who said he lost job as cabdriver after being arrested for driving while intoxicated.

Love Smith, 64, an Air Force veteran, is resigned to leaving. “To me, it was better than sleeping in the park,” he said.

Smith said it was no surprise that the shelter was closing to make way for development. “You know doggone well they’re not going to mess with that,” he said.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Homeless Veterans Are in the Lurch

Senate Holds Hearing on Veteran Transition Process

UNITED STATES SENATE COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES

Meeting Date: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 B 9:30 a.m.
Meeting Location: Room 216, Hart Senate Office Building

To receive testimony on improvements implemented and planned by the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs for the care, management, and transition of wounded and ill servicemembers.

Witnesses:

Honorable Gordon R. England
Deputy Secretary of Defense

Honorable Gordon H. Mansfield
Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs

Honorable Preston M. (Pete) Geren, III
Secretary of the Army

Honorable David S.C. Chu
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness

Lieutenant General Eric B. Schoomaker, USA
Surgeon General of the United States Army

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Senate Holds Hearing on Veteran Transition Process

MRFF Exposes Deception at Air Force Academy

February 7, 2008 – The Air Force Academy was criticized by Muslim and religious freedom organizations for playing host on Wednesday to three speakers who critics say are evangelical Christians falsely claiming to be former Muslim terrorists.

The three men were invited as part of a weeklong conference on terrorism organized by cadets at the academys Colorado Springs campus under the auspices of the political science department.

The three will be paid a total of $13,000 for their appearance, some of it from private donors, said Maj. Brett Ashworth, a spokesman for the academy.

The three were invited because they offered a unique perspective from inside terrorism, Major Ashworth said. The conference is to result in a report on methods to combat terrorism that will be sent to the Pentagon, members of Congress and other influential officials, he added.

Members of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, a group suing the federal government to combat what it calls creeping evangelism in the armed forces, said it was typical of the Air Force Academy to invite born-again Christians to address cadets on terrorism rather than experts who could teach students about the Middle East.

This stuff going on at the academy today is part of the endemic evangelical infiltration that continues, said David Antoon, a 1970 academy graduate and a foundation member.

The three men were invited to talk about being recruited and trained as terrorists, not religion, although one of them, Zak Anani, did tell students that converting to Christianity from Islam saved his life, said John Van Winkle, another spokesman for the academy.

Muslim organizations objected to the fact that no other perspective about Islam was offered, saying that the three speakers Mr. Anani, Kamal Saleem and Walid Shoebat habitually paint Muslims as inherently violent. All were born in the Middle East but Mr. Saleem and Mr. Shoebat are now American citizens, while Mr. Anani has Canadian citizenship.

Their entire world view is based on the idea that Islam is evil, said Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on Islamic American Relations. We want to provide a balancing perspective to their hate speech.

Academic professors and others who have heard the three men speak in the United States and Canada said some of their stories border on the fantastic, like Mr. Saleems account of how, as a child, he infiltrated Israel to plant bombs via a network of tunnels underneath the Golan Heights. No such incidents have been reported, the academic experts said. They also question how three middle-aged men who claim they were recruited as teenagers or younger could have been steeped in the violent religious ideology that only became prevalent in the late 1980s.

Prof. Douglas Howard, who teaches the history of the modern Middle East at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich., heard Mr. Saleem speak last November at the college and said he thought the three were connected to several major Christian evangelical organizations.

It was just an old time gospel hour Jesus can change your life, he changed mine, Mr. Howard said. That is mixed in with Watch out America, wake up America, the danger of Islam is here.

Mr. Howard said his doubts about their authenticity grew after stories like the Golan Heights saga as well as something on Mr. Saleems Web site along the lines that he was descended from the grand wazir of Islam. The grand wazir of Islam is a nonsensical term, Mr. Howard said.

Keith Davies, the director of the Walid Shoebat Foundation, which organizes their appearances, said critics tried to undermine the speakers reputation because they cant argue with the message.

Arab-American civil rights organizations question why, at a time when the United States government has vigorously moved to jail or at least deport anyone with a known terrorist connection, the three men, if they are telling the truth, are allowed to circulate freely. A spokesman for the F.B.I. said there were no warrants for their arrest.

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on MRFF Exposes Deception at Air Force Academy

Murtha and the Cost of the War

February 11, 2008 – One longtime House member’s views of the hidden costs of the war in Iraq are worth studying — when the congressman is Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), chairman of the House Appropriations subcommittee on defense.

Murtha was a Marine officer during the Vietnam War, earning a Bronze Star and two Purple Heart medals. Murtha, in his 34th year in Congress, is an outspoken critic of the Bush administration’s Iraq policy.

He holds strong views about the effect of the war on the U.S. military and the public, which he detailed in a speech last week to the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a nonpartisan Washington think tank.

“Less than 1 percent of the public is making the sacrifice that these troops [in Iraq and Afghanistan] are making,” Murtha said. He noted his proposal for a war tax, which was shot down by the Democratic leadership.

“You can’t put a trillion-dollar war on a credit card and leave the bills for our children to pay,” he said. “The same Americans suffering in Iraq today will be paying for this borrowed war for the rest of their lives.”

In other words, he suggested, the same troops who are fighting now will end up paying for the cost of the war.

Murtha is a strong advocate of the 24-year-old Defense Department Family Advocacy Program, which pays for counseling for service members dealing with several issues, from their children’s truancy to emotional or sexual abuse of spouses. He said that troops at U.S. military bases have told him about their families’ need for counseling.

As a result, Murtha last year added $147 million to the fiscal 2008 appropriations bill for the Family Advocacy Program, increasing the amount from the administration’s request of $253 million. In President Bush’s proposed fiscal 2009 budget, sent to Congress last week, funding for the program was cut to $244 million.

Noting that the administration is spending $343 million every 24 hours on the Iraq war, Murtha said that 11 hours in Iraq “could restore $156 million cut by the president’s Defense Department budget for the Family Advocacy Program.”

While Murtha was in Afghanistan recently, the subject of divorce and pressure on military families came up. A troop commander described his soldiers as “worried about their families,” Murtha said, referring to the stress that comes from knowing “that if you were deployed over and over again, you were going to be at a point where the pressure is tremendous on what’s going on” at home.

Another cost of the war, Murtha said, is the declining quality of recruits joining the volunteer Army. Murtha said he favors a draft because he believes “you could never sustain a long-term deployment with a volunteer Army . . . and it would cost very much in order to try to sustain these kind of deployments.”

Citing Army statistics, Murtha said that since the beginning of the Iraq war, the percentage of Army recruits with high school diplomas has dropped from 94 to 71, and the proportion of recruits who require waivers for criminal records increased from 4.6 percent to 11.2 percent.

Equally telling, he continued, are the soaring sums paid for retention and enlistment bonuses. In fiscal 2003, before the Iraq war, the Army spent $157 million, he said; today it pays $1 billion annually.

“They’re even paying captains and majors to stay,” Murtha said. “People that left West Point in 2001, 46 percent got out; in 2002, 52 percent to 53 percent got out.” The reason these young officers are leaving, he said, is “because their families are saying, ‘Look, you get out or I’m going to leave you.'”

Murtha also cited the war’s cost on maintenance of major military equipment. The average age of F-15 fighter aircraft, used for precision bombing, is 24 years, and most are beyond the safe flying time of 4,500 hours. There are 162 “down right now trying to find out what’s wrong with them,” said Murtha, who earlier in the week held a closed hearing with the Air Force. “Flying hour costs have increased 87 percent. Depot maintenance has increased 800 man-hours for every F-15.

“The military is in worse shape than they were seven years ago. No question — everybody will tell you that.”

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Murtha and the Cost of the War

VA Brain Injury Research Funds Wasted, Claims University of Texas Doctor

Austin VA researcher alleges mismanagement: Van Boven says superiors have hindered research into traumatic brain injury.

February 11, 2008 – When the Department of Veterans Affairs announced last year that it was starting a brain injury research program at the University of Texas, Dr. Robert Van Boven predicted that his program would become “the birthplace for new standards of treatment” for wounded troops.

Now, seven months after he was hired, Van Boven said his VA bosses are responsible for “gross mismanagement, waste and possible fraud” concerning the program. Van Boven said program money is being used for research unrelated to brain injuries and that peer reviewers found that the work had no merit. After raising complaints, Van Boven said, his bosses threatened to further cut his research time. He filed official grievances with his Central Texas bosses on Feb. 1 and with the VA’s Office of the Inspector General on Tuesday.

“As a private citizen, I find it an unacceptable use of taxpayer money,” he said. “And now they’re trying to punish me for being a whistle-blower.”

VA officials said last week that they have formed a panel to look into Van Boven’s allegations but declined to comment further.

“At this point, we can’t comment before the investigation is concluded,” said Nelia Schrum, a VA spokeswoman in Temple.

Van Boven is the head of a program housed at UT’s J.J. Pickle Research Campus in North Austin, which is home to one of the world’s most sophisticated magnetic resonance imaging scanners. The VA is renting space and owns the right to use the scanner once a week.

The program headed by Van Boven is funded by a 2005 VA research grant and managed by the VA’s Central Texas arm. The original grant was $5.4 million and intended for all types of work using the imager.

For the first year and a half, $1.2 million was used to pay for imaging research into diabetic retinopathy, a condition that can cause diabetics to gradually go blind. The lead researcher, Dr. Kevin Carlin, was examining whether the body gives certain clues that a diabetic is at serious risk of blindness.

Van Boven was hired last summer and took over the entire grant. He said he wasn’t told his budget would also include research unrelated to brain injuries. Schrum said the grant Van Boven is managing is intended primarily but not solely for brain injury research. She could not say whether Van Boven was told that the grant could also be used to fund other research.

Van Boven says the eyesight research was flawed at best, would not produce results and needed to be suspended. But he said his bosses would not let him. He said Carlin and a consultant working with him have cost an additional $190,000 since Van Boven was hired, while producing no discernible results. Schrum said Carlin would not comment.

Van Boven alleges that when he complained, his boss threatened to cut his research time by 40 percent by assigning other tasks. He alleges his bosses took other actions against him, including chastising him for volunteering to help organize a fun run to raise awareness for traumatic brain injury and for inviting U.S. Sen. John Cornyn to the announcement without approval from his VA superiors.

mtoohey@statesman.com; (512) 445-3673

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on VA Brain Injury Research Funds Wasted, Claims University of Texas Doctor

Editorial Column – Waterboarding for God and Country

February 9, 2008 – After one spends 45 years in Washington , high farce does not normally throw one off balance.  I found the past few days, however, an acid test of my equilibrium.

I missed the National Prayer Breakfast—for the 45th time in a row.  But, as I drove to work I listened with rapt attention as President George W. Bush gave his insights on prayer:

“When we lift our hearts to God, we’re all equal in his sight.  We’re all equally precious…In prayer we grow in mercy and compassion…. When we answer God’s call to love a neighbor as ourselves, we enter into a deeper friendship with our fellow man — and a deeper relationship with our eternal Father.”

Vice President Dick Cheney skipped Thursday’s prayer breakfast in order to put the final touches on the speech he gave later that morning to the Conservative Political Action Conference.  Perhaps he felt he needed some extra time to devise careful words to extol “the interrogation program run by the CIA…a tougher program for tougher customers, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of 9/11,” without conceding that the program has involved torture.

But there was a touch of defensiveness in Cheney’s remarks, as he saw fit repeatedly to reassure his audience yesterday that America is a “decent” country.

After all, CIA Director Michael Hayden had confirmed publicly on Tuesday that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and two other “high-value” detainees had been waterboarded in 2002-2003, though Hayden added that the technique has since been discontinued.

An extreme form of interrogation going back at least as far as the Spanish Inquisition, waterboarding has been condemned as torture by just about everyone—except the hired legal hands of the Bush administration.

On Wednesday President Bush’s spokesman Tony Fratto revealed that the White House reserves the right to approve waterboarding again, “depending on the circumstances.”  Fratto matter-of-factly described the process still followed by the Bush administration to approve torture—er; I mean, “enhanced interrogation techniques” like waterboarding:

“The process includes the director of the Central Intelligence Agency bringing the proposal to the attorney general, where the review would be conducted to determine if the plan would be legal and effective.  At that point, the proposal would go to the president.  The president would listen to the determination of his advisers and make a decision.”

Dissing Congress

Cheney’s task of reassuring us about our “decency” was made no easier Thursday, when Attorney General Michael Mukasey stonewalled questions from the hapless John Conyers, titular chair of the House Judiciary Committee.  Conyers tried, and failed, to get straight answers from Mukasey on torture.

Conyers referred to Hayden’s admission about waterboarding and branded the practice “odious.”  But Mukasey seemed to take perverse delight in “dissing” Conyers, as the expression goes in inner city Washington .  Sadly, the tired chairman took the disrespect stoically.

He did summon the courage to ask Attorney General Mukasey directly, “Are you ready to start a criminal investigation into whether this confirmed use of waterboarding by U.S. agents was illegal?”

“No, I am not,” Mukasey answered.

Mukasey claimed “waterboarding was found to be permissible under the law as it existed” in the years immediately after 9/11; thus, the Justice Department could not investigate someone for doing something the department had declared legal.  Got that?

Mukasey explained:

“That would mean the same department that authorized the program would now consider prosecuting somebody who followed that advice.”

Oddly, Mukasey himself is on record saying waterboarding would be torture if applied to him.  And Michael McConnell, Director of National Intelligence, was even more explicit in taking the same line in an interview with Lawrence Wright of New Yorker magazine.  McConnell told Wright that, for him:

“Waterboarding would be excruciating.  If I had water draining into my nose, oh God, I just can’t imagine how painful!  Whether it’s torture by anybody else’s definition, for me it would be torture.”

Okay, it would be torture if done to you, Mike; how about if done to others?  Sadly, McConnell, too, missed the prayer breakfast and the president’s moving reminder that we are called “to love a neighbor as ourselves.”   Is there an exception, perhaps, for detainees?

Cat Out of Bag

When torture first came up during his interview with the New Yorker, McConnell was more circumspect, repeating the obligatory bromide “We don’t torture,” as former CIA Director George Tenet did in five consecutive sentences while hawking his memoir on 60 Minutes on April 29, 2007.  As McConnell grew more relaxed, however, he let slip the rationale for Mukasey’s effrontery and the administration’s refusal to admit that waterboarding is torture.  For anyone paying attention, that rationale has long been a no-brainer.  But here is McConnell inadvertently articulating it:

“If it is ever determined to be torture, there will be a huge penalty to be paid for anyone engaging in it.”

Like death.  Even Alberto Gonzales could grasp this at the outset.  That explains the overly clever, lawyerly wording in the Jan. 25, 2002 memorandum for the president drafted by the vice president’s lawyer, David Addington, but signed by Gonzales.  Addington/Gonzales argued that the president’s determination that the Geneva agreements on prisoners of war do not apply to al-Qaeda and the Taliban:

“Substantially reduces the threat of domestic criminal prosecution under the War Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. 2441)…enacted in 1996…

“Punishments for violations of Section 2441include the death penalty…

“[I]t is difficult to predict the motives of prosecutors and independent counsels who may in the future decide to pursue unwarranted charges based on Section 2441.  Your determination would create a reasonable basis in law that Section 2441 does not apply, which would provide a solid defense to any future prosecution.”
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT, January 25, 2002, p. 2

Mike McConnell needs to get his own lawyers to bring him up to date on all this.  For that memorandum was quickly followed by an action memorandum signed by George W. Bush on Feb. 7, 2002.  The president’s memo incorporated the exact wording of Addington/Gonzales’ bottom line; to wit, the U.S. would “treat the detainees humanely and, to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity, in a manner consistent with the principles of [ Geneva ].  (emphasis added)

That provided the loophole through which then-defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld and then-CIA director George Tenet and their subordinates drove the Mack truck of torture.  Even the Bush-administration-friendly editorial page of the Washington Post saw fit on Friday to declare torture “illegal in all instances,” adding that “waterboarding is, and always has been, torture.”

Waterboarding has been condemned as torture for a very long time.  After WW-II Japanese soldiers were hanged for the “war crime” of waterboarding American soldiers.

Patriots and Prophets

Patriots and prophets have made it clear from our earliest days that such abuse has no place in America .

Virginia ’s Patrick Henry insisted passionately that “the rack and the screw,” as he put it, were barbaric practices that had to be left behind in the Old World , or we are “lost and undone.”  Attorney General Mukasey, for his part, recently refused to say whether he considers the rack and the screw forms of torture, dismissing the question as hypothetical.

As for prophets, George Hunzinger of Princeton Theological Seminary has awakened enough religious folks to form the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, a coalition of 130 religious organizations from left to right on the political spectrum.  Hunzinger puts it succinctly: “To acknowledge that waterboarding is torture is like conceding that the sun rises in the east,” adding:

“All the dissembling in high places that makes these shocking abuses possible must be brought to an end. But they will undoubtedly continue unless those responsible for them are held accountable…. A special counsel is an essential first step.”

Sadly, Hunzinger and his associates have been unable to overcome the pious complacency of the vast majority of institutional churches, synagogues, and mosques in this country and their reluctance to exercise moral leadership.

How It Looks From Outside

Sometimes it takes a truth-telling outsider to throw light on our moral failures.

South African Methodist Bishop Peter Storey, erstwhile chaplain to Nelson Madela in prison and longtime outspoken opponent of apartheid, has this to say to those clergy who might be moved to preach more than platitudes:

“We had obvious evils to engage; you have to unwrap your culture from years of red, white, and blue myth.  You have to expose and confront the great disconnect between the kindness, compassion, and caring of most American people and the ruthless way American power is experienced, directly or indirectly, by the poor of the earth.  You have to help good people see how they have let their institutions do their sinning for them.

“All around the world there are those who long to see your human goodness translated into a different, more compassionate way of relating with the rest of this bleeding planet.”

Mukasey’s thumbing his nose at Conyers’ committee yesterday was simply the most recent display of contempt for Congress on the part of the Bush administration.  The Founders expected our representatives in Congress to be taken seriously by the executive branch, and expected that Members of Congress would hold senior executives accountable—to the point of impeaching them, when necessary, for high crimes and misdemeanors.

That used to worry those officials and put a brake on more outlandish behavior.  Not any more.

No Worries, George

One reads George Tenet’s memoirs with some nostalgia for the days of a modicum of congressional oversight, and with a strong sense of irony—as he confesses concern that Congress might one day hold him and others accountable for taking liberties with national and international law.

It seems likely that then-White House counsel Alberto Gonzales and David Addington counseled Tenet that his concerns were quaint and obsolete and, alas, they may have been right, the way things have been going.  But Tenet apparently entertained lingering misgivings—perhaps even qualms of conscience.

In the immediate post-9/11 period, Tenet says he told the president “our only real ally” on the Afghan border was Uzbekistan , “where we had established important intelligence-collection capabilities.”  We now know from UK Ambassador to Uzbekistan Craig Murray that those “collection capabilities” included the most primitive methods of torture, including boiling alleged “terrorists” alive.

Tenet adds that he stressed the importance of being able to detain unilaterally al-Qaeda operatives around the world.  His worries shine through the rather telling sentences that follow:

“We were asking for and we would be given as many authorities as CIA ever had.  Things could blow up.  People, me among them, could end up spending some of the worst days of our lives justifying before congressional overseers our new freedom to act.”  At the Center of the Storm, p. 177-178

Tenet need not have worried.  He would be shielded from accountability by a timid Congress as well as an arrogant White House able to arrogate unprecedented power to itself and to shield those it wished to protect.

Setting the Tone

It was President George W. Bush who set the tone from the outset.  After his address to the nation on the evening of 9/11, he assembled his top national security aides in the White House bunker—the easier, perhaps, to foster a bunker mentality.  Among them was counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke, who quoted the president in his memoir:

“I want you to understand that we are at war and we will stay at war until this is done.  Nothing else matters.  Everything is available for the pursuit of this war.  Any barriers in your way, they’re gone.  Any money you need, you have it. This is our only agenda…

“I don’t care what the international lawyers say, we are going to kick some ass.”   Against All Enemies, Free Press, 2004

Clarke, of course, took his book’s title from the oath of office we all swore as military officers and/or senior government officials: “To defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”

John Ashcroft, head of the Department of Justice at the time, fell in lockstep with the thrust of the president’s comment dismissing any concern with international law—or, as would quickly be seen, domestic law, as well.  With the enthusiastic assistance of David Addington, the affable Ashcroft assembled a cabal of Mafia-like lawyers whose imaginative legal opinions on torture, warrantless eavesdropping, and other abuses mark them forever as “domestic enemies” of the Constitution.

Add Mukasey to this distinguished roster.

Torture: the Hallmark

What is not widely known is that Justice Department-approved torture was first applied on an American citizen, John Walker Lindh, who was captured in Afghanistan in late November 2001.  The White House and corporate press immediately sensationalized Lindh as “the American Taliban.”

Jesselyn Radack, a conscientious legal advisor in the Justice Department’s Professional Responsibility Advisory Office, which gives ethics advice to Department attorneys, insisted that Lindh be advised of his rights before any interrogation.  Instead, he was tortured mercilessly during the first few days of his internment and denied medical care.

Lindh had had the foolishness and bad luck to be in the wrong place at the wrong time; i. e., in a large group of prisoners rounded up by CIA and Army paramilitary forces—too large a group, it turned out.

A spontaneous uprising took place, and CIA paramilitary officer Johnny “Mike” Spann, who had questioned Lindh just minutes before, was shot dead.  Outraged, Spann’s colleagues applied “frontier justice,” totally ignoring the Constitutional cautions of Ms. Radack.

The Department of Justice moved quickly to fire Radack for her principled stand.  But she had the presence of mind to save emails providing chapter and verse of the difficult exchanges in which she had insisted on respect for Lindh’s rights as an American citizen.  Newsweek carried the story briefly, but neither Congress nor anyone else in the media showed much interest.

Radack’s book recounting this experience, The Canary in the Coalmine: Blowing the Whistle in the Case of “American Taliban” John Walker Lindh, is available on line at: http://www.patriotictruthteller.net/.

Against this backdrop, together with Guantanamo , Abu Ghraib, and prisons in Afghanistan , Iraq , and elsewhere, Patrick Henry’s warning remains a challenge for our time: Are we “lost and undone?”  I think not; but we had better get it together soon, for, as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., cautioned, “There is such a thing as too late.”

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in Washington, DC.  He was an Army intelligence officer before joining the CIA where he had a 27-year career as an analyst.  He is now on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Editorial Column – Waterboarding for God and Country

Florida VCS Holds Benefit for Wounded Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans on March 30

February 9, 2008 – A Walkathon on Siesta Key to benefit wounded veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan is being sponsored by the Florida Veterans for Common Sense on Mar. 30, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

“This special Walkathon comes from a deep interest in veterans helping veterans by creating an event where the public can get directly involved to support the troops by participation and making donations to the Haley House Fund supporting the James A. Haley Veterans Medical Center in Tampa,” Geoff Morris, walkathon project chairman for Florida Veterans for Common Sense, said.  The event is non-political. 

All proceeds from this fundraiser will be used to provide immediate help to the visiting families of veterans with blast injuries, those afflicted with spinal cord and brain injuries, and other injuries sustained while serving in Iraq and Afghanistan .

The most seriously injured soldiers of these wars are sent to the James A. Haley Veterans Medical Center in Tampa , noted as the busiest VA hospital in the United States , where doctors and staff treat and rehabilitate some of the most severely injured Troops of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. James A. Haley, VA Hospital is a Level 1 medical center and a high profile Polytrauma Center .  The sign at the entrance of the hospital says it all. “The Price of Freedom is Visible Here”.

America’s wounded service men and women need to know that their loved one’s are at their bedside, possibly during the worst time in their life, Morris noted. This is where the Haley House Fund comes to the rescue.

The primary goal of the Haley House Fund has been to provide temporary lodging and comfort for families of Veterans and Active Duty Soldiers being treated for life threatening injuries and diseases at James A. Haley VA Medical Center, located at 13000 Bruce B. Downs Blvd. , in Tampa .

Some injuries have been traumatic brain or skull injuries, spinal cord injuries, amputations, burns, bullet / shrapnel wounds and so much more. While these warriors are rehabilitating from their injuries, the Haley House Fund enables families to be at the bedside of their loved one. These families are instrumental in providing comfort to their loved one in a time of need.

The Haley House Fund, Inc is a not for profit charity corporation 501 © (3), national and community in graphic scope. The Fund functions 100{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} on donations from the public and from Grants. The 2007 Organizational budget was $162,000. Haley House is operated by volunteer staff of 5 unpaid Board Members and numerous volunteers. There is no salary or compensation.

Until August, 2004, these family members and other important persons to the veteran or active duty service member, were paying top rates at local hotels, living out of their cars, taking second mortgages, and maxing credit cards, just be near the VA Hospital and their loved one. Today the Haley House Fund provides a comfort home nearby the James A. Haley Hospital for family members to stay at no charge to them.

The Walkathon provides our communities a wonderful opportunity to help raise the funds necessary to support the men and women who are facing long term recovery from combat injuries suffered while protecting our freedoms, Morris said.

Contacts:

Geoff Morris       
Siesta Key Beach Walkathon Chairman   
Florida Veterans for Common Sense    
Morris & Widman PA
245 N. Tamiami Trail, Suite E
Venice , FL 34285
(941) 484-0646
geoffm@mwk-law.com     

Mary Ann Keckler, Director
Haley House Fund, Inc.
P.O. Box 701
Brandon, FL 33509
(813) 468-0361
maryannkeck@aol.com

Web Sites:

James A. Haley VA Medical Center: http://www1.va.gov/visn8/tampa/

Haley House Fund, Inc: http://www.haleyhousefund.com/

Posted in Veterans for Common Sense News | Comments Off on Florida VCS Holds Benefit for Wounded Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans on March 30