In Gitmo

In Gitmo   This week in New Yorker magazine, Jane Mayer writes about the United States military detention center in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and raises new questions about the treatment of detainees. Here, with Amy Davidson, Mayer talks about interrogation and the war on terror.

AMY DAVIDSON: You visited the detention center at Guantánamo Bay. What was your impression of the place? What did, and didn’t, you get to see?

JANE MAYER: I was surprised by how much the Department of Defense let me see. They clearly are waging a tough public-relations battle to try to improve Guantánamo’s image in the world, and to do so they have apparently decided that they need to get better press coverage. The soldiers and officers I met there seemed very dedicated and committed to the mission, and they seemed at least publicly convinced that most of the detainees would present a serious threat to U.S. security if they had the chance to get out.

However, while military officials led me on a tour of Camp Delta, where most of the detainees are housed, they would not allow interviews with the detainees. Under these circumstances, only one side of the story was available: that of the U.S. military.

With this major caveat, they bent over backward to allow access to a number of fascinating scenes in Guantánamo, including allowing me to attend one of the Administrative Review Board hearings in which detainees can challenge their status as a danger to the U.S. In the one I attended, the detainee, whose name I had to agree not to release, demanded to see the evidence that the U.S. had against him, so that he could refute it. But much of the evidence, U.S. military authorities told him, was classified, and he would not be allowed to see it. The detainee, a Saudi, wore handcuffs, ankle cuffs, and a belly chain, and was shackled to a bolt in the floor. He spoke very little English, and became increasingly frustrated and angry. At one point, instead of relying on his translator, he started yelling at the three presiding military officers, “Shut up! Shut UP!”

I could not learn the disposition of his case, as the Review Board sends its recommendations in secret up the chain of command in the Department of Defense. What came through to me was the complete breakdown of communication and understanding between the U.S. officials and the detainee, and also the utter lack of due process. It looked like a court hearing, but there were no lawyers. And although the detainee had a military representative, he had no one to truly be an advocate for his interests. The refusal of the Review Board to share the evidence it had with the accused seemed radically out of synch with U.S. standards of justice.

On the surface, though, thanks to the presence of thousands of U.S. troops there, Guantánamo is becoming like a little American town. A Starbucks had recently opened, and a McDonald’s and several other restaurants did a brisk business. The area was unpleasantly wet and hot when I was there, but also surprisingly beautiful—lush and green, framed by hills of tropical jungle and blue mountain peaks. During their free hours, the soldiers swim at the coral beaches and dive. There’s even a golf course.

Your article this week is titled “The Experiment,” and you quote a lawyer for a detainee who, after describing alleged abuses, says, “The whole place appears to be one giant human experiment.” What kind of experiment does he mean?

The chief focus of the U.S. military detention center in Guantánamo Bay is to gain “actionable intelligence” by interrogating the detainees. Everything there is geared towards this end. The reason that some critics have called it a giant psychological experiment is that U.S. military officials have deployed Behavioral Science Consultation Teams, or bscts, to help devise and implement interrogation strategies—a melding of psychology and military intelligence. The psychologists and psychiatrists who work in these bscts apparently develop individually tailored psychological approaches aimed at creating rapport with—or, if necessary, breaking the resistance of—each detainee. The techniques they have employed, I was told, follow very closely the techniques studied and perfected by behavioral scientists working in a different capacity for the military since the Cold War.

You discuss the military’s Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape program, known by its acronym, sere. What is sere, and how is it related to the treatment of prisoners at Guantánamo?

Before 9/11, many of these behavioral scientists were affiliated with sere schools, where they used their knowledge to train U.S. soldiers how to resist coercive interrogations. But since 9/11, several sources told me, these same behavioral scientists began to “reverse engineer” the process. Instead of teaching resistance, they used their skills to help overcome resistance in U.S.-held detainees.

The sere program was designed to inoculate soldiers against the psychological coercion, abuse, and torture that they might be subjected to if they were captured. It was created after the Korean War, during which Americans were convinced that U.S. soldiers who were captured by the enemy would be “brainwashed” into giving up secrets. The school was expanded to include every branch of the service after the Vietnam War, when worries centered more on whether returning soldiers had been traumatized by their experiences. The curriculum was devised in part by behavioral scientists conversant in the sorts of nightmarish treatment that P.O.W.s have had to endure. The theory was that soldiers could be trained to resist such coercion if they had practice enduring it. So they went through a course of simulated abuse—all carefully calibrated and monitored to ensure that no U.S. soldier was actually hurt. Much of the curriculum is classified, but sources described some of the techniques to me. They include a number of methods aimed at increasing the soldiers’ stress levels to approximate acute anxiety. The Navy’s course actually has included a form of physical torture, waterboarding, while most of the courses mostly use less brutal psychological methods, such as sleep deprivation, hunger, hooding, exposure to temperature extremes, noxious noise, and gambits involving religion, flags, and sex.

What is a doctor’s obligation to a prisoner, a suspected terrorist, being held by his government?

A doctor’s first obligation is always, as the Hippocratic Oath puts it, to “do no harm.” But beyond that, there is a serious argument underway within the professional medical and psychological societies about whether medical personnel can and should participate in supporting interrogations. Doctors and psychologists, obviously, are citizens too, and when they’re in the military, they are often spoken of as having dual loyalties—to their patients and to their country. There seems to be a consensus, however, that while medical personnel may play non-treating roles in some circumstances, they should not take part in coercive, abusive, or torturous treatment of prisoners. This violates the World Medical Association’s 1975 protocol, and violates pretty much every other national and international standard. Nor can scientists participate in experimenting on human subjects without their informed consent, even for national-security reasons. It is this last bit that the Pentagon has reinterpreted. It has allowed non-treating medical personnel to assist in interrogations, and treating medical personnel to violate patient confidentiality if national security is at stake. The Pentagon argues that this is no different than policies inside U.S. prisons. But prisoners there, unlike those in Guantánamo, are covered by U.S. laws banning coercive interrogations.

You talk about a period in late 2002 and 2003 when there was a great deal of pressure on the interrogators at Guantánamo to get results. How high up does responsibility for what happens in an interrogation room go?

When the commanders in Guantánamo wanted permission to use more coercive interrogation methods than those allowed under the U.S. Military Code of Justice, their requests went up to the top of the Pentagon, to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. This is where responsibility resides.

The legal status of the prisoners at Guantánamo Bay has been the subject of much dispute. Under international law, what would the United States’ obligations be? Has the Administration lived up to—or recognized—those obligations?

Under the Geneva Conventions, which the Bush Administration decided not to abide by in their treatment of the Guantánamo prisoners, they would have had to do things very differently. The 1949 Geneva Convention requires the establishment of a “competent tribunal” to determine, on a case-by-case basis, if there is any doubt, whether a detainee should be designated a P.O.W. But when U.S. forces captured Al Qaeda and Taliban soldiers in late 2001 and early 2002, in Afghanistan, they were never given individual status-review hearings. As a result, critics say, a number of non-combatants were swept up along with them. If Geneva was followed the U.S.-held prisoners would not have had to answer questions beyond their name, rank, and serial number. In most cases, Geneva disallows any harsher treatment for prisoners who are non-cooperative. So the whole system of rewards and punishments that has been devised at Guantánamo would be out of bounds. Geneva also specifically bars coercive interrogations. And it also bars medical personnel from conducting “experiments” on prisoners.

We’ve heard a lot of terrible accounts from former Guantánamo prisoners. The military often responds by pointing out that an Al Qaeda training manual instructs its members to lie about their experiences in detention. How good is our information about what goes on there?

It’s hard to evaluate. The only truly non-partisan experts who have been allowed inside Guantánamo, and given access to the detainees there, are inspectors with the International Committee of the Red Cross. Their findings are confidential, shared only with the government. But several of their reports have been leaked, and what they have shown has been disconcerting. The I.C.R.C. has termed the treatment of detainees in Guantánamo in the recent past as “tantamount to torture.”

A Supreme Court decision last year found that prisoners in Guantánamo had a right to challenge their detention and, at least in theory, gave them more access to lawyers. How has that changed the situation? How much have lawyers been able to do for the detainees?

Lawyers, whose presence inside Guantánamo was never anticipated by the Bush Administration—it argued that the detainees had no right to representation—have actually changed things quite a lot. Although only a few dozen lawyers have been allowed limited visits with their clients in the camp, they have brought unwanted outside pressure on the military to improve conditions. They have pushed hard to expose and reduce abuse, and to improve medical and psychological treatment. In response to the Supreme Court ruling, the military instituted a form of legal process in which the prisoners can challenge their detention, known as Combatant Status Review Tribunals, or C.S.R.T.s. Whether this process provides the detainees with adequate due process has yet to be decided by the higher courts. There are conflicting opinions at the lower levels, which have been appealed.

What kind of line can be drawn between the treatment of prisoners in Guantánamo and the abuses at Abu Ghraib?

One obvious line is the career trajectory of General Geoffrey D. Miller, who was commander first in Guantánamo, and then was sent to Iraq to oversee Abu Ghraib. It was General Miller who created the bscts to aid in interrogations. He imported the bsct idea with him when he went to Iraq. Some suggest the sere techniques migrated this way, as well.

There have been a number of internal military inquiries into the treatment of prisoners at Guantánamo. How good a job have they done?

Hard to tell, since the most recent report, by Vice-Admiral Albert T. Church III, is still almost entirely classified. His conclusion, that abuse of detainees was an aberration, rather than the result of any policy, I think is disputable given the systematic way in which the sere curriculum seems to have been adapted to interrogation uses in Cuba, Iraq, and elsewhere.

A surprising part of the story is the role of the F.B.I. in challenging the Pentagon. Can you talk about that a little? Specifically, it seems that there are two issues: on the one hand, some agents simply objected to the treatment they witnessed; on the other, they had a different approach to interrogation, based more on building rapport, and different goals.

The F.B.I. has had fierce fights with the Pentagon over the interrogation methods used in Guantánamo and elsewhere. The F.B.I., to begin with, is a law-enforcement agency, geared towards prosecuting cases in the U.S. courts. The Pentagon is more interested in gaining actionable intelligence than in bringing wrongdoers to justice. The F.B.I. requires its agents to read suspects their Miranda rights, and to question them in ways that are consonant with American law, so that when cases do get to trial they aren’t thrown out. U.S. courts, for instance, would never allow confessions from suspects who have been coerced into implicating themselves. But as your question points out, the divide goes beyond just what the U.S. courts allow. The F.B.I., which has had years of experience questioning suspects, has found that non-coercive interrogation methods yield more reliable results. F.B.I. officials acknowledge that force may get someone to talk, but it won’t necessarily get them to tell the truth. Force often yields false confessions. One agent told me, “I’d confess to being the third gunman on the grassy knoll if you tortured me. But what good would that be? Not only am I giving you misleading information, you also haven’t solved the crime.”

This raises the question of whether torture works. Is it a mistake to think that it does?

Many experts think so. The Israeli Supreme Court, for instance, banned the use of torture in interrogations in 1999, after finding that it resulted in too many false confessions and too much moral baggage. An interesting case study is discussed in this article, involving the alleged twentieth hijacker, Mohammed al-Qahtani. He was subjected to extremely harsh interrogation, which some would define as torture. In the end, we know he confessed that he was, as suspected, sent by Al Qaeda to assist in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. But was this a triumph? Traditional non-coercive legal methods had already proven this to U.S. law-enforcement authorities. Qahtani was stopped in Orlando, Florida, by an alert immigration agent, who refused him entry based on doubts about his reason for entering the country. After he was later captured in Afghanistan, he was sent to Guantánamo, where he refused to give his name. A fingerprint check identified him, and a subsequent search of phone and parking records revealed that he was connected to Mohammed Atta. None of this required torture. It just required smart (and legal) police work. So, after months of extremely harsh treatment, Qahtani essentially confirmed what the government already knew about him. One of the sources I interviewed asked, given the international political outrage that Guantánamo has provoked, “Was it worth it?” It’s a question that Congress and the public have not yet really stepped up to answer.

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England to Plead Not Guilty in Second Trial

FORT HOOD, Tex., July 7 — Attorneys for Lynndie R. England, the Army private who appeared in iconic photos of inmate abuse at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison, said Thursday that she will plead not guilty when the Army reopens her court-martial later this summer on charges of mistreating Iraqi prisoners.

Earlier this year, the 22-year-old soldier had agreed to a plead guilty to several charges in return for reduced prison time. But an Army judge threw out her plea in May, saying that the confession she had worked out with Army prosecutors was not believable.


Pvt. Lynndie R. England, second from left, arrives at a pretrial hearing. Pvt. Lynndie R. England, second from left, arrives at a pretrial hearing. (Reuters)

The Army has since filed a new case against England, including most but not all of the charges she faced before. The announcement Thursday that she intends to fight the charges in court means her court-martial — to be held here in August or September — could be the most dramatic legal case spawned by the Abu Ghraib scandal.

It is still possible that England could negotiate a new plea bargain with prosecutors. But that seems unlikely, because the presiding judge at her court-martial will be Army Col. James L. Pohl, the man who threw out England’s earlier guilty plea. At a preliminary hearing Thursday, Pohl rejected a defense motion that he turn the case over to another judge.

Pohl ruled in May that England’s guilty plea was invalid because he found evidence that she felt she was following orders of her superiors when she posed in photos with naked prisoners. That belief constitutes a valid defense to the charges, the judge said, and so a guilty plea was not permitted under military law.

The abuse at Abu Ghraib became public in the spring of last year with the release of scores of photographs that showed Iraqi prisoners, some of them naked, hooded and shackled, being taunted and harassed by England and other U.S. soldiers. The graphic pictures prompted denunciation of the U.S. Army around the world.

In the wave of investigations that followed, Pentagon reports blamed Army commanders at the prison as well as senior commanders in Iraq for Abu Ghraib scandal.

In the criminal courts, though, the Army has prosecuted only junior enlisted soldiers. No officers at the prison, and no one in the overall chain of command, has faced criminal charges in the case; some officers were given reprimands.

Seven enlisted soldiers have pleaded guilty. Pvt. Charles A. Graner Jr., identified by the Army as the ringleader of the prison guards, was convicted of abuse charges in a court-martial and sentenced to 10 years in jail. England, a reservist from West Virginia, was an office clerk with no training as a prison guard when the Army stationed her at Iraq’s toughest prison in 2003. At 19, she was the most junior soldier charged in the Abu Ghraib case.

Although she signed a confession saying she recognized her conduct at the prison was wrong, she subsequently told Pohl that she only did what Graner told her to do. “He had the corrections-officer background, and I didn’t,” she said.

England’s lawyers unsuccessfully asked the judge Thursday to throw out all charges against her on grounds that a new court-martial would subject her to double jeopardy.

In the May court-martial, England’s attorneys presented testimony from former officers at Abu Ghraib who described the prison as a putrid, dangerous, overcrowded facility where inmates and their American guards were constantly sick, U.S. soldiers received “minimal” training, and Army commanders “totally failed to apply the Geneva Conventions.”

That line of testimony, blaming senior officers for the prison scandal, will likely be repeated when England goes on trial again.

If convicted, she faces a maximum of 11 years in prison, plus a dishonorable discharge. But if the soldier is acquitted, the result would constitute a challenge to statements by President Bush that the Abu Ghraib scandal was solely the fault of a few rogue enlisted soldiers.

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Bush Answers Gonzales Critics

President Bush tried Wednesday to quell the conservative criticism engulfing Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, his longtime adviser, and scolded special interest groups for exploiting the debate over the next Supreme Court justice to raise funds.

In his first news conference since Justice Sandra Day O’Connor announced her retirement Friday, Bush said he will not require her replacement to pass a test on abortion or same-sex marriage. He offered a robust defense of Gonzales, the one potential nominee who has stirred vigorous opposition among the president’s own conservative supporters.

In the wake of Bush’s stern warning, delivered from his first stop on a European trip, many conservatives ratcheted down their rhetoric or went silent altogether, but others ignored the president and pressed their attack on Gonzales for not aggressively opposing abortion and affirmative action. Further fueling the debate over the potential nominee, Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) offered qualified words of support for Gonzales.

The continued focus on the attorney general underscored how the selection process has swiftly evolved into a Gonzales-or-someone-else choice. Whether Bush views it that way or not, senators and interest groups on both sides have concentrated their attention on Gonzales’s record and perceived views on the theory that the president’s friend and confidant has emerged as the front-runner. These lawmakers and groups are publicly discussing other possible candidates, almost all federal appellate judges, almost as if they were indistinguishable and relevant mainly as the alternative to Gonzales.

Bush seemed aggravated by the attacks on his friend, who followed him from Texas to Washington and served as White House counsel before taking over the Justice Department in February. “All of a sudden this fellow, who is a good public servant and a really fine person, is under fire,” Bush told reporters at a news conference with Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. “I don’t like it at all.”

Bush offered no clues to his thinking about various candidates but promised to probe the character, not the legal rulings, of prospective justices during interviews at the White House after he returns at the end of the week. Senators, he added, should ignore the intense pressure coming from partisan groups, which plan to spend an unprecedented $100 million to influence the choice.

“I hope the United States Senate conducts themselves in a way that brings dignity to the process and that the senators don’t listen to the special interest groups, particularly those on the extremes that are trying to exploit this opportunity for not only . . . what they may think is right but also for their own fundraising capabilities,” Bush said.

In hopes of bolstering his own lobbying campaign, Bush tapped former senator Fred D. Thompson (R-Tenn.) to escort the eventual nominee around the Senate. Thompson, who retired from public office two years ago to return to his acting career and now plays a district attorney on NBC’s “Law & Order,” will serve much as Sen. John C. Danforth (R-Mo.) did during the confirmation of Clarence Thomas in 1991.

“It’s a smart thing to do because the people in the White House can’t spend all their time on this” and Thompson is “extremely well regarded,” said C. Boyden Gray, who was White House counsel to Bush’s father and founded the Committee for Justice to support the current president’s nominees.

Bush got support from an unexpected quarter Wednesday when Reid, the Senate’s top Democrat, spoke out favorably about Gonzales and criticized “the far right” for attacking him while the president is overseas. “Alberto Gonzales is qualified,” Reid told reporters in Las Vegas. “He’s attorney general of the United States and a former Texas judge. But having said that he’s qualified, I don’t know if he’d have an easy way through.”

The positive assessment contrasted with the broader Democratic critique of Gonzales for his role in drafting detention policies that critics say led to torture of suspected terrorists and other prisoners. Reid joined most Senate Democrats in voting against Gonzales’s confirmation as attorney general in February. Reid stirred criticism from within his own party earlier this year for suggesting that he would vote to confirm Justice Antonin Scalia if he were nominated for chief justice.

Bush’s entreaty to conservatives to stop assailing Gonzales was reinforced by White House allies making conference calls emphasizing that such internal division only helps the opposition. “There’s a sense that the left is going to create dissension among the right, and the media loves that story . . . waiting for the president to tell the wackos to stuff it,” said Sean Rushton, executive director of the Committee for Justice. “But the president and his staff have their eye on the horizon” and will not be drawn in, he said.

If anything, some people close to Bush said, the attacks on Gonzales might push Bush closer to choosing him. Some conservatives came to that conclusion in deciding to mute their public comments. “I don’t think a lot of these attacks are helpful, and they might backfire,” said one conservative activist who opposes Gonzales.

But not all agreed. Manuel A. Miranda, former counsel to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), forwarded an e-mail message to journalists Wednesday outlining reported Gonzales remarks that called into question his position on Roe v. Wade , the decision establishing a constitutional right to abortion. In further comments distributed by the Free Congress Foundation, a conservative advocacy group, Miranda expanded on his criticism.

“It’s not that we have anything personal against Alberto Gonzales, but he has said some things that are very discomforting,” Miranda said. Free Congress paraphrased Miranda as saying that Gonzales’s comments on various cases “show that he is not a movement conservative” and adding: “We don’t know what he really thinks on many, many issues. That is something that conservatives on this nomination cannot tolerate.”

Miranda left his Senate post last year after an investigation by the Senate sergeant-at-arms found that he and another GOP staffer had systematically downloaded and leaked thousands of Democratic files dealing with judicial nominations. Miranda denied any illegal actions.

The president’s comments about the Supreme Court came during a brief news conference with reporters, his only scheduled public appearance during this international trip. Bush said he is spending much of his time reviewing the backgrounds of possible nominees and talking to staff about the candidates’ pros and cons. He plans to meet with senators early next week before interviewing the candidates.

“I will let my legal experts deal with the ramifications of legal opinions,” Bush said. “I will try to assess their character, their interests.” While Bush initially considered announcing his pick next week, aides said there is talk of delaying the decision to protect the nominee from prolonged attacks from the left or right. Either way, Bush wants the new justice approved by early October.

Bush said the criteria for the job are simple. “I’ll pick people who, one, can do the job, people who are honest, people who are bright, and people who will strictly interpret the Constitution and not use the bench to legislate from.” Bush was mum on who meets such criteria.

 

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Johnny Comes Marching Home to Loans

 Maybe figuring that it is mostly worried moms keeping their kids home, the army, after its fourth straight month of recruitment shortfalls, has begun broadcasting a new series of TV ads. They feature young people telling their folks about the education benefits—up to $70,000 for college or $65,000 to repay student loans—and the chance to serve a worthy cause. For the brief idea about the income tax loans 2021 visit our site.

Kathy Allwein of Lebanon, Pennsylvania, found herself having that exact conversation with her younger son in 2002. Tony Allwein, now 24, graduated from Catholic school in 1999 and attended the Pennsylvania College of Technology, a public technical affiliate of Penn State, for three years, where he studied computer programming. He was putting himself through with student loans (now learning what VA home loan calculator is, alas!), and Kathy Allwein says the debt was a big factor in his decision to drop out and, soon after, join the army.

“I knew that getting my loans paid off would be a huge benefit for myself and my parents,” Tony Allwein, now stationed in Germany, said by e-mail. “Four years of service to erase a $19,000 debt seemed pretty good. The fact that I could finish my education in the army sounded really good.”

Now members of the anti-war group Military Families Speak Out, Kathy and her husband weren’t exactly thrilled. “We fought him every step of the way,” Kathy says. “Tony just told me I worried too much, that he wouldn’t have to go to Iraq.” The Allweins knew better, but at least, they thought, his education debt would be taken care of.

“That recruiter sat in our living room and promised the whole family that these loans would be taken care of in full,” Kathy says, her voice steely. “In his contract it was stated that they would take care of them.” In Iraq, Tony served as a rear gunner on a convoy, for a month or two lacking much needed body armor. His active duty ends in November 2006 and he is eligible to be called back for four years after that. And just last month, his family found out that his loans would not be repaid by the U.S. government. Not one cent.

“We kept getting hounded by these people,” Kathy says of the student loan collectors. “They kept calling and asking why these weren’t being paid. His recruiter told us it always takes a while, so just be patient and they’ll be taken care of. I went through my congressman and they sent me a packet of information that I did not understand. I have a friend who’s an attorney and she explained the whole thing to me.”

The fine print states that since Anthony’s loans came from from a private lender, not the government’s guaranteed federal student loan program, they weren’t covered. Private or alternative student loans  make up one of the fastest-growing sectors of the student loan market. You can get a fast loan from NeedMoneyNow and other such places these days with ease. Together they have an estimated volume of $10.5 billion in the 2003-04 school year (compared to a total of $81.5 billion in federal student loans). Marketed by most banks and all the big student loan companies, including Sallie Mae, private loans are the only choice for the growing number of students whose financial need goes beyond federally subsidized loan limits. But they feature higher interest rates and often fewer repayment options. Kathy said her family, which almost certainly would have been eligible for federal loans, was not aware of the difference when Tony went to school.

Tony’s recruiter said he wasn’t allowed to talk to the press. A military source did confirm the details of Allwein’s story, though, including that Anthony’s contract stated the loans would be repaid.

The Allweins are not the only family complaining that recruiters are getting desperate or sometimes misleading. With the war getting less popular every day, there have been reports of recruiters falsifying documents or passing recruits answers on the qualifying exam. The New York Times reported in May that recruiters are feeling pressure to bend the rules, even accepting one young man straight out of a psych ward. There has been talk of accepting older and less-educated people and overlooking a record of minor crimes.

For now, Kathy, an administrative assistant, and her husband, who works for the Hershey Company, will have to make those loan payments themselves. It will not be easy with their youngest soon heading to college. In a word, Kathy says, she feels “betrayed.”

Tony Allwein echoes his mother’s sentiments. “I really feel that I, as well as my parents, got screwed pretty badly. The reason I joined the army was to get rid of my loans. It was bad enough I was sent to fight a war I had no idea why I was fighting. Then I came back to Germany to find out my loans wouldn’t be paid, like my contract said.”

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‘I’m Not Going to Come Home’: One Marine’s Third Iraq Tour

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Shaded by a towering blue spruce in Wheeler Park stands a gray granite monument that honors this city’s men and women who have died in combat from the Spanish-American War to, as the memorial reads, “Iraqi Freedom.”

The name of Lance Cpl. Marty G. Mortenson was etched into the stone on the eve of Armed Forces Day in May. A month earlier, on April 20, Mortenson had been killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq.

Just a few months before he died, Mortenson sent his mother an e-mail: I am really sorry about [forgetting] your birthday . . . I am so streesed out that it is really bring [ing] me down. . . . I have had so much on my mind . . . going off to war 4 the 3rd time isn’t easy.

Mortenson was on his third tour — his third pump, in Marine jargon — in Iraq. He had spent his 20th, 21st and 22nd birthdays in Iraq. Before he left on his last tour, he told a friend in California: “It’s like three strikes, you’re out. I have a feeling I’m not going to come home.”

A generation ago in the Vietnam War, grunts had to survive 13 months and then knew they were going home for good. But the nature of an all-volunteer military has changed deployments and expectations for America’s troops.

With the military’s numbers at their lowest level in modern history, no draft to bring in new recruits and no end in sight to the U.S. deployment in Iraq, more American troops are likely to be going on multiple tours. The Army has sent multiple units to Iraq for second tours. The Marines, which deploy units for shorter stints, are embarking on third tours. Three infantry battalions and three rotary wing squadrons of Marines are on their third pump in Iraq.

At least 13 troops on their third tours, most of them Marines, have been killed.

“We’re not expanding numbers, and we’re not reducing our commitments around the world,” said University of North Carolina history professor Richard H. Kohn, a former chief of Air Force history at the Pentagon. “We’re taking it out of the hide, as they say in the military.”

“If they have to go back a second or third time, particularly a third time, is it really fair?” he said. “I would call that an extraordinary burden.”

Approximately 17,000 of the nation’s 191,000 Marines are stationed in Iraq. “We certainly understand the individual sacrifice to go over three times, but seven-month rotations ensure the right mix of people go over, and it keeps the deployment cycle down to a manageable rate,” said Maj. Jason Johnston, a Marine Corps spokesman. “As time goes on, we will see more and more of this.”

For Mortenson and the members of the 1st (infantry) Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, Calif., the orders for Iraq came in January 2003, in March 2004 and in February of this year.

“I remember before we went in, nobody’s ever been in combat and we didn’t know exactly what to expect. But we were all motivated that we could do it. We were really eager to go,” said Lance Cpl. Eric J. Young, 22. Like Mortenson, he was a squad automatic weapon (SAW) gunner in Alpha Company.

A year later, the second tour was greeted with a certain amount of confidence, he said. “We had an idea of what to expect this time: the heat, everything bad about Iraq.”

But learning about a third tour was tough.

“Those of us who had gone through [the first and second deployments] were pretty convinced we weren’t going to go back,” said Young, whose enlistment ends in August. “Honestly, I was kind of pissed off about going back.”

Cpl. Matt Buchanan, 22, a machine-gun squad leader in Charlie Company of the 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, agreed. He was shot in the arm during his third tour this spring and was sent back early to wait out his September separation from the service.

“I thought, ‘You have got to be kidding me.’ I could not believe they were doing that,” Buchanan said. “I can accept that because it comes with the job. But the worst part was telling my family.”

Mortenson enlisted in May 2002 and was in the first large U.S. ground force to go into Iraq on the first night of the war in March 2003. The battalion secured a facility in the Rumaila oil fields along the Iraq-Kuwait border and pushed more than 300 miles north to Baghdad. Before returning stateside in August, they had engaged in fierce fighting with the Fedayeen and had taken over a mosque where Saddam Hussein had been sighted.

By fall 2003, Mortenson knew his battalion was headed overseas again, this time to Okinawa by mid-December and perhaps on to Iraq. The training cycle in Okinawa, however, was curtailed by February 2004.

“We were discouraged that he was going to miss another Christmas, and then he was only in Okinawa a month and he called and said, ‘They’re moving up Iraq,’ ” said Mortenson’s mother, Ruth.

By March 2004, Mortenson and Alpha Company were in Fallujah. They commandeered an old potato chip factory they nicknamed FOB (Forward Operating Base) Wounded Knee and ran security patrols out of it.

It was during that first battle for Fallujah in April 2004 that Mortenson bailed out his entire platoon. A SAW gunner, Mortenson sprinted more than 300 feet under intense enemy fire to set up his machine gun to provide cover fire for his unit. He earned the nickname “Mad Dog” and was awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal for Valor in Combat.

Mortenson was back at Camp Pendleton in late summer 2004. He told a National Public Radio reporter who was interviewing Marines upon returning from their second tour: “I’ve been there twice, and no, I don’t want to go back.”

His mother recalled what he told her: “I’ve had it.”

But by Christmas, Alpha Company knew it was headed back to Iraq. “You’re thinking, we’ve had two pretty rough times. Is he going to have to go back?” Ruth Mortenson recalled. “And he said ‘yes.’ “

Mortenson spent his pre-deployment time off at home in January, snowboarding the mountains outside Flagstaff in a T-shirt. He wanted to soak up all the cold he could before going back to Iraq, his family said. He baby-sat his nephews and built them forts in their living room. He took his “dream girl,” a former classmate he knew would never agree to a real date with him, to lunch. He said he wanted a grilled steak, so his father, Ken, put up a tarp in the back yard and shoveled the snow out of the barbecue pit. 

“We realized we had to make the most we could of when he was home,” Ruth Mortenson said.

By March, Mortenson and the rest of his unit were in Ramadi — just kind of doing a lot of patrols looking for the enemies, and guarding iraqi political centers, Mortenson wrote his parents on March 13.

He asked his parents to send phone cards and batteries, and he tried to calm their fears.

the ieds or . . . road side bombs, they happen all the time and arent very effective, the enemey only uses them because they can detonate them from far away from the safety of us . . . i am fine dont worry, Mortenson wrote on March 27.

In Flagstaff, the Mortensons immersed themselves in their work and in their prayer and Bible study groups. “We went on with our lives, trusting we would hear from him eventually and he would be all right,” his mother said.

In April, Mortenson began writing home about life after the Marines, and by the middle of the month he knew his third tour was to end in mid-October. He wrote that he was interested in joining the National Guard, working as a firefighter or attending community college to learn auto body work .

i am trying to put out ideas because on may 19th I only have a year left. that only leaves me with 6-7 months when I get back . . . not a lot of time, Mortenson wrote on April 18.

Early on the afternoon of April 20, Mortenson and Cpl. Kelly M. Cannan, another third-timer in Iraq, were on their way to catch reported terrorists at a cafe in Ramadi when a roadside bomb went off beside their Humvee. Cannan was killed instantly. Mortenson sustained a massive head wound and died hours later at a military medical facility in Baghdad.

In Arizona, two Marines arrived early on the evening of April 20 at the Mortensons’ blue-and-white tract home in Flagstaff. They asked for Ruth, the beneficiary listed on her son’s $250,000 military life insurance policy.

Five hundred mourners packed Flagstaff Christian Fellowship for Mortenson’s funeral on April 27. The family’s scrapbook is six inches thick, with hundreds of sympathy cards and e-mails from friends and public officials such as Flagstaff’s mayor and City Council members, President Bush, and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Ruth Mortenson recalled those days before Christmas when she first heard that her son might have to go back a third time and her worries were renewed.

“If they go back, can they put him someplace easy?” she remembered thinking. “But Marines don’t go to easy places.”

Researcher Madonna Lebling contributed to this report.

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UK aid funds Iraqi torture units

British and American aid intended for Iraq’s hard-pressed police service is being diverted to paramilitary commando units accused of widespread human rights abuses, including torture and extra-judicial killings, The Observer can reveal.

Iraqi Police Service officers said that ammunition, weapons and vehicles earmarked for the IPS are being taken by shock troops at the forefront of Iraq’s new dirty counter-insurgency war.

The allegations follow a wide-ranging investigation by this paper into serious human rights abuses being conducted by anti-insurgency forces in Iraq. The Observer has seen photographic evidence of post-mortem and hospital examinations of alleged terror suspects from Baghdad and the Sunni Triangle which demonstrate serious abuse of suspects including burnings, strangulation, the breaking of limbs and – in one case – the apparent use of an electric drill to perform a knee-capping.

The investigation revealed:

· A ‘ghost’ network of secret detention centres across the country, inaccessible to human rights organisations, where torture is taking place.

· Compelling evidence of widespread use of violent interrogation methods including hanging by the arms, burnings, beatings, the use of electric shocks and sexual abuse.

· Claims that serious abuse has taken place within the walls of the Iraqi government’s own Ministry of the Interior.

· Apparent co-operation between unofficial and official detention facilities, and evidence of extra-judicial executions by the police.

The issue of increasing human rights abuses has been raised with the new Iraqi government by the Foreign Office, the US State Department and the United Nations. British Embassy officials in Baghdad have been briefed on the crisis by concerned senior Iraqi officials on several occasions.

The Ministry of Defence confirmed that it has spent £27 million in gift aid on the Iraqi security services, which provided guns, ammunition, and public order equipment such as protective vests and armoured Land Rovers. An MoD source said the majority of this material went to the police. A further £20m went to the police from the government’s Global Conflict Prevention Pool, jointly funded by the MoD, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Department for International Development.

Despite that, the British government has, until now, remained silent in public on the issue of the country’s widening human rights crisis.

Liberal Democrat defence spokesman Michael Moore called on ministers to make an immediate statement in the House of Commons: ‘These are serious reports that go to the heart of the question of the coalition’s oversight of the security situation in Iraq. The Foreign Office and the Ministry of Defence must urgently inform Parliament about the scope of their investigation into these allegations,’ he said.

The Foreign Office said last night that it was taking the reports of abuse ‘very seriously’. It issued detailed responses to the claims: ‘We are aware and deeply concerned by reports of detainee abuse by Iraqi police officers and of men in police uniforms committing serious crimes, whether these men are genuine policemen or not. Any abuse of detainees is unacceptable.’

An MoD spokesman told The Observer: ‘We are aware of the allegations. We have raised this with the Iraqi government at the highest levels in Baghdad and Basra.’

Privately, there is a growing belief that complaints are being stonewalled.

The investigation raises questions about the British government’s commitment to denying aid to governments that tolerate or encourage human rights abuses.

International and Iraqi officials claim the use of torture has become more extensive since the country’s first democratically-elected government was sworn in.

Steve Crawshaw of Human Rights Watch,said: ‘There has been the attempt to suggest that because Saddam’s regime is over now everything is rosy in Iraq. What is happening in official places in Iraq is simply horrific and must be stopped.’

The Foreign Office stressed: ‘Any abuse of detainees is unacceptable. As soon as we become aware of any allegations of abuse we raise them at the highest levels in Basra and Baghdad.

‘We would expect them to publish the findings of any investigations, prosecute those found to have carried out any abuse, punish those found guilty regardless of rank or background, and take all steps to prevent any recurrence.’

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Two U.S. troops found dead in Afghanistan

KABUL (Reuters) – Two U.S. special forces soldiers who went missing in eastern Afghanistan a week ago have been found dead and one rescued, but the whereabouts of a fourth remains unknown, the U.S. military said on Tuesday.

The bodies of the soldiers, part of a four-man Navy SEAL reconnaissance team that went missing during fighting with militants in Kunar province, were found during a combat operation there on Monday, a military statement said.

The soldiers went missing last Tuesday just before a U.S. helicopter sent to rescue them was shot down by militants, killing all 16 U.S. Special Forces soldiers aboard.

“The two service members were taken to the U.S. military hospital at Bagram Airfield where they were pronounced dead,” it said referring to the main U.S. base to the north of Kabul.

“Another member of the force was located and airlifted to the Bagram hospital with non-life-threatening injuries,” it said referring to a rescue first confirmed on Monday.

“The whereabouts of one service member remains unknown,” it added.

The statement did not say how the soldiers, identified by U.S. officials as Navy SEAL commandos trained to operate behind enemy lines, had died.

U.S. spokeswoman Lieutenant Cindy Moore said a major anti-militant operation codenamed “Redwing” was continuing in Kunar, one of the aims of which was to find the missing commando.

She said she had no information to indicate he may have been captured — contrary to Taliban claims.

Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi said last week that video of a captured soldier would be provided to news organizations and photographs posted on the Taliban Web site — www.alemarah.com — but neither appears to have happened.

Hakimi also said seven U.S. “spies” had been killed by the guerrillas before insurgents shot down a helicopter sent to rescue them, killing all 16 U.S. Special Forces soldiers aboard.

HEAVIEST CASUALTIES

The helicopter casualties were the heaviest for U.S. forces in a combat incident in Afghanistan since they overthrew the Taliban in late 2001 and came amid stepped up militant violence ahead of Sept. 18 parliamentary elections.

Confirmation of the U.S. deaths brought to 32 the number of U.S. soldiers killed in militant-related violence since March, while 15 other soldiers and three civilian contractors died in a helicopter crash caused by a dust storm in April.

The deaths have made 2005 the bloodiest year for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since the Taliban’s fall, but total U.S. casualties remain a fraction of those on Washington’s other key front in Iraq.

Kunar Governor Assadullah Wafa said on Monday that 17 civilians, including women and children, had been killed in a U.S. airstrike on Friday as part of the effort to find the missing soldiers.

President Hamid Karzai was “saddened and distressed” by reports of the civilian deaths, government spokesman Jawed Ludin said on Tuesday, adding that such deaths could not be justified.

The U.S. military said on Monday it had killed an “unknown” number of militants and civilians in the strike on a militant compound and regretted the loss of innocent life.

“There is no way, obviously, that the killings of civilians can be justified,” Ludin told a news briefing, adding that the incident showed the need to rethink strategy to target militant leaders, their networks and their support structures.

“We cannot explain to our own people why they should suffer in our fight against terrorism,” he said. “Terrorists are killing them and they are also suffering from our operations — that’s a very sad situation.”

The U.S. military also said on Tuesday that six suspects were arrested in Kunar on Monday after U.S. forces discovered a weapons cache and Taliban propaganda materials northwest of its capital Asadabad. It said the cache included materials that could be used to make bombs.

(Additional reporting by Yousuf Azimy and Ahmad Sear)

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56 Founders with Common Sense: Our Nation’s Declaration of Independence

IN CONGRESS, July 4, 1776.

The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America,

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.–Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.

He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.

He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.

He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.

He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.

He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.

He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation: For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us: For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States: For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world: For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent: For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury: For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences: For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies:For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.

He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.

He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.

He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.

He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.

He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.

In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress in the most humble terms: Our repeated Petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A Prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our Brittish brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends.

We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.

The 56 signatures on the Declaration:

Georgia:
   Button Gwinnett
   Lyman Hall
   George Walton

North Carolina:
   William Hooper
   Joseph Hewes
   John Penn

South Carolina:
   Edward Rutledge
   Thomas Heyward, Jr.
   Thomas Lynch, Jr.
   Arthur Middleton

Massachusetts:
John Hancock

Maryland:
Samuel Chase
William Paca
Thomas Stone
Charles Carroll of Carrollton

Virginia:
George Wythe
Richard Henry Lee
Thomas Jefferson
Benjamin Harrison
Thomas Nelson, Jr.
Francis Lightfoot Lee
Carter Braxton

Pennsylvania:
Robert Morris
Benjamin Rush
Benjamin Franklin
John Morton
George Clymer
James Smith
George Taylor
James Wilson
George Ross

Delaware:
Caesar Rodney
George Read
Thomas McKean

New York:
William Floyd
Philip Livingston
Francis Lewis
Lewis Morris

New Jersey:
Richard Stockton
John Witherspoon
Francis Hopkinson
John Hart
Abraham Clark

New Hampshire:
Josiah Bartlett
William Whipple

Massachusetts:
Samuel Adams
John Adams
Robert Treat Paine
Elbridge Gerry

Rhode Island:
Stephen Hopkins
William Ellery

Connecticut:
Roger Sherman
Samuel Huntington
William Williams
Oliver Wolcott

New Hampshire:
Matthew Thornton

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Veterans Affairs deep in the red and going deeper

Veterans Affairs deep in the red and going deeper

WASHINGTON – Fred Malphurs has canceled plans to replace equipment, postponed two new outpatient clinics and holds a waiting list of 7,844 people who want appointments at veterans hospitals and clinics in North Florida and South Georgia.

Malphurs, director of the veterans health-care network that straddles the two states, said he told superiors in the Department of Veterans Affairs last September that his 11 facilities, including hospitals in Gainesville and Lake City, expected to be $108 million in the red for 2005.

Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill professed shock last week at news that the VA faces a large budget shortfall this year and an even wider gap in 2006, but Malphurs did not.

“It’s not surprising to me,” he said.

VA officials say they will divert $1 billion from maintenance, equipment and reserve accounts to cover a health-care funding gap through the 2005 fiscal year that ends Sept. 30. In the next fiscal year, the shortfall could be as much as $2.7 billion, the VA said last week.

Criticism fell on VA officials and President Bush as the political and concrete effects of the crunch sank in.

The Bush administration admitted for the first time that despite substantial funding increases since 2001, two wars and policy choices have left the VA short on cash.

In response, the House and Senate passed different solutions for this year and then left for the Fourth of July break without reaching agreement. They have yet to tackle the larger funding dilemma in the 2006 budget and possibly beyond.

The VA said its models for health care enrollment in the 2005 fiscal year assumed 23,553 patients would be veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. A new estimate in March boosted the figure to 103,000 – which represents $273 million of the 2005 shortfall in the roughly $28-billion health-care budget.

A continuing influx of older veterans accounts for most of the shortfalls this year and next, but the VA admits the wars are pinching hospitals and clinics after months of downplaying their effect.

Now, lawmakers don’t trust the VA to predict its true needs. Democrats blame the Bush administration for deliberately lowballing VA budget requests since 2002 in an effort to balance the books.

“The buck stops, as Harry Truman said, with a man named George Bush,” Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada said.

‘An embarrassment’

Embarrassed and angry, lawmakers in both parties vow to plug the holes.

“Count on us,” Rep. C.W. Bill Young, a Florida Republican who chairs the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, assured VA Secretary James Nicholson.

The finger pointing and unusually sharp debate may offer veterans groups their hardest evidence yet that health care funding should not be part of the annual budget process. Veterans groups want funding to be automatic, like an entitlement program.

“This whole situation really makes the case for assured mandatory funding,” said Sen. Daniel Akaka of Hawaii, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.

Veterans see a silver lining in that kind or response.

“Every time we try to bring it up with some members of Congress, they say the system is working and they’re giving VA what they need,” said Joseph Violante, legislative director for Disabled American Veterans. “This clearly demonstrates that they’re not.”

Nicholson, who took office four months ago, is bearing the brunt of outrage.

House Appropriations Committee Chairman Jerry Lewis of California told Nicholson the VA’s failure to tell Congress of the funding problem months ago “borders on stupidity.”

Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., called the situation “a shabby way to treat America’s veterans.”

Nicholson, a veteran and former chairman of the Republican National Committee whose last post was ambassador to the Vatican, denied he tried to “hide the ball,” as one Republican put it.

“The defining element of what we do at VA is take care of our veterans,” he said.

But Republicans, in particular, are stung.

In April, Republican senators helped defeat a Democratic effort led by Sen. Patty Murray of Washington to add $2 billion to the 2005 budget. Nicholson had assured Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas, chairwoman of the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations Subcommittee, in a letter that more money wasn’t needed.

“It was a frustration to me,” Sen. Larry Craig, the Idaho Republican who chairs the Veterans Affairs Committee, said last week of being wrong, “and an embarrassment.”

Laying blame

Nicholson testified the VA discovered the shortfall during a midyear review in March that showed enrollment for 2005 would increase by 5.2 percent instead of the predicted 2.3 percent. Now, 2006 enrollment is expected to rise 6 percent instead of 2.4 percent. The problem became public during questioning at a June 23 hearing.

Nicholson said that because the VA could use reserves and money intended for maintenance and equipment, the department had the 2005 shortfall under control. He said congressional staff was informed.

“I don’t think the VA has been forthcoming,” said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., a member of the veterans panel.

Democrats say regional VA officials warned them months ago that they were in trouble, which led Democrats to seek more money in 2005. The comments from Malphurs appear to confirm that. He said deficit projections last year resulted in savings directives from above “so we wouldn’t go belly up.”

Last week, the Senate passed a $1.5 billion amendment to an Interior Department spending bill intended to cover this year’s VA shortfall and some of next year’s.

The House only approved $975 million, an amount the administration requested on Thursday. Senators dug in and demanded more.

Congress adjourned for Independence Day at an impasse.

The administration and some GOP leaders have tried to clamp down on VA spending, which has risen 40 percent since 2001.

House leaders this year replaced the chairman of the House veterans panel, who often sided with veterans who complained of inadequate funding. And the previous VA secretary, Anthony Principi, said last year that the White House budget for 2005 was $1.2 billion less than he requested.

Nicholson blamed the shortfalls on models used by the VA to predict growth in the health care system, which don’t account for uncertainties of war or include long-term care, dental needs, prosthetics and several other health care areas.

The administration says the shortfall next year compared to the president’s budget plan could be up $1.6 billion. That assumes Congress will approve Bush’s proposed enrollment fees and drug co-payment increases that lawmakers have repeatedly rejected. Without those added fees, add another $1.1 billion to the gap.

The VA also blames a data lag. Projections for 2005 were based on data from 2002. Projections for 2006 are based on 2003 data, and so on.

“We have computers for crying out loud,” said Rep. Michael Bilirakis, a Florida Republican who chairs the Veterans Affairs Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee. “Can’t we do better than that?”

Rep. Bob Filner, Democrat of California, asked Nicholson to resign, but he refused.

“The model is not the problem,” Filner told Nicholson during a hearing. “You are the problem and the president is the problem.”

I-Told-You-So’s are plentiful among veterans and their allies who have complained of crisis for years, but what to do? The VA is working on its 2007 budget using models it says it can’t trust.

“We are in a combat era,” Nicholson told House members. “We’re going to have to calculate as best we can what that means.”

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What Iraq needs is a Walter Cronkite

  What Iraq needs is a Walter Cronkite President Bush went on the air this week to pretend again that things are OK in Iraq. Shades of President Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam nearly 40 years ago.

The most important similarity between Iraq and Vietnam is that both Democratic and Republican presidents lied to us in wartime. To refresh your memory, here’s how we got out of the Vietnam quagmire:

•Walter Cronkite, CBS-TV news anchor known as “the most trusted man in America,” after a combat tour of Vietnam in 1968 declared, “There is no way this war can be justified any longer.”

•Johnson lamented to aides, “If I’ve lost Cronkite, I’ve lost middle America.” He announced he would not run for re-election.

The crucial difference between Vietnam and Iraq is that there is no Cronkite to call Bush’s bluff. Without a strong, trusted, non-political voice, too many of us remain Bush-blinded. Bush tried keeping the wool over our eyes again Tuesday on national TV by repeatedly tying Iraq to 9/11. That charge is as phony as his discredited prewar claim that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.

Most of us who have had personal war experiences strongly believe this great country is worth fighting for at risk of lives. My World War II Bronze Star and Combat Infantryman’s Badge on the wall behind my desk remind me of that daily.

They also remind me that war is hell, that we must fully support our servicemen and women and put their lives at risk only for honest and just and noble causes.

That’s why I’m convinced the best way to support our troops in Iraq is to bring them home. Sooner rather than later.

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