Editorial Column: A Truth-Teller for VA

December 9, 2008 – In the Bush administration, General Eric K. Shinseki committed the crime of truth-telling: He told the Senate in early 2003 that maintaining order in Iraq would take far more US troops than Donald Rumsfeld planned for. It cost him his job as Army chief of staff. That same virtue, honesty, should stand him in good stead now that President-elect Barack Obama has nominated him to be secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The choice is a stinging rebuke not just of Rumsfeld and President Bush for failing to take Shinseki’s advice on the Iraq war, but also of the administration’s weak effort to solve the medical, educational, emotional, and employment problems that veterans are having in returning to civilian life. Just as the Bush administration thought it could oust Saddam Hussein and create a peaceful, democratic Iraq with a bare-bones force, it has tried to skimp on veterans services.

If confirmed, Shinseki will face the challenge first of reducing the unconscionable six months to a year that it now takes many veterans to qualify for disability coverage, or to transition from military medical care to the veterans’ system. Also, veterans health facilities often lack the psychiatrists and psychologists needed to treat and counsel veterans suffering from traumatic brain injuries or post-traumatic stress disorder. The new secretary will have to oversee implementation of the expanded GI Bill educational benefits that Congress wisely approved earlier this year.

Military leaders and veterans organizations have hailed the nomination. Shinseki, who lost most of one foot in combat in Vietnam and had to persuade military doctors to let him return to duty, said discharged service members “deserve a smooth, error-free, no-fail, benefits-assured transition into our ranks as veterans.” That is a tall order.

While no one doubts that Shinseki would speak up if he thought Congress or the administration’s own numbers-crunchers were not giving him the money he needs, there is concern that his low-key style might not be up to the formidable task of shaking up the department’s bureaucracy. Critics said that, as Army chief of staff in 2002 and 2003, Shinseki should have fought harder to get Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, to plan for the several hundred thousand troops that Shinseki predicted would be needed to occupy Iraq.

But in that dispute, Shinseki could not count on the backing of the president. Obama made clear in nominating him Sunday that Shinseki would have that support. That should put some steel in his management of the department. It badly needs a forceful advocate at its head.

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Dec 9, VCS Update: Share Your Vision of Change with President-Elect Obama

Our New VA Secretary, Shaping Our Veterans’ Future, and VCS on Counterspin.

Veterans for Common Sense is pleased that President-elect Barack Obama chose General Shinseki as VA Secretary.  VCS told reporters that in February 2003, General Eric Shinseki honestly and correctly assessed our nation’s military needs before the invasion of Iraq in March 2003. This same level of candor and honesty will serve President-elect Obama well so he can quickly and accurately identify VA’s many challenges and then implement responsible solutions that take into consideration our veterans’ needs and concerns.

VCS will continue to lend our expertise and speak out about crucial changes to VA that will benefit our veterans. Please take a moment to set up a monthly contribution and support our efforts today.

VCS is very excited to announce a window of opportunity to let the executive branch decision makers know about our views on important issues like torture, domestic spying, veterans’ healthcare, and the Iraq War fiasco.

Here’s how this works. You can share your views directly with President-Elect Barack Obama. So please take a moment to visit each of the links below. When you are at the www.Change.gov web site, click on the “Submit Your Ideas” box to share your ideas.

Restoring Our Civil Liberties: Send your ideas about ending domestic surveilance and ending torture to the incoming Obama Administration. Tell them torture is wrong and illegal, domestic surveilance is unconstitutional, and Guantanamo Bay must close. We also want to restore Habeus Corpus.

Ending Iraq War Fiasco: Send your ideas about ending the war in Iraq. Give your feedback about national security, troop withdrawal, diplomacy, and rebuilding Iraq.

Veterans: We want you to send your feedback to President-Elect Obama about all of our veterans. We care about improving access to prompt and high-quality healthcare, eliminating the claims backlog, hiring new, pro-veteran VA leaders, and ending the stigma against veterans with post traumatic stress disorder.

Help VCS Spread the Word: Remember, Veterans for Common Sense is only as strong as our members. Ask your friends to join VCS so we can reach 14,000 members by December 31. Please give a gift to veterans today, and make a year end tax-deductible contribution to VCS.

VCS on the Air: Veterans for Common Sense was featured on Counterspin, the news broadcast by FAIR. Download Counterspin and listen to me discuss Gulf War Illness and the need for more research to understand the illnesses, research for treatment, and investigating the handful of VA employees who blocked efforts to assist our veterans.

Looking Foward to 2009: In January, once the new Congress is seated, we will begin urging our members to ask Congress to finish the great work they started in 2007 fixing VA.  We need your help to make that happen! Please give to Veterans for Common Sense today so we can keep working hard for our veterans!

Thank you,

Paul Sullivan
Executive Director
Veterans for Common Sense

VCS provides advocacy and publicity for issues related to veterans, national security, and civil liberties. VCS is registered with the IRS as a non-profit 501(c)(3) charity, and donations are tax deductible.

Give a Gift to Veterans! Set up your tax-deductible contribution to VCS today.

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Spying on Pacifists, Environmentalists, and Nuns

December 7, 2008 – Reporting from Takoma Park, Md. — To friends in the protest movement, Lucy was an eager 20-something who attended their events and sent encouraging e-mails to support their causes.

Only one thing seemed strange.

“At one demonstration, I remember her showing up with a laptop computer and typing away,” said Mike Stark, who helped lead the anti-death-penalty march in Baltimore that day. “We all thought that was odd.”

Not really. The woman was an undercover Maryland State Police trooper who between 2005 and 2007 infiltrated more than two dozen rallies and meetings of nonviolent groups.

Maryland officials now concede that, based on information gathered by “Lucy” and others, state police wrongly listed at least 53 Americans as terrorists in a criminal intelligence database — and shared some information about them with half a dozen state and federal agencies, including the National Security Agency.

Among those labeled as terrorists: two Catholic nuns, a former Democratic congressional candidate, a lifelong pacifist and a registered lobbyist. One suspect’s file warned that she was “involved in puppet making and allows anarchists to utilize her property for meetings.”

“There wasn’t a scintilla of illegal activity” going on, said David Rocah, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed a lawsuit and in July obtained the first surveillance files. State police have released other heavily redacted documents.

Investigators, the files show, targeted groups that advocated against abortion, global warming, nuclear arms, military recruiting in high schools and biodefense research, among other issues.

“It was unconscionable conduct,” said Democratic state Sen. Brian Frosh, who is backing legislation to ban similar spying in Maryland unless the police superintendent can document a “reasonable, articulable suspicion” of criminal activity.

The case is the latest to emerge since the Sept. 11 attacks spurred a sharp increase in state and federal surveillance of Americans. Critics say such investigations violate constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech and assembly, and serve to inhibit lawful dissent.

In the largest known effort, the Pentagon monitored at least 186 lawful protests and meetings — including church services and silent vigils — in California and other states.

The military also compiled more than 2,800 reports on Americans in a database of supposed terrorist threats. That program, known as TALON, was ordered closed in 2007 after it was exposed in news reports.

The Maryland operation also has ended, but critics still question why police spent hundreds of hours spying on Quakers and other peace groups in a state that reported more than 36,000 violent crimes last year.

Stephen Sachs, a former state attorney general, investigated the scandal for Gov. Martin O’Malley — a Democrat elected in 2006. He concluded that state police had violated federal regulations and “significantly overreached.”

According to Sachs’ 93-page report and other documents, state police launched the operation in March 2005 out of concern that the planned execution of a convicted murderer might lead to violent protests.

They sent Lucy to join local activists at Takoma Park’s Electrik Maid, a funky community center popular with punk rockers and slam poets. Ten people attended the gathering, including a local representative from Amnesty International.

“The meeting was primarily concerned with getting people to put up fliers and getting information out to local businesses and churches about the upcoming events,” the undercover officer reported later. “No other pertinent intelligence information was obtained.”

That proved true for all 29 meetings, rallies and protests that Lucy ultimately attended. Most drew only a handful of people, and none involved illegal or disruptive actions.

Using the aliases Lucy Shoup and Lucy McDonald, she befriended activists. “I want to get involved in different causes,” she wrote in an e-mail, citing her interest in “anti-death penalty, antiwar and pro-animal actions!!!”

Max Obuszewski, a Baltimore pacifist who leads antiwar protests, said Lucy asked about civil disobedience, but didn’t instigate any. “She never volunteered to do anything, not even hand out leaflets,” he said. “She was not an agent provocateur.”

Greg Shipley, a state police spokesman, said that no one in the department had been disciplined in connection with the spying program. Lucy, who has not been publicly identified, would not consent to an interview, he said.

The surveillance, Shipley said, was inappropriate. And the listing of lawful activity as terrorism “shouldn’t have happened, and has been corrected.”

Most of the files list terrorism as a “primary crime” and a “secondary crime,” then add subgroups for designations such as antiwar protester.

Some contain errors and inconsistencies that are almost comical.

Nancy Kricorian, 48, a novelist on the terrorist list, is coordinator for the New York City chapter of CodePink, an antiwar group. She serves as liaison with local police for group protests, and has never been arrested.

“I have no idea why I made the list,” she said. “I’ve never been to the state of Maryland, except maybe to stop for gas on the way to Washington.”

Josh Tulkin, 27, a registered lobbyist with the Virginia state Legislature, is cited under “terrorism — environmental extremists.” Tulkin was deputy director of Chesapeake Climate Action Network, an environmental group that claims 15,000 members and regularly meets with governors and members of Congress.

“If asking your elected officials a question about public policy is a crime, then I’m guilty,” he said.

Barry Kissin, 57, a lawyer who ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 2006, heads the Frederick Progressive Action Coalition, a group that works “for social, economic and environmental justice,” according to his police file. Their protests “are always peaceful,” it added.

He was labeled “Terrorism — Anti-Government.”

Nadine Bloch, 47, runs workshops for protest groups that seek corporate responsibility and builds huge papier-mache puppets often used in street marches. Her terrorism file indicates she participated in a Taking Action for Animals conference in Washington on July 16-18, 2005.

Animal rights, Bloch said, is one of the few causes she doesn’t actively embrace. Besides, she was attending an educators conference in Hawaii that week as a contractor for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

“This whole thing,” she said, “is so absurd.”

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Can Stop-Loss be Stopped?

December 7, 2008 – The Pentagon announced plans this week to recruit more foreigners residing in the U.S. into the ranks of the U.S. military. At the same time, many of those who’ve served their tours in the armed forces are finding it difficult to leave because of a provision known as “Stop-Loss.”

On a cold December evening, some folks go caroling. Others hold anti-war vigils.

Every Wednesday night for the past two years, Anna Berlinrut has been out on this same New Jersey corner handing out fliers, talking about the war, and about stop-loss – a policy that’s keeping her son in Iraq this Christmas.

“Do you think the average American knows what stop-loss is?” Smith asked.

“No, they don’t, they really don’t,” Berlinrut said.

The term stop-loss refers to the policy of keeping combat units together, sometimes even after individual soldiers’ enlistments are up.

Right now, around 12,000 troops are under stop-loss orders.

“It is a necessary part of war, unfortunately,” said Mackenzie Eaglen, a military analyst for the Heritage Foundation.

“Stop-loss allows a commander, in Iraq for example, to freeze in place a trained unit and deploy them as a team.”

“And the advantages of it are what?” asked Smith.

“It generally helps prevail in conflict and avoid the further loss of life,” said Eaglen, “because as a trained unit, this group has functioned together, they’ve lived together, they’ve fired weapons together, so they will in theory be a more effective fighting force.”

It’s all in the enlistment contract, the part that says, “In the event of war, my enlistment in the armed forces continues until six (6) months after the war ends.”

Are soldiers informed about this when they sign up?

(CBS)”Technically, it’s in the fine print of the enlistment contract,” said Eaglen, “but there’s no doubt the government can do a better job informing soldiers and their families verbally of this requirement because it’s obscure fine print.

“But most expect it not to be used, so most are surprised – understandably – when they’re told, ‘You can’t get out when you want to.'”

Stop-loss was the subject of a critically acclaimed (but little-seen) movie of the same name this year. The policy seems harsh, but it’s hardly a new idea.

In World Wars One and Two, military enlistments were for the duration of hostilities. But by the Vietnam era, combat veterans went home as soon as their hitch was up and were replaced by inexperienced troops which would often hurt a unit’s fighting effectiveness.

After Vietnam, a system was put in place to keep entire units together, and part of that plan was the stop-loss policy.

Anna Berlinrut’s son – a Marine sergeant on his third tour of Iraq – was supposed to be coming home in a few weeks. But now he’s been stop-lossed until April – or later.

Anna Berlinrut, whose son was stop-lossed back to IraqFor his family, including the newborn son he has yet to meet, the waiting really is the hardest part.

“Is there any way to explain what that’s like for you as a mom?” Smith asked.

“There was one time the doorbell rang,” Berlinhut said. “I opened it up, and it was a high school kid selling candy. I fell apart. I really did.”

“Because you thought – ?”

“I thought that maybe there would be a couple of Marines in dress uniform, waiting to tell me the worst.”

It’s not easy for military brass, either. In June, Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike McMullen was asked, “Is there anything in the works about the stop-loss program being ended in the Army?”

“No,” he said. “Tough subject. I’d like to see stop-loss going away. I’d like to see stop-loss go away tomorrow if I could make it happen. Given the priorities that we have right now and the mission that we have, I don’t see it stopping in the near future.”

The policy also affects those who have left active duty: Army Reservist Colby Buzzell, a veteran of one combat tour in Iraq, was home and settling into civilian life in San Francisco when he got a letter from the Army telling him he was bound for Iraq … again.

“Imagine you went to college for four years,” Buzzell told Smith, “and you got out, got a job, got a house, had a lease, had bills, and all of a sudden you got a letter from your college saying, ‘Guess what? You didn’t graduate from college. You have to go back and do all the schooling you’d already done.

“It’s Russian roulette. Everyone that goes over there has at least one close call and sooner or later you either, you get killed or you miss limbs or, you know, something happens.”

Buzzell was recently diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) from his first tour in Iraq – and that has kept him from being deployed.

“I know that the stop-loss is their way of hanging onto those that they’ve invested in, those that have an expertise to serve,” said Vickie Castro. “I understand the concept. I don’t necessarily agree with it.”

Castro’s son Jonathan, an Army corporal, was stateside, his enlistment nearly up. But when his unit was ordered to Iraq in 2004, he was stop-lossed – and ordered to ship out with them.

(CBS)”His orders came down, and it didn’t matter that he was supposed to have been released from active duty,” said Castro. “His orders came down, and they froze him. And they deployed him with his unit in October when he was supposed to have been released in July of that year.”

Four days before Christmas, a suicide bomber walked into a mess tent where Corporal Jonathan Castro was having lunch with his squad.

“December the 21st, 2004, just past 8:00 at night, the military sent their officer to inform me that my only child was dead, that my only child had been killed in this suicide bombing in this mess tent,” Castro told Smith.

“I don’t know how long I screamed.”

“People, people tell me all the time, they say, ‘Well, but he volunteered.’ We have a volunteer military. We have a volunteer military. And that’s true. Jonathan did volunteer. But he had completed his commitment.”

There are signs that stop-loss might not last forever. Military recruiting and re-enlistment is up, thanks to the terrible civilian job market, and a bigger head count could eventually make stop-loss less necessary.

There are plans for a troop reduction in Iraq as well, though that might not help right away.

“Even if we pull troops out of Iraq, there’s a chance that stop-loss could continue?” Smith asked.

“That’s right,” said the Heritage Foundation’s Eaglen, “because if force levels drop in Iraq and rise in Afghanistan for example in a significant way, you’re looking at roughly the same potential number of forces needed, just in a different country and a different conflict. And that could ultimately keep the stop-loss in effect at this level for a while.”

“They’re just recycled over and over and over again until they’re totally used up,” she said.

“Do you feel like your son is getting used up?” Smith asked.

“I’m afraid that he might be,” she said. “I don’t think that he’s the same person that he was.”

So like most military moms, she’s praying her son is home – next Christmas.

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4,600 Veterans Attend Workshop on Benefits in Georgia

December 5, 2008 – Army Maj. Freddie Zink is looking ahead to the future after sustaining a serious head injury in Iraq.

“They are not forcing me out,” Zink said Thursday at the Supermarket of Veterans Benefits program at the Columbus Civic Center. “I need to get out for my injury.”

Zink, a 49-year-old medical officer from Powdersville, S.C., was serving with a Reserve unit when his vehicle crashed into a hole. The August accident in Baghdad, Iraq, left Zink with a traumatic brain injury and possibly a medical discharge from the Army by early next year.

About 4,600 other veterans like Zink and their family members filled the arena floor of the Civic Center to learn more about benefits.

“I’m very pleased with the crowd,” said Pete Wheeler, commissioner of Georgia Department of Veterans Service, as he looked over a line that stretched from the arena to the entrance of the Civic Center. “We are overwhelmed now.”

Tom Cook, assistant commissioner, said 86 stations were set up to represent 45 agencies. Veterans could file claims, check on benefits, get answers to questions and take part in free health screenings where flu shots, blood pressure checks and other screenings were available.

“This is very helpful,” said Army Sgt. Debra Allen of Columbus. After a 22-year career in the Reserves and serving on active duty, Allen fears a shoulder injury will force her to leave the military early next year.

Assigned to a transportation unit at Fort Benning, Allen said she learned some details about benefits on post but nothing like the information representatives offered at the benefits program.

Johnny Kimbrough, an Army veteran, came to the Civic Center to check on a medical claim. “I think it’s all right,” Kimbrough, 59, said of the one-day program.

Theresa Williams, who served two years in the Army, said the information was useful to her. “I think it was pretty well organized,” said Williams, 46. “It was very helpful to me.”

She learned that she is eligible to apply for a Veterans Affairs home loan but found out too late about education benefits to help her become a nurse. “Your education benefits have to be used by a certain time,” Williams said. “I didn’t know I had any.”

Chief Warrant Officer 4 Russell Wilkerson of Albertville, Ala., has been in an Army uniform for 39 years but may be forced out for health reasons. The Army is evaluating whether Wilkerson can perform his job as a maintenance technician at age 59. “I probably will be out in January or February,” he said.

Wheeler said about 2,240 claims and transactions were processed during the day.

“We are extremely happy that we were able to assist so many veterans and their dependents today,” Wheeler said. “This program is extremely helpful for the veterans because so many different government agencies are assembled at a single location and claims are filed on the spot.”

Many of the veterans had no idea they were eligible for benefits. “Many of these claimants will be receiving benefits for the first time, and some of them had no idea that they were eligible for anything,” Wheeler said.

It’s been 17 years since the program was in Columbus and the fifth time since 1966 when about 5,000 veterans were served at the first event. Programs in other cities have included Albany, Athens, Atlanta, Augusta, Brunswick, Dalton, Gainesville, Griffin, Macon, Rome, Savannah, Valdosta and Waycross.

“This is an excellent example of team effort and cooperation when so many different government agencies can be assembled at the same time in one location to allow a veteran to file a claim right on the spot,” Wheeler said.

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5 Guards Face U.S. Charges in Iraq Deaths

December 6, 2008 – The Justice Department has obtained indictments against five guards for the security company Blackwater Worldwide for their involvement in a 2007 shooting in Baghdad that killed at least 17 Iraqi civilians and remains a thorn in Iraqi relations with the United States.

The indictments, obtained Thursday, remained sealed. But they could be made public in Washington as soon as Monday, according to people who have been briefed on the case and who spoke on condition of anonymity because the indictments had not been unsealed.

A sixth guard was negotiating a plea, those people said.

Peter A. Carr, a spokesman for the Justice Department, declined to comment on Friday. Anne E. Tyrrell, a spokeswoman for Blackwater, also declined to comment.

The six guards have been under investigation since the shootings occurred Sept. 16, 2007, as their convoy traveled through a traffic circle in Nisour Square that was filled with cars, pedestrians and police officers. The guards have told investigators that they fired after coming under attack. Blackwater has maintained that its guards did nothing wrong, and the company itself is not being charged in the case. Investigations by the Pentagon, the F.B.I. and the Iraqi government found no evidence to support the guards’ version of events.

Among those named in the indictment, according to the people briefed on the case, are Paul Slough, a 28-year-old who served in the Army Infantry and the Texas National Guard before joining Blackwater in 2006, and Dustin Heard of Tennessee, a former marine who joined Blackwater in 2004.

Those who have been briefed on the case said prosecutors could seek 30-year prison sentences under a Reagan-era antidrug law focusing on the use of machine guns in the commission of violent crimes. Drugs were not involved in the Blackwater case.

Mark Hulkower, Mr. Slough’s lawyer, would not confirm whether his client was one of those indicted. But if he is, Mr. Hulkower said, “We will contest the charges in court, and we are confident he will be vindicated.”

The Nisour Square shootings have had a profound impact in Iraq, both on the role of contractors in the war zone and on the Baghdad government’s relationship with the Bush administration. The episode was the bloodiest in a series of violent events involving Blackwater and other American security contractors that had stoked anger and resentment among Iraqis.

Founded in 1997 by Erik Prince, a former member of the Navy Seals and heir to a family fortune made in the auto parts industry, Blackwater had developed a reputation among Iraqis and American military personnel for flaunting an aggressive, quick-draw image and for security personnel who took excessively violent actions to protect the people they were paid to guard.

In December 2006, a Blackwater guard who was off duty and reportedly drinking heavily was reported to have shot a bodyguard for an Iraqi vice president in Baghdad. In 2007, the State Department acknowledged that Blackwater had been involved in many more shootings than the two other security contractors in other regions of Iraq.

But the Nisour Square episode prompted so much protest that Iraq’s prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, demanded that the Bush administration pull Blackwater out of the country.

In a profile of Mr. Slough, The New York Times reported this year that he had used dry military language to explain to investigators that he fired his weapon only at targets who posed immediate threats to his life and to those of his colleagues.

He described fighting his way out of a terrifying ambush that began when the driver of a white, four-door sedan ignored numerous hand signals and drove directly at the Blackwater motorcade. And he described muzzle flashes from a shack about 160 feet behind the car, a man in a blue button-down shirt and black pants pointing an AK-47, small-arms fire from a red bus stopped in an intersection, and a red car backing up toward his convoy.

“I engaged the individuals,” Mr. Slough told investigators, “and stopped the threat.”

The F.B.I. concluded that at least 14 of the 17 fatal shootings in Nisour Square were unjustified, saying that Blackwater guards recklessly violated American rules for the use of lethal force. Military investigators went further, saying that all of the deaths were unjustified and potentially criminal. Iraqi authorities characterized the incident as “deliberate murder.”

Still, the guards could not be prosecuted under Iraqi law because of an immunity agreement signed by the Coalition Provision Authority, the governing authority installed by American troops after the invasion. And legal experts have long pointed out that the case faces significant legal hurdles in American courts, which have only vague powers to prosecute Americans for crimes committed abroad.

Immunity for security contractors became a central issue this year in the negotiations between Iraq and the United States over an agreement setting out the terms under which American troops could remain in Iraq. Iraqi officials repeatedly demanded an end to legal immunity for American contractors. The Bush administration eventually agreed, and tens of thousands of contractors will be held responsible for their actions under Iraqi law at the start of next year.

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VA Botches Appointment Scheduling, VA Inspector General Reports

December 5, 2008 – A new report says Veterans Centers run by the Department of Veterans Affairs could have seen more patients in the past year if they did a better job scheduling and rescheduling visits.

About 4.9 million appointments were not kept in fiscal 2008, with each missed visit costing the VA about $182, according to the report by the VA inspector general, released Dec. 4.

That means VA is both losing money and failing to treat veterans as quickly as possible by keeping a flawed system for making appointments, and by not maintaining waiting lists to fill appointments canceled at the last minute.

A medical facility sometimes may leave an appointment open intentionally because visits can run long, and facilities worry about being able to see everyone.

But the report also found about 3.1 million incidents in fiscal 2008 when patients did not show up for appointments, and 1.8 million appointments that were canceled by the patient and not refilled with other patients.

Having 4.9 million unfilled appointments does not mean VA potentially could see 4.9 million more people, however. Most were seen later, and some of those were multiple appointments for the same person.

The biggest benefit from better scheduling is that veterans would be seen faster, the report says.

Sen. Daniel Akaka, the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee chairman who requested the reports, said something needs to be done.

“The fact that we continue to see a trend of flawed or inefficient scheduling practices being used by VA is troubling,” he said. “I have led the fight to provide full funding for VA, but VA must be as efficient and accurate as possible in order to avoid waste and mismanagement, especially in these times of economic difficulty.”

The VA could save $76 million a year if did better at scheduling and rescheduling appointments, Akaka said.

In a written response to the report, VA health officials vowed to develop a revised scheduling system that will include a waiting list for patients ready to fill openings left by others who have canceled appointments.

A second IG report also released Dec. 4 continues to monitor problems with inaccurate records of appointments in the North Florida-South Georgia Veterans Health System, where statistics about how long veterans must wait for an initial appointment are skewed because some patients are left out.

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Remembering Pearl Harbor: World War II Veteran Recalls Wartime Experiences in Pacitif

December 7, 2008 – Forget the time Maurice Sposato scored a draw in the ring against legendary boxer Sugar Ray Robinson.

The toughest bout this small but scrappy pugilist ever had “was fighting for my country,” he said.

Today, on the 67th anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attacks, Sposato, 91, joins a dwindling number of World War II veterans in remembering a conflict that not only shaped the direction of societies, but long afterward had profound influence on millions of lives.

Sposato enlisted in the Marines because of the higher calling to serve in the U.S. military, he said. He was wounded in the Battle of Tarawa, losing two toes and having his hips filled with shrapnel.The injuries effectively ended a promising career in boxing, one that had seen him barnstorming the country for 10 years as an amateur and professional fighter and notching a 59-9 record. He earned the nickname “Kid Sharkey.”

But despite having to quit the sport, Sposato knew only to “keep on punching” – his salutatory catchphrase to friends and strangers. He stayed near the ring for six decades, training and counseling famed boxers such as Archie Moore, Doug DeWitt, Buster Mathis, Jose Torres and Larry Holmes.

Sposato also tutored countless youngsters in need of a second chance in Golden Gloves boxing.

After living in his White Plains, N.Y., birthplace for 91 years, he moved to Nashua this spring to live under the full-time care of his daughter, Judy Sposato.

He has slowed a bit, needing a walker and wheelchair and recovering from several bladder surgeries. But in a recent visit, he demonstrated the spunk and wit that often mark boxing’s most colorful characters.

“I’m not complaining. I’m 91 years old . . . after all I’ve been through,” he said.

Without question, World War II defined Sposato.

As with many veterans, he said nearly nothing about his battlefield experiences for most of his life, Judy Sposato said. But seeing and reading news accounts of the Iraq War disheartened her father, and he started recounting his experiences to illustrate that war is unnecessary, she said.

Maurice Sposato joined more than 35,000 U.S. troops in the invasion of the Pacific atoll Tarawa, a four-day incursion that’s considered one of the bloodiest in Marines history.Because of a low tide, the 2nd Division Marines had to disembark their assault boats far from shore. The waist-deep water soaked many Marines’ weapons, and many troops were shot down by about 4,000 waiting Japanese soldiers.

“I was a machine gunner,” Sposato said. But his 30-caliber gun was wet and couldn’t fire.

“I killed two guys with my bare hands. I had to do it.”

Sposato was awarded two Purple Hearts and many other military commendations for his service.

Nearly 3,000 Marines died at Tarawa. All but 17 of the 4,000 Japanese defenders died.

The experience shook Sposato, enough that it disturbs him to see politicians sending “young boys” to war in Iraq, he said. Instead of rich politicians initiating war, the public should first vote to approve any military action, he said.

Sposato used his hands to fight before the war, but it was in the relatively safer confines of a boxing ring. He was hooked as an adolescent, and eventually toured the country as a “bootleg boxer” – fighting in unsanctioned contests.

He earned the nickname that would identify him for life because he talked often about boxer Jack Sharkey, while his trainer liked another fighter named Tom Sharkey. The 14-year-old became Kid Sharkey.

In 1939, he fought an up-and-coming Sugar Ray Robinson, who is widely hailed as the greatest fighter pound for pound. The Poughkeepsie, N.Y., match ended in a draw.

“He was a fast boxer, but I used to train with him,” Sposato said. “Every time he threw a move, I knew what was coming.”

Sposato said he could box with his left or right hand. His head was his “fifth punch.”

Several times he led a reporter through the moves he used and taught others – at one point, jumping out of his chair and giving a hands-on tutorial.

His advice: Fully concentrate on the opponent to anticipate his moves, constantly shuffle your feet and shift your body to avoid the big blow and keep the other guy off balance, and throw several hooks, to be followed by an “over” punch.

These points and many others served Kid Sharkey well as a trainer and coach once he returned from the war. He helped pros and amateurs. He steered the young kids turned into his care by police to the Golden Gloves program.

Sposato used his New York University psychology degree to full advantage as a private detective for 26 years, his daughter said, but also in countless gyms.

Among the many awards he received for his ring contributions, Sposato earned the American Association for the Improvement of Boxing Rocky Marciano Award. For his 90th birthday, his family and dozens of boxing figures threw a surprise party.

Although the violence of war scarred him, the violence of boxing seemingly gave Sposato a life of purpose.

“People who know him as a kind, mild-mannered person always ask, ‘How did you end up in a sport like that?’ ” Judy Sposato said.

Instead of answering his daughter’s question, Maurice Sposato turned to a reporter to offer more insight: “Keep him low all the time. A slugger doesn’t last.”

As he later bid the reporter and a photographer goodbye, Sposato had one more nugget: “Keep on punching.”

Albert McKeon can be reached at 594-5832 or amckeon@nashuatelegraph.com

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Editorial Column: Attorney General Mukasey Uses Infamous ‘Nixon Defense’ to Justify Torture and Domestic Spying

December 2, 2008 – When it comes to protecting George W. Bush and his administration, Attorney General Michael Mukasey is stretching legal arguments as far as his predecessor Alberto Gonzales ever did – now even invoking the “Nixon Defense” for justifying presidential wrongdoing.

This week, Mukasey argued that there is no legal basis to prosecute current and former administration officials for authorizing torture and warrantless domestic surveillance because those decisions were made in the context of a presidential interest in protecting national security.

“There is absolutely no evidence that anybody who rendered a legal opinion, either with respect to surveillance or with respect to interrogation policies, did so for any reason other than to protect the security in the country and in the belief that he or she was doing something lawful,” Mukasey said during a Dec. 3 roundtable discussion with reporters.

Mukasey’s argument is, in essence, the same as Richard Nixon’s infamous declaration in his 1977 interview with David Frost that – in the context of Nixon’s illegal wiretappings, black-bag jobs and infiltration of antiwar groups – “when the President does it, that means that it is not illegal.”

Nixon’s approval of the so-called Huston Plan, which proposed these actions against adversaries deemed national security threats, became one of the articles of impeachment filed against Nixon before his resignation in August 1974. Nixon defended his decision as necessary to protect the country.

In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, President Bush, his White House legal advisers – and now Attorney General Mukasey – resurrected Nixon’s concept of a President operating above the law to defend the nation.

As with the “Nixon Defense,” Mukasey maintains that – at least when Bush and his subordinates are involved – a justifiable intent negates any violation of law. In other words, if Bush or his advisers decide that some illegal act is necessary for national security, the act becomes, effectively, legal.

Mukasey is wrapping his extraordinary argument in the context of protecting Bush’s subordinates – at places like the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel – from second-guessing for giving the President advice on what he can do in engaging in acts that would be illegal if done by someone else.

“If the word goes out to the contrary, then people are going to get the message, which is that if you come up with an answer that is not considered desirable in the future you might face prosecution, and that creates an incentive not to give an honest answer but to give an answer that may be acceptable in the future,” Mukasey told the reporters.

Conyers Complaint

Rep. John Conyers, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, immediately took issue with the “breadth” of Mukasey’s statement “and the blanket conclusion that everyone involved in approving these policies believed they were acting within the law.”

Conyers reminded Mukasey that reams of evidence – including testimony from career military and law enforcement officials – show that top White House officials may have broken the law by authorizing torture and warrantless domestic surveillance.

“The public record reflects ample warning to administration officials that its legal approach was overreaching and invalid, such as repeated objections by military lawyers … on interrogation issues and the stark warning by then-Deputy Attorney General [James] Comey that the [Justice] Department would be ashamed if the world learned of the legal advice it had given on torture issues,” Conyers said in a letter to Mukasey.

Indeed, Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba, who led the investigation of abuses at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, said “there is no longer any doubt as to whether the current administration has committed war crimes. The only question that remains to be answered is whether those who ordered the use of torture will be held to account.”

Conyers added, “Looked at another way, is it your view that the CIA attorney who reportedly told Guantanamo interrogators that Department legal guidance boiled down to ‘If the detainee dies you’re doing it wrong’ — or the Department lawyer who advised him — justifiably believed that approach comported with the law?”

Conyers was referring to minutes of a discussion on Oct. 2, 2002, when Jonathan Fredman, chief counsel to the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center, told U.S. military officials how interrogators could use the “wet towel” technique, known as waterboarding, to extract information from detainees.

“It can feel like you’re drowning. The lymphatic system will react as if you’re suffocating, but your body will not cease to function,” Fredman said, adding that the “wet towel” technique would only be defined as torture “if the detainee dies.”
 
“It is basically subject to perception,” Fredman said. “If the detainee dies you’re doing it wrong.”
 
Fredman’s comments prompted Lt. Col. Diane Beaver, then the chief military lawyer at the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to respond: “We will need documentation to protect us.”

Conyers’s letter signals a strong possibility that his investigation into the Bush administration’s interrogation practices will continue when the 111th Congress convenes in January.

Mukasey’s Resistance

Like Attorney General Gonzales before him, Mukasey has stonewalled congressional inquiries into the Bush administration’s counterterrorism policies by refusing to release top-secret documents about the programs.

Mukasey also rebuffed a request by Conyers in June to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate whether Bush and senior members of his Cabinet committed war crimes by authorizing CIA and military interrogators to use harsh tactics against detainees at Guantanamo Bay and in Iraq.

That request followed an investigation by the International Committee of the Red Cross into interrogation practices at Guantanamo Bay, which “documented several instances of acts of torture against detainees, including soaking a prisoner’s hand in alcohol and lighting it on fire, subjecting a prisoner to sexual abuse and forcing a prisoner to eat a baseball.”

Mukasey’s comments also would seem to undercut work by the Justice Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility, which has spent four years probing the infamous Aug. 1, 2002, “torture memo” addressed to then White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales and written by former Office of Legal Counsel attorney John Yoo and signed by Yoo’s boss Jay Bybee.

That OPR probe is examining “whether the legal advice contained in those memoranda was consistent with the professional standards that apply to Department of Justice attorneys,” according to H. Marshall Jarrett, the head of the watchdog office.

The probe has centered on Yoo’s use of an obscure health benefits statute to justify use of brutal interrogation tactics as long as they don’t cause “death, organ failure, or serious impairment of body functions.”

Jack Goldsmith, who succeeded Bybee as head of the OLC, withdrew the “torture memo” in fall 2003, calling it “sloppily written” and “legally flawed.”

Nevertheless, the opinion from the Office of Legal Counsel – which is responsible for advising the President on whether actions are lawful and constitutional – gave the White House cover for decisions on harsh interrogations that may have already been underway.

Last April, President Bush told an ABC News reporter that he approved of meetings of a National Security Council’s Principals Committee where senior officials discussed specific interrogation techniques that the CIA could use against detainees.

The Principals Committee included Vice President Dick Cheney, then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Colin Powell, CIA Director George Tenet and Attorney General John Ashcroft.

No Legal Accountability

Mukasey’s embrace of the Nixon Defense – essentially clearing anyone who acted under presidential authority with the intent of protecting the nation – means that none of the participants would face any legal accountability.

Indeed, Mukasey told the reporters that he saw no reason for President Bush to even consider granting blanket pardons.

“In those circumstances, there is no occasion to consider prosecution and there is no occasion to consider pardon,” Mukasey said.

Nevertheless, there are ongoing investigations being conducted by Mukasey’s Justice Department into actions related to Bush’s “war on terror.”

In a semi-annual report sent to Congress, Inspector General Glenn Fine said he is continuing to probe the Justice Department’s involvement with the terrorist surveillance program and the FBI’s use and abuse of exigent letters where agents sought phone and e-mail records. 

There is also the investigation by John Durham, an assistant attorney general in Connecticut who was appointed special counsel earlier this year to investigate the destruction of videotapes in 2002 that documented CIA interrogators waterboarding detainees.

The tapes were ordered destroyed, according to published reports, because the individuals overseeing the interrogations feared criminal prosecution if the tapes were leaked.

During his roundtable talk with reporters, Mukasey again refused to say whether he believed waterboarding was torture.

At his Senate confirmation hearings, Mukasey balked at answering that question, almost derailing his nomination, which was saved by the support of Democratic Sens. Charles Schumer and Dianne Feinstein.

Mukasey first insisted that he hadn’t been briefed on the practice, and later maintained that since the use of waterboarding had been suspended, there was no reason for him to give an opinion.

That argument – asserting that he had no responsibility for investigating acts like waterboarding since they had occurred before his arrival at Justice – foreshadowed his current assertion that it would be wrong to reexamine actions by Bush and his subordinates earlier in the “war on terror.”

Sanctioned Acts

Some of those controversial techniques also appear to have been sanctioned by the Justice Department, before Mukasey’s arrival.

For instance, CIA officials pressed the Justice Department’s criminal division for assurances that they would not be prosecuted under anti-torture laws if they followed guidelines on aggressive interrogation techniques. The officials appealed to the head of the Criminal Division for these guarantees, to Michael Chertoff, who is now Secretary of Homeland Security.

Three years ago, when Chertoff was facing confirmation hearings to be Homeland Security chief, the New York Times cited three senior-level government sources as describing Chertoff’s Criminal Division as fielding the questions from the CIA.

“One technique the CIA officers could use under circumstances without fear of prosecution was strapping a subject down and making him experience a feeling of drowning,” the Times reported. In other words, Chertoff appears to have green-lighted waterboarding.

Chertoff reportedly did object to some other procedures, such as death threats against family members and mind-altering drugs that would change a detainee’s personality, the Times reported

During his Senate confirmation hearings in February 2005, Chertoff denied providing the CIA with legal guidance on the use of specific interrogation methods, such as waterboarding. Rather, he said he gave the agency broad guidance in response to questions about interrogation methods.

“You are dealing in an area where there is potential criminality,” Chertoff said in describing his advice to the CIA. “You better be very careful to make sure that whatever you decide to do falls well within what is required by law.”

Nevertheless, the evidence continues to build that Chertoff’s assurances gave CIA interrogators confidence they would avoid prosecution as long as they stayed within the permissive guidelines devised by Yoo and Bybee.

Concerns about Obama

That evidence has lead civil rights organizations to press President-elect Barack Obama to aggressively investigate the Bush administration’s actions once he is sworn in next month.

Obama has not indicated whether Eric Holder, his choice for Attorney General, will pursue an investigation into the Bush administration’s policies, particularly issues related to torture.

In response to press reports about Obama shying away from such a probe, Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights said “one of Barack Obama’s first acts as President should be to instruct his Attorney General to appoint an independent prosecutor to initiate a criminal investigation of former Bush administration officials who gave the green light to torture.”

In an article published in the magazine The Progressive, Ratner pointed to a statement Holder made a few months ago in which the Attorney General designee said the “American people” are owed “a reckoning.” 

Ratner said anything less than a full-scale criminal investigation – a substitute like a Truth Commission assigned simply to ascertain the facts – would be unacceptable.

“If Obama and Holder want to adhere to our Constitution and uphold our highest values, they must pursue those in the Bush administration who violated that Constitution, broke our laws, and tarnished our values,” Ratner wrote. “To simply let those officials walk off the stage sends a message of impunity that will only encourage future law breaking. The message that we need to send is that they will be held accountable.

“This is not Latin America; this is not South Africa. We are not trying to end a civil war, heal a wounded country and reconcile warring factions. We are a democracy trying to hold accountable officials that led our country down the road to torture. And in a democracy, it is the job of a prosecutor and not the pundits to determine whether crimes were committed.”

Jason Leopold has launched a new Web site, The Public Record, at www.pubrecord.org.

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Veterans Affairs Investigation Deepens at New York Regional Office

December 5, 2008 – An internal Department of Veterans Affairs investigation found that the New York regional office altered vets’ claims to make them appear as if they were being processed faster than they actually were.

Hundreds of documents submitted to the regional office in Manhattan were intentionally dated incorrectly in an internal program used in the processing of claims, and some supervisors instructed employees to alter the dates, according to a summary of the internal probe obtained by the Times Union.

Joseph Collorafi of Guilderland, director of veterans affairs, was suspended in the wake of allegations about the backdating of forms. Collorarfi, who commuted from his suburban home on Amtrak, was one of six administrators placed on administrative leave.

U.S. Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand called the backdating of reports “troubling” and said she would ask the House Veterans Committee chairman to open an inquiry immediately.

“Our veterans deserve their earned benefits on time and need to be able to trust that their federal government is operating in good faith,” Gillibrand, D-Greenport, said in a prepared statement. “We need to prevent this from happening again.”

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VA performance measures track the time it takes to process a claim, and the problems in New York are “very, very serious,” VA spokeswoman Alison Aikele in Washington, D.C., said Thursday. It is too early to determine if criminal charges will result, she said.

VA officials would not discuss disciplinary action of specific individuals, but the director and assistant director of the office have already been transferred to other offices.

Aikele said backdating problems have been uncovered only at the New York office. But the VA’s inspector general is conducting a separate investigation into the shredding of claims documents across the nation. In recent weeks 41 of the 57 VA regional offices were found to have essential documents in the shredder bin.

The New York office serves more than 800,000 veterans in 31 counties across the state, including the Capital District. Last month, two veterans groups filed a lawsuit in District of Columbia federal court claiming the VA takes too long to process vets’ disability claims. The suit stated that the agency takes on average at least six months per claim and some extend up to a year.

Neither Collorafi, nor his attorney, Peter Noone, returned phone calls seeking comment.

A July audit of the New York office examining individual cases revealed that 16 of 20 claims were intentionally given incorrect dates to appear as if they were received within a week of being put into the computer system.

VA officials in New York blamed the problem on “miscommunication.” Aikele said no claims were affected because the original date on the paperwork was used for payment. The altered dates, she said, affected only internal recordkeeping. A subsequent August review of a sample of 390 veterans claims found 220, or 56 percent, were backdated.

Chauncey Robinson of Colonie, who served in the Army in 1992, is one of many veterans who have been scrambling to have their claims files reviewed after the problems surfaced in the New York office. He has been trying to track down his file for years after his claims were lost. Robinson – receiving disability compensation since 1995 for post-traumatic stress disorder – said he is not receiving money he is owed for service-related hypertension because the VA cannot find his personnel and medical files. He said transferring the VA administrators was insufficient punishment.

“They should be fired, and in my opinion vets should sue the administration,” he said. “They’re sweeping it under the rug. … They try to make you discouraged to leave them alone.”

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