Q & A with Joseph Stiglitz: Economist Says Economic Recession Made Worse by Iraq War

November 19, 2008 – We had an overwhelming response to the call for questions for Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel-winning economist and author who joins us from Columbia University. I grouped your questions together so that Professor Stiglitz could get to the topics you asked about most – and he has indeed given some very thorough answers! If you want to read more, visit his website and check out his books and articles. And as always, please feel free to leave your comments here.

Q. How long do you expect the current crisis to last, and what will its effects be on developing countries?

A. There is a growing consensus among economists that this is going to be the deepest and longest downturn in the last quarter century, and almost surely, since the Great Depression. (Direct comparisons between numbers – e.g. unemployment rates – may not be meaningful because of the change in the structure of the economy, away from manufacturing towards the service sector.)

Precisely how long it lasts will depend in part on the policies put into place by the United States and other governments. In the best of circumstances – given the mistakes already made – we are likely not to begin recovery until late 2009 or 2010. But the question is, even then, will it be a strong recovery, or will we enter an economic malaise, not unlike that of Japan?

The American economy has been sustained by a consumption binge fueled by a housing bubble. Savings rates are likely to increase from near zero to a much higher number. Even a “large” government stimulus, say two percent of gross domestic product, won’t fully offset this, and there are other downward pressures, e.g. the contraction of state and local expenditures as their tax revenues contract. The growth in net exports was particularly important in the second quarter. But with the spread of the downturn to the rest of the world, and the strengthening of the dollar, it is hard to see how even this can be sustained.

I always thought that the idea that there could be decoupling of the American economy from the rest of the world was a myth. The world has become too interconnected. Developing countries have benefits from being able to export large quantities to the advanced industrial countries, and their growth has, in many instances, been fueled by investments from those countries. But that means when there is a downturn in the advanced industrial countries, they will be affected.

They will be affected through several channels: declining trade, declining commodity prices, declining investments, increasing risk premiums, higher costs of capital and capital outflows. One of the ironies is that while the United States was the source of the global financial crisis, today money is flowing from developing countries to the United States, partly because, for all its weaknesses, a United States government guarantee on, say, a bank deposit is worth more than a similar guarantee from a developing country.

Moreover, the United States and Europe have been pursuing countercyclical policies (not necessarily totally effectively) – doing exactly the opposite of the procyclical policies imposed on East Asia in the last global crisis. But these differences mean that volatility may be higher in developing countries, another reason that they may suffer more.

Moreover, some developing countries have suffered from some of the same underlying problems (though to a less degree) that afflicted the United States. Some have had real estate and stock market bubbles, and in some, these bubbles have broken. Some countries, like Brazil, seem to have had much better bank regulation than the United States, and so have not had the kind of financial crisis that has afflicted the United States.

We can expect most countries to be affected, some more than others: those with large trade deficits, large debts that have to be refinanced and highly indebted firms, and those which are highly dependent on exports to the United States or on commodity prices are likely to be among those that are likely to suffer the most.

Q. Who was at fault for the crisis? Who was asleep at the switch? Were the indicators already visible in the 1997-98 financial crises? Could more monitoring have averted the problem? Are derivatives markets still viable?

A. This is a man-made crisis. It didn’t have to happen. It was the result of macro-economic policies in the United States – in particular, a tax cut for the rich which did not stimulate the economy – combined with the Iraqi war, which led to soaring oil prices. These put the burden of keeping the economy going on monetary policy. The Federal Reserve responded in a shortsighted way: it provided ample credit with low interest rates. Combined with lax regulations, it was an explosive mixture – and it exploded.

There were many elements that contributed to make it worse. The financial sector was rife with conflicts of interest and perverse incentives that led to shortsighted and excessively risky behavior. The rating agencies believed in financial alchemy, that they could convert F-rated sub prime mortgages into A-rated securities safe enough to be held in pension funds. Their ratings played a vital role in facilitating securitization, enabling money to go from cash rich sources (like pension funds) supposedly managing their money conservatively into risky mortgages, fueling the bubble.

Derivatives played a role: Derivatives were invented to help manage risk, but they became a gambling instrument, enabling banks to gamble billions of dollars of other people’s money with each other and with insurance companies like AIG. The trillions of dollars of exposure were totally out of line with what prudent risk management would have called for. Even when disclosed, they were so complex that not even those who created them fully understood their risk implications. Now, they and the other complex securities the banks invented contribute greatly to our problems. The banks know that they don’t know their own balance sheets, let alone that of anyone to whom they might lend. No wonder credit markets have frozen!

There is a failure in regulation—we should, for instance, have restricted incentive structures that encouraged shortsighted and excessively risky behavior, including excessive leverage. We stripped away regulations and didn’t adopt new regulations to respond to the changing financial environment (curbing abuses of derivatives). We allowed the banks to grow so big that they were too big to fail, and this too encouraged excessively risky behavior; they could gamble, knowing that if they won, they walked off with the profits, and if they lost, taxpayers would pick up the tab. Behind the failure in incentives is a failure in corporate governance – the chief executives and management enriched themselves at the expense of others, even their shareholders.

But even when we had good regulations, they were not enforced. We appointed as regulators people (like Alan Greenspan) who didn’t believe in regulation.

It is hard to believe that so many believed in the notion that markets were self-regulating – given the history of capitalism. But evidently some did, and some in positions of responsibility. A little late, even the high priest of laissez-faire capitalism, Alan Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve, has admitted he may have made a mistake – a mistake which has imposed vast costs on taxpayers in the trillions, homeowners in lost homes, workers in lost jobs, retirees in an impoverished old age, and millions of Americans in dashed dreams for a better life.

The Administration and the Fed were remarkably slow in seeing the problem coming, and when they did, they responded at first inadequately, and then with panic. The stimulus package passed in February predictably failed to stimulate – the Administration again thought that a tax cut was an all purpose cure to any ill, but in the circumstances, with a heavy burden of debt and an uncertain future, Americans saved most of the money.

The Fed and Treasury veered recklessly in their bailout strategies, bailing out some, not others, demanding harsh terms on some, not on others. They have made what would in any case have been difficult even worse. For those of us who had lived through the East Asia crisis, the decision not to bail out Lehman Brothers brought on memories of the mismanagement of the Indonesian crisis. There, the IMF (under the influence of the United States Treasury) shut down 16 banks, made it clear that there were more to follow, wouldn’t say which ones, but made it clear that there would be at most only limited deposit insurance. They succeeded in killing the private banking system; the next day there was panic.

Q. What’s the best way to solve the problems of the crisis, in the short and long terms? Keynesian fiscal measures? Aid for individual investors? Capital controls and Tobin taxes? Or should government get out of the way and simply let businesses and investors be wiped out, in the spirit of creative destruction?

A. Government has to take strong actions. If we don’t, the downturn will get worse. It might recover in the long run – but in the long run, we are all dead. No one, not even President George w. Bush, thinks doing nothing is the right action. Unfortunately, the actions taken by the Bush Administration, while very costly, have not been very effective.

The Bush Administration has been relying on a massive blood transfusion to a patient dying from internal hemorrhaging; nothing is being done to stem the wave of foreclosures. Already millions of Americans have lost their home, and millions more will in coming months. We have a human tragedy, not just an economic crisis. We need to put in place strong and effective policies, such as bankruptcy reform and aid to low income households for home ownership (we pay a substantial fraction of those costs for higher income individuals through tax deductions).

Beyond that, we need a strong fiscal stimulus. Given the huge legacy of debt being left by Bush, some are asking, can we afford it? The answer is, we cannot afford not to do it. If we don’t provide a strong stimulus, the economy will decline further, tax revenues will decrease, and the deficit will increase in any case.

The Bush Administration has also been relying on its old recipe of trickle down economics – throw enough money at Wall Street, and a few crumbs will trickle down to the rest of the economy. It has been clear that the Fed and the Bush Administration simply didn’t know what to do. They panicked as the market panicked. They veered from one plan to another. Fortunately, they abandoned the cash-for-trash proposal, but the delay was costly. But then they took a good idea, equity injections, and showed that even a good idea could be perverted. The intent of Congress in giving money to the banks was to encourage lending. But because they didn’t impose adequate restrictions or incentives, as money was pouring into the banks, they were pouring it out in dividends and bonuses, and even making plans to buy up other healthy banks. The credit contraction did not seem to be arrested.

But we won’t restore confidence unless we change bank behavior. All we have done is give them more money. But we have kept in place the perverse incentives. We need strong regulation, not just to restore confidence, but to make it less likely that we will again have such a crisis.

Q. What responsibility does the war in Iraq bear for the current economic situation in the United States?

A. I believe the war played a large role in the current crisis, in two ways (explained more fully in my book with Linda Bilmes, The Three Trillion Dollar War). First, it contributed greatly to the run-up of oil prices. Different economists may differ about precisely how much it contributed, but none think that it did not have an important role. The price of oil was $23 dollars a barrel before the war, and futures markets predicted that they would remain around that level for a decade. They understood that there would be large increases in demand (from China, India, even the U.S.), but they anticipated concomitant increases in supply, especially from the low cost producers in the Middle East. The war upset that equation.

High oil prices meant Americans were spending hundreds of billions of dollars abroad to import oil – money that otherwise would have been spent at home. That weakened the American economy. The Fed took on its responsibility to maintain the economy reasonably near full employment, in an admittedly shortsighted manner. A flood of liquidity and lax regulations led to a housing bubble, which fueled a consumption binge. Savings fell to zero. It enabled America to forestall the necessary adjustments – but at a high cost. It was, in many ways, analogous to how Latin America responded to the oil price shock of the 70s. They too borrowed (it was called “recycling petrodollars”), beyond their ability to pay. In the early 80s, country after country went into default, leading to the lost decade of the 80s.

The housing bubble and consumption binge might have occurred without the war; but undoubtedly, the war encouraged the Fed to keep interest rates lower and to engage in more lax regulation than it otherwise would. The result was a bubble that was bigger, and a crash that was deeper.

The war had another effect on the economy: Because it was financed totally on the credit card, America’s deficit and national debt soared. That meant that the room to maneuver when the crisis hit was reduced. Even Ben Bernanke has pointed this out as one of the big differences between the recession of 2001 and today: then we had a 2{cd9ac3671b356cd86fdb96f1eda7eb3bb1367f54cff58cc36abbd73c33c82e1d} of GDP surplus, ample funds to finance a strong stimulus. Last (fiscal) year’s deficit of nearly a half trillion set a new record, and next year’s will be much, much larger – even before counting in the cost of the bailouts and the bills to be paid for the returning disabled veterans (likely to number 40 to 50 percent of the 1.7 million troops that have been deployed). Worries about the mounting debt will lead some to argue for a circumscribed fiscal response. If they succeed, almost surely, the downturn will be deeper and longer lasting than it otherwise would have been.

Was it a war to defend the dollar?

No one really understands why we went to war in Iraq. The purported reasons make no sense. There were no weapons of mass destruction, and that was known to be the case (with a high degree of reliability). There was no connection with Al Qaeda; it was in Afghanistan, a war which has been going badly, partly because we diverted our attention and resources away from it. (Now, of course, Al Qaeda has moved into Iraq.)

Some think we went to war to promote democracy throughout the region. If so, it has been a dismal failure. Some think we went to war to get cheap oil. If so, it has again been a dismal failure. But even the idea was strange: We live in the 21st century, not the 19th. In the 19th century, a country could march into another and seize its resources. But we signed the Hague convention, which requires that an occupying power treat the resources of the country as a fiduciary. Iraq’s oil would be Iraq’s, not America’s.

Will future wars rely so much on costly private armies of contractors?

Hopefully not. The contractors have not only been costly; they have often undermined our mission, in many ways. Maximizing profits is not necessarily consistent with maximizing America’s strategic objectives.

We used contractors because the Bush Administration wanted Americans to believe that we could have a war for free. They didn’t want to impose a draft, and the war was unpopular, which made recruitment difficult. Without the contractors, we would have had to expand our military significantly.

Q. How would a stimulus package help the economy, especially private investment?

A. A well-designed stimulus package will increase demand, and that will lead to an increase in output and employment. That will, in turn, reduce the number of foreclosures and bankruptcies. That means that the banking system will be stronger than it otherwise would be. Returns to investment will be higher, and there will be more access to capital.

A temporary (incremental) investment tax credit could help stimulate investment even more.

Should General Motors receive a bailout?

The relevant question is, what is the best way to restructure America’s automobile industry? We need to be careful in identifying who is being bailed out. The Mexico bailout was, for instance, not a bail-out of Mexico, but of American (and other) investors who had invested in certain Mexican bonds. Like most of the other bailouts (and not unlike our current bailout), it was largely a Wall Street bailout.

We could restructure General Motors in a way that maintained and enhanced its productive capacity, and limited the necessity of putting in government money. Restructuring would probably wipe out shareholder value (which is not great in any case), and diminish greatly that of bondholders. We have to do it in a way that will maintain and increase confidence in GM’s products and improve its technology. I believe it can be done, though it might require special legislation (a form of pre-packaged restructuring). In fact, doing this (with accountability for the managers that have failed) might actually increase confidence in GM’s products.

The risk is that a bailout without financial and corporate restructuring will cost our hard-pressed taxpayers far more than necessary, will undermine the sense of accountability so necessary for the functioning of a market economy, and will fail to achieve its underlying objective of creating a sustainable, viable, and vibrant industry. It will simply lead to the need for further bailouts in the future.

Can the American middle class avoid ruin?

Yes, if we put in place the right policies. There is nothing inevitable about the hollowing out of the middle class. It, like the current economic downturn, is a result of flawed policies.

Can global imbalances be reversed in the midst of these challenges?

Some of the global imbalances will almost inevitably be reversed in the midst of the current downturn; indeed, we can view the global meltdown as part of the long-predicted “disorderly unwinding” of these global imbalances. America’s savings rate will increase, its investment rate will decrease, and its trade deficit will probably decrease.

Q. Is Barack Obama the right person to take on these problems? Is his election an economic positive in itself?

A. I believe Barack Obama is the right person to take on these problems. He has shown an enormous awareness of what needs to be done. He has, for instance, emphasized the need for a stimulus and to do something about the problem of foreclosures.

His real challenge will come as he faces some of the tough decisions. How big a stimulus – and how big a deficit? Fiscal conservatives will be arguing for a small package, urging caution. Too small a package will mean that foreclosures will continue apace, bankruptcies will continue to increase, banks’ balance sheets will continue to worsen, and the economy will remain weak. Some will argue against restructuring the Troubled Assets Relief Program, but we will have to make it work – Congress and the American people never intended to give hundreds of billions of dollars to the banks so that they could continue their dividends. It was intended that they sustain their lending. Some in the financial market will urge caution in introducing regulations. Caution, yes. But behavior has to be changed in fundamental ways. We have to regulate incentives and risk taking. We have to do something about derivatives and leverage. The banks have shown that we cannot rely on self-regulation.

Will he be able to help create an international regulator?

We will have to have global cooperation in regulation. We cannot allow “regulatory arbitrage,” where banks to go to some Caribbean island to escape regulation (or to enable those engaged in drug dealing, tax evasion, or corruption to launder their money). The world’s leaders have recognized this, and even without a global regulator, we can achieve enough global cooperation to prevent these abuses.

Q. Where will global growth come from in the next decade?

A. Growth in the next decade is again likely to come from emerging markets. It is possible that America will emerge from its problems reinvigorated. There is a great deal of excitement about converting into a green economy all over the world. But the next few years are likely to be difficult.

Will we have a new world order in global economic management, with more participation by developing countries?

We have already seen the beginning of the shift – President Bush called a meeting of the G-20 to deal with the global crisis, not the G-7. There, they agreed that there needed to be a change in global economic governance. But progress may be slow, unless the developing countries with the large pools of liquid money the world needs insist on the changes, if they are going to provide that money to the international financial institutions, or unless the United States and Europe come together committed to creating a more democratic global economic governance.

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Nov 18, VCS in the News: Under Obama, Veterans See Hope for a Broken System

Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, said his organisation believes “President-elect Obama is already pro-veteran. We believe that he has a generally favourable disposition toward veterans, we’ve been pleased to see him give veterans issues a very high profile, and we hope that continues while he’s in the White House.”

November 18, 2008 – Thirty-three-year-old Walter Williams was among the thousands of revelers who flooded into the streets of Oakland on Nov. 4 to celebrate Barack Obama’s election as the 44th president of the United States.

Williams, a U.S. Army veteran who served tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan, initially had trouble coping with his return from the war zone. He did drugs and slept in his car and the homes of his friends, before stabilising himself and landing a job at the San Francisco non-profit Swords to Plowshares, where he helps other veterans find work.

On election night, Williams told IPS he had sworn off participating in the electoral process after “the lies I saw in the desert”, but became excited about Obama’s campaign after he saw the president-elect speaking to veterans on MTV.

“He cared enough to ask,” Williams said. “He didn’t just turn away, turn his back like most people do… He actually cares about the common man, and the common man is who’s over there fighting.”

Professional veterans’ advocates also have high hopes for an Obama administration. They note that as a senator, Obama co-sponsored the Dignity for Wounded Warriors Act, which was designed to solve problems with the military medical system after the Washington Post revealed deplorable conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Centre in 2007.

Obama was also a strong supporter of strengthening educational benefits for returning soldiers through a more generous GI Bill, and has consistently voted to appropriate more money to the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) as it copes with the more than 350,000 veterans who have turned to the VA for medical treatment after returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan.

In his speech accepting the Democratic nomination for president in Denver in August, Obama referred to the plight of the country’s veterans numerous times. “We are more compassionate than a government that lets veterans sleep on our streets and families slide into poverty,” he said.

“In the faces of those young veterans who come back from Iraq and Afghanistan, I see my grandfather,” Obama said, “who signed up after Pearl Harbor, marched in Patton’s army, and was rewarded by a grateful nation with the chance to go to college on the GI Bill.”

Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, said his organisation believes “President-elect Obama is already pro-veteran. We believe that he has a generally favourable disposition toward veterans, we’ve been pleased to see him give veterans issues a very high profile, and we hope that continues while he’s in the White House.”

Donald Overton, executive director of Veterans of Modern Warfare, shared a similar sentiment with IPS.

“I had the opportunity to meet with President-elect Obama’s team at the Democratic National Convention,” Overton said. “President-elect Obama really seems to have his heart in the right place. He is engaging the veteran community and he is looking to make significant changes so we’re hoping his administration and their transition team will assess the situation, put the right people in office, and really bring about change within the VA system.”

On his official transition website change.gov, Obama promises to increase the number of VA mental health providers, reform the government’s bureaucratic disability claims system, and increase the number of Vet Centres, where returning veterans can find community as they make the difficult transition from war to civilian life.

If he makes good on those promises, it will make a tremendous difference in the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. But it will not be easy, because George W. Bush is leaving the Department of Veterans Affairs in a state of disarray.

According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, 18 veterans commit suicide every day and 200,000 sleep homeless on the streets on any given night.

An April 2008 study by the Rand Corporation found that 300,000 Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans currently suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder or major depression. Another 320,000 suffer from traumatic brain injury and physical brain damage. A majority are not receiving help from the Pentagon or VA system which critics say are more concerned with concealing unpleasant facts than they are with providing care.

Both Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans of Modern Warfare are suing the Bush administration for failing to care for the country’s wounded veterans. Veterans for Common Sense’s class action lawsuit aims to force the VA to treat Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. Veterans of Modern Warfare filed suit last week to force the VA to give disability payments to wounded veterans in a timely manner.

Both of them will be pushing their lawsuits forward even as Barack Obama assumes the presidency of the United States.

*IPS Correspondent Aaron Glantz is author of the upcoming book “The War Comes Home: Washington’s Battle Against America’s Veterans”.

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Nov 18, VCS in the News: Gulf War Illness Confirmed

“After 17 years of official government delays and denials, VA’s Research Advisory Committee should be commended for their work providing facts about Gulf War illnesses,” said Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense.

November 18, 2008 – A federal health panel released conclusions Monday that evidence strongly and consistently indicates hundreds of thousands of US troops in the first Gulf War contracted long-term illnesses from use of pills, given by their own military to protect them from effects of chemical weaponized nerve agents, and from their military’s pesticide use during deployment.

Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans’ Illnesses report covers a large range of scientific research and government investigations on Gulf War illness. Its authors claim their “comprehensive analysis” resolves many questions about what caused Gulf War illness and what types of health care can address these serious conditions, which affect at least one in four of the 697,000 Gulf War veterans.

A committee summary describes veterans’ various, painfully nagging and long-term health obstacles. “Illness profiles typically include some combination of chronic headaches, cognitive difficulties, widespread pain, unexplained fatigue, chronic diarrhea, skin rashes, respiratory problems, and other abnormalities. This symptom complex, now commonly referred to as Gulf War illness, is not explained by routine medical evaluations or by psychiatric diagnoses and has persisted, for many veterans, for 17 years. While specific symptoms can vary between individuals, a remarkably consistent illness profile has emerged from hundreds of reports and studies of different Gulf War veteran populations from different regions of the US and from allied countries.”

In addition to pills supposedly protecting soldiers from nerve agents, the deadly agents themselves ultimately became a crucial wartime exposure. During the January and February 1991 ground war and after, US and allied forces destroyed large stores of Iraqi chemical weapons. And, as the war itself progressed, thousands of military chemical alarms went off, causing soldiers to don chemical protective equipment. Since then, the US General Accountability Office (GAO) and veterans’ advocates have repeatedly criticized the lack of quality of the chemical protective masks and protective suits worn by US troops.

Two of the most controversial after-war explosions of underground Iraqi chemical storage depots were set off by US forces themselves at Khamisiyah, Iraq, on March 4 and 10, 1991. Few of the troops were wearing protective gear at the time even though US forces had access to earlier intelligence reports detailing the chemicals inside the bombed bunkers. The Defense Department (DoD) first estimated that 5,000 troops were exposed, and then increased the estimates repeatedly until the number rose to 100,000. Another GAO report said the number is much higher than that but gave no specific figure. At the time and years afterward, the DoD claimed the troops’ exposure to chemical warfare agents was too weak to have seriously harmed their health.

Still another of the Research Advisory Committee’s conclusions says, “Studies indicate that Gulf War veterans have significantly higher rates of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) than other veterans, and that Gulf War veterans potentially exposed to nerve agents have died from brain cancer at elevated rates. Although these conditions have affected relatively few veterans, they are cause for concern and require continued monitoring.”

Pesticides, mentioned in Monday’s committee report, were used routinely during the war to protect service members against harmful or molesting insects biting troops throughout the Iraq war zone. Common Gulf War insecticides included d-phenothrin, chlorpyrifos, resmethrin, malathion, methomyl and lindane, according to the US Department of Defense Deployment Health Clinical Center. Deet and permethrin (a pyrethroid), are technically repellents rather than insecticides, says the center, but they were also an ultimate health concern, the center opines.

The Research Advisory Committee’s continued conclusions say that limited other evidence, not totally decisive, shows that the armed service members could have become sick from low-level exposure to chemical warfare nerve agents as well as their close proximity to oil well fires, their receipt of multiple so-called preventative vaccines, and the effects of combinations of their hazardous other Gulf War exposures.

The report was issued by the committee to US Secretary of Veterans Affairs James Peake. “The VA has accepted and implemented prior recommendations of the committee and values the work represented in the report presented today. Secretary Peake thanked the committee for its report and recommendations and directed VA to review and respond to the committee’s recommendations in the near future,” said Alison Aikele, a VA spokesperson. Despite receiving at least one adverse comment via email, the VA did not respond to that criticism. As well, Charlene Reynolds, a defense contract spokeswoman for the Pentagon, said the DoD is preparing a similar statement without yet being sure when it would be released.

The Committee report knocks down repeated theories of largely Pentagon-funded studies that one of the main causes of all these wartime illnesses was post-traumatic stress disorders or other mental ailments. “Gulf War illness fundamentally differs from trauma and stress-related syndromes described after other wars,” concludes the report. “Studies consistently indicate that Gulf War illness is not the result of combat or other stressors and that Gulf War veterans have lower rates of posttraumatic stress disorder than veterans of other wars.” This discredits the Walter Reed Army Medical Center’s extensive studies of Gulf War veterans, which concluded stress was a major cause of Gulf War illnesses.

The Research Advisory Committee’s conclusions additionally minimize other allegedly sickening Gulf War exposures, including depleted uranium munitions blasts, anthrax vaccine use, fuels, solvents, sand and particulates, infectious diseases and chemical agent resistant coating (CARC). However, numerous other scientific reports have earlier concluded these exposures, too, sometimes proved extremely sickening for war veterans.

Highlighted by the committee’s findings is what many veterans’ advocates have called the gross negligence of responsible federal health and military agencies in repeatedly failing to get to the bottom of what the government labeled the “mysterious Gulf War syndrome” illnesses. What’s more, during three presidential reigns and several sessions of US Congresses, the highest level officials continuously discussed these hazards and resulting troop illnesses and deaths, but never came to their own ultimate conclusions or scientific plans to deal with the health consequences.

Denise Nichols, a veteran nurse, retired Army major and vice chair of National Vietnam and Gulf War Veterans Coalition, has worked many years to assist sick Gulf War service members. “The veterans of the Gulf War 90-91 did not give up,” wrote the nurse. “They knew that physically something in their bodies was damaged. They have been stating this since November 1993, when the first hearings [in Congress] occurred. Their family members have seen it and tried to hold their families together waiting for answers from the government. It has been an exceedingly difficult nightmare for these veterans and their families. Many were told that it was psychological or somatic and [so] families left their veteran loved ones behind. [And,] many of these veterans have died, [been] forgotten [or] misdiagnosed. It is time now that the government declassify all [wartime and post war] records that might provide more answers. After all, in 2003, we liberated Iraq, so many ask now, ‘Why not let these records that may provide answers be fully declassified?'”

After the end of 43 days of dirty chemical and environmental Gulf War chaos when former President George H.W. Bush laid out conditions for a cease fire on Feb. 27, 1991, hundreds of thousands of US, allied, Iraqi troops and Iraqi civilians suffered resulting long-term illnesses and, ultimately, untold deaths. Very limited medical attention has ever been paid by US federal agencies to sick Iraqi civilians the US military and their private contractors were supposed to protect.

Today, close to 18 years later, US and foreign governments are still making promises, struggling and conversing over failed attempts to give the combatants and civilians proper health care. Meanwhile, as the US fights the second war in Iraq and continues along with the war in Afghanistan, the failed attempts to deal with US casualties and sicknesses continues at a similar dragged out pace. “When will they ever get it done?” war veterans have repeatedly asked themselves and others.

Monday, the 14-member Research Advisory Committee and a consultant, composed of doctors, scientists and veterans, confirmed these thousands of Gulf War One veterans’ haunting and frustrating concerns. It concluded, “Federal Gulf War research programs have not been effective, historically, in addressing priority issues related to Gulf War illness and the health of Gulf War veterans. Substantial federal Gulf War research funding has been used for studies that have little or no relevance to the health of Gulf War veterans, and for research on stress and psychiatric illness … A renewed federal research commitment is needed to identify effective treatments for Gulf War illness and address other priority Gulf War health issues.”

“After 17 years of official government delays and denials, VA’s Research Advisory Committee should be commended for their work providing facts about Gulf War illnesses,” said Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense (VCS). “Veterans for Common Sense is concerned that there are up to 210,000 Gulf War veterans who remain ill after serving the 1991 Gulf War, and these veterans still need healthcare and disability benefits.”

“VCS urges Congress to fund new research into why so many Gulf War veterans are ill as well as fund research into desperately needed medical treatments for veterans. VCS also urges top VA officials to review the conduct of the VA Central Office staff who blocked scientific research and treatments for veterans, especially VA’s contracts with the Institute of Medicine that improperly excluded animal studies from scientific review. The VA Central Office staff who needlessly delayed research, treatment, and disability benefits for hundreds of thousands of Gulf War veterans should be held accountable for their actions,” said Sullivan.

He continued, “The facts now show that top Pentagon officials failed to assist Gulf War veterans by clinging to the myth that Gulf War illnesses was related to stress.” Sullivan went on to say that the US Army “neglected to consider the many toxic exposures as potential causes of Gulf War illnesses, even after Gulf War veterans raised these as serious possibilities.”

The committee identified four areas of highest priority research to assist sick Gulf War veterans as follows:

1) Evaluate the effectiveness of currently available treatments used for Gulf War illness or conditions with similarities to Gulf War illness.

2) Pilot trials and/or observational studies capable of identifying promising treatments suitable for evaluation in larger clinical trials.

3) Identification of specific pathophysiological mechanisms underlying Gulf War illness that are potentially amenable to treatment interventions.

4) Assess novel therapies based on scientific findings as they emerge.

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Editorial Column: After the Torture Era

November 18, 2008 – “I have said repeatedly that I intend to close Guantanamo, and I will follow through on that. I have said repeatedly that America doesn’t torture, and I’m going to make sure that we don’t torture. Those are part and parcel of an effort to regain America’s moral stature in the world.”

That unequivocal passage from President-elect Barack Obama’s first extended interview since the election, broadcast on “60 Minutes” Sunday night, was a big step toward healing the damage that the Bush administration has done not just to our nation’s image but to its soul.

Amid the excitement of the election and the urgency of the economic crisis, it has been easy to lose sight of the terrorism-related “issues” that defined George W. Bush’s presidency and robbed America of so much honor, stature and goodwill.

I put the word issues in quotation marks because torture can never be a matter of debate. Yet the Bush administration sought to numb Americans to what has traditionally been seen as a clear moral and legal imperative: the requirement that individuals taken into custody by our government be treated fairly and humanely.

This doesn’t mean handling nihilistic, homicidal “evildoers” with kid gloves. It means being as certain as possible that the people we are holding are, indeed, real or would-be terrorists, not unlucky bystanders; and treating these detainees in accordance with international law, as we would expect detained U.S. personnel to be treated.

At Guantanamo, at Abu Ghraib and in a little gulag of secret CIA prisons overseas, the Bush administration failed to live up to these basic responsibilities and thus sullied us all.

We will look back on the Bush years and find it incredible, and disgraceful, that individuals were captured in battle or “purchased” from self-interested tribal warlords, whisked to Guantanamo, classified as “enemy combatants” but not accorded the rights that that status should have accorded them, held for years without charges — and denied the right to prove that they were victims of mistaken identity and never should have been taken into custody.

A new study by researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, based on interviews with 62 men who were held for an average of three years at Guantanamo before being released without being accused of a crime, found that more than a third said they were turned over to their American captors by warlords for a bounty. Those who reported physical abuse said most of it occurred at the United States’ Bagram air base in Afghanistan, where about half the men were initially held before being taken to Guantanamo.

Two-thirds of the former detainees reported suffering psychological problems since their release, and many are now destitute, shunned by their families and villages. None has received any compensation for the ordeal, according to the report, titled “Guantánamo and Its Aftermath.”

Years from now, we will be shocked to see those pictures of naked prisoners being humiliated and abused at Abu Ghraib — and we will be ashamed of a U.S. government that punished low-level troops for their sadism but exonerated the higher-ups who made such sadism possible.

Years from now, we will know the full truth of the clandestine, CIA-run prisons where “high-value” terrorism suspects were interrogated with techniques, including waterboarding, that both civilized norms and international law have long defined as torture. From what we already know, it’s hard to say which is more appalling — the torture itself or the tortured legal rationalizations that Bush administration lawyers came up with to “justify” making barbarity the official policy of the U.S. government.

Obama’s clarity on the issues of Guantanamo and torture stands in contrast to his necessary vagueness about how he will deal with the economic crisis. Torture is wrong today and will still be wrong tomorrow, whereas today’s economic panacea can be tomorrow’s drop in the bucket. Who would have thought that these “war on terror” issues would be the easy part for the new president?

Not that easy, though. More reports like the UC-Berkeley study will come out, but this is not a task that can be left to academic researchers alone. The new Obama administration has a duty to conduct its own investigation and tell us exactly what was done in our name. Realistically, some facts are going to be redacted. Realistically, some officials who may deserve to face criminal charges will not. But to restore our national honor and heal our national soul, we at least need to know.

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Newspaper Editorial: Gulf War Troops Poisoned, Neglected

November 18, 2008 – One of the most dangerous threats to the health of American troops in combat might be the United States government. That conclusion can reasonably be drawn after a government panel reported that one in four U.S. veterans of the 1991 Gulf War – about 172,000 troops – is ill from exposure to toxic chemicals, most of them administered by the U.S. government.

For years, the government has resisted persistent claims by thousands of Gulf War veterans that their service there had somehow sickened them. Symptoms included forgetfulness, persistent headaches and fatigue, pain, digestive problems and other maladies.

The federal government studied the complaints, and veterans have gotten some help. But funding for Gulf War-related illnesses has dropped in recent years. There also have been skeptics about whether there really was a Gulf War illness.

But the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans’ Illnesses, set up by Congress to review all studies done on Gulf War illness, found serious gaps and concluded in a report to be presented this week:

“The extensive body of scientific research now available consistently indicates that ‘Gulf War’ illness is real, that it is the result of neurotoxic exposures during Gulf War deployment, and that few veterans have recovered or substantially improved with time.”

The troops were not sickened by Iraqi chemicals. Instead, the advisory committee said, it found that a drug called pyridostigmine bromide, administered as a tablet to U.S. troops to offset the effects of nerve gas (which the Iraqis never used), was “causally associated” with Gulf War illness symptoms.

In addition, it said pesticides also were found to cause Gulf War illness. Pesticides were sprayed in areas where troops were based to ward off sand flies, and some soldiers said they were ordered to dunk their uniforms in the pesticide DEET and to spray pesticide on exposed skin and in their boots to deter scorpions.

The panel said it could not draw a conclusion on whether the huge oil well fires set in Iraq had also contributed to the poisoning of the troops.

This is not the first time American troops have been unintentionally poisoned by their own commanders. During the Vietnam War, the U.S. military sprayed large amounts of a herbicide, Agent Orange, across thousands of acres to clear them of vegetation and thus deny cover to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong soldiers. But thousands of American troops also inhaled or were covered by Agent Orange and sickened by it, and are still sick today.

Of course, American commanders in both wars were not attempting to harm their own troops. Nevertheless, they ended up doing a great deal of damage to many of the troops who took ill and have lived with the consequences ever since, as have their families.

The government – that is, taxpayers – has a clear-cut obligation to care for these sickened troops, and the cost could be high. And in the future, U.S. commanders must be far more conservative about using chemical warfare, even if only in defense.

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New Veterans Hit Hard by Economic Crisis

November 17, 2008 – After a mortar sent Andrew Spurlock hurtling off a roof in Iraq, ending his Army career in 2006, the seasoned infantryman set aside bitterness over his back injury and began to chart his life in storybook fashion: a new house, a job as a police officer and more children.

“We had a budget and a plan,” said Mr. Spurlock, 29, a father of three, who with his wife, Michelle, hoped to avoid the pitfalls of his transition from Ramadi, Iraq, to Apopka, Fla.

But the move proved treacherous, as it often does for veterans. The job with the Orange County Sheriff’s Office fell through after officials there told Mr. Spurlock that he needed to “decompress” after two combat tours, a judgment that took him by surprise. Scrambling, he settled for a job delivering pizzas.

Mr. Spurlock’s disability claim for his back injury took 18 months to process, a year longer than expected. With little choice, the couple began putting mortgage payments on credit cards. The family debt climbed to $60,000, a chunk of it for medical bills, including for his wife and child. Foreclosure seemed certain.

While few Americans are sheltered from the jolt of the recent economic crisis, the nation’s newest veterans, particularly the wounded, are being hit especially hard. The triple-whammy of injury, unemployment and waiting for disability claims to be processed has forced many veterans into foreclosure, or sent them teetering on its edge, according to veterans’ organizations.

The problem is hard to quantify because there are no foreclosure statistics singling out veterans and service members. Congress recently asked the Veterans Affairs Department to find out how badly veterans were being affected, particularly by foreclosures. The Army, too, began tracking requests for help on foreclosure issues for the first time. Service organizations report that requests for help from military personnel and new veterans, especially those who were wounded, mentally or physically, and are struggling to keep their houses and pay their bills, has jumped sharply.

“The demand curve has gone almost straight up this year,” said Bill Nelson, executive director for USA Cares, a nonprofit group that provides financial help to members of the military and to veterans. Housing, Mr. Nelson said, “is the biggest driver in the last 12 months.”

Congress has recently taken small steps to help, banning lenders from foreclosing on military personnel for nine months after their return from overseas, up from three months, and ensuring that interest rates on their loans remain stable for a year. Another relief bill to prevent certain injured veterans from losing their homes while they wait for their disability money was signed into law in October. The protection is good for one year.

“We owe these men and women more than a pat on the back,” said Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, who introduced one of the bills.

But the short-term measures do little to address the underlying economic difficulties that new veterans face, beginning with the job hunt. Veterans, particularly those in their 20s, have faced higher unemployment rates in recent years than those who never served in the military, though the gap has shrunk as the economy has worsened. (Veterans traditionally have lower unemployment rates than nonveterans.)

Recently discharged veterans, though, fared worst of all. A 2007 survey for the Veterans Affairs Department of 1,941 combat veterans who left the military mostly in 2005 showed nearly 18 percent were unemployed as of last year. The average national jobless rate in October was 6.5 percent.

A quarter of those who found jobs failed to make a living wage, earning less than $21,840 a year.

“You fill out a job application and you can’t write ‘long-range reconnaissance and sniper skills,’ ” said Mr. Spurlock, who searched a year for a better-paying job than delivering pizza, finally finding one as a construction supervisor.

The situation is especially troubling for the injured, whose financial problems begin almost immediately.

“The wife drops everything to be by his bedside,” said Meredith Leyva, founder of Operation Homefront, a nonprofit group that provides emergency money and aid to 33,000 military families a year, including the Spurlocks. “She stays at the nearest hotel to make sure he is alive. They live that way for months. She either has to quit her job or she is fired. This bankrupts people.”

Some injured veterans cannot work at all and must rely on disability checks and other government payouts. The wait for a disability check from the Veterans Affairs Department averaged six months in August, enough to financially crush some families.

Those who can work struggle to find employers willing to accommodate their injuries, including mental health problems. The Labor Department recently started a Web site, America’s Heroes at Work, that prods employers into hiring more wounded veterans and explains that post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury are manageable conditions and not necessarily long-term.

Some believe that the government has to do more.

“There have to be incentives for employers,” said Thomas L. Wilkerson, a retired Marine Corps general who is chief executive of the Naval Institute, an independent nonprofit group.

Active duty troops who switch installations also find themselves struggling. Many of those forced to sell their homes this year are finding a scarcity of buyers, or even renters, particularly in states hit hard by the mortgage crisis. Military spouses must choose between taking a loss on their homes or riding out the housing slowdown and facing another separation from their loved one.

Although the government offers safeguards for some federal employees in similar circumstances, it will not help service members make up the difference if they are forced to sell a home at a loss.

What is worse, foreclosure or excessive debt can damage a service member’s career by leading to discharge, the loss of security clearances or, in extreme cases, jail.

A 2007 California task force reported that in the Navy, the number of security clearances revoked because of debt increased to 1,999 in 2005, from 124 in 2000.

“It’s the crash in the market,” said Joe Gladden, managing partner of Veteran Realty Service America’s Military, who sees families in extremis out of Northern Virginia. “It’s not that they have made stupid decisions.”

Mr. Gladden said e-mail messages and phone calls to his office had become so routine that he encouraged military families to share their stories anonymously on his company Web site, vrsam.com.

“I am about sick over this situation,” one woman wrote. “Our two young boys have to go without seeing Daddy until we can sell our house. Not only that, but we face the possibility of Daddy deploying to Iraq again. Shouldn’t we be able to spend as much time together until that happens?”

For the Hatchers, the financial decline began after Roger, a Navy reservist and father of four, returned from his first tour of duty in Iraq. When he got back to Ventura, Calif., in 2004, his job as a groundskeeper for a school district was gone. He was offered a custodial job for less pay. Mr. Hatcher decided to find another job. He looked for several months, then was redeployed to Iraq. By then, the family had moved to Bakersfield, to a cheaper house near relatives.

His second tour was tougher. Iraq had grown more violent, and in late 2006, Mr. Hatcher was blown out of a Humvee after it hit a roadside bomb. The blast injured his shoulder, arm and neck. Back home, Mr. Hatcher, 49, fell prey to nightmares and rages. He drank heavily, said Tami, his wife of two decades. The pain in his shoulder never let up.

It took Mr. Hatcher eight months to find a job, and the family fell behind on their house payments. A disability claim filed in 2007 was still pending in August, Mrs. Hatcher said.

Mr. Hatcher wound up hospitalized for post-traumatic stress disorder three times. “We noticed there was a change after the first tour, but not as drastic as this time,” Mrs. Hatcher said. “The person comes back a different person, and then you have financial issues on top of it.”

His new employer, a construction company, welcomed him back after each medical absence. Still, weeks off the job meant weeks without pay.

Meanwhile, the mortgage company ratcheted up the pressure. Feeling cornered, the Hatchers signed a forbearance agreement, which significantly increased their monthly payment. “They knew about my husband’s situation,” Mrs. Hatcher said of the mortgage company. “They wouldn’t work with us.”

The Hatchers borrowed from friends and relatives but still came up short. Then two nonprofit groups stepped in to help. One of them, Operation Homefront, negotiated with the lender to keep them in their house.

Mrs. Hatcher, a purchasing agent, tried her best to shield her husband from their financial troubles. “It’s putting a big strain on me,” she admitted. “But only one of us can lose it at a time right now, and it’s his turn.”

The Spurlocks, back in Florida, were not so lucky. Operation Homefront managed to stop foreclosure proceedings, but the couple had to agree to a deed in lieu, turning over their house to the bank. Their debt was forgiven.

The family moved into a rental house and whittled down its credit card debt to $26,000.

“It feels impossible right now to pay off our bills,” said Michelle Spurlock, 28, her voice breaking. “I had to get my mom to bring diapers over. We couldn’t go grocery shopping. As soon as we turn a corner, it’s something else.”

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Nov 19, VA Shredder Scandal: Chairman Filner Says Confidence in VA Completely Shattered by Recent Document Shredding

Chairman Filner to VA: Confidence in VA Completely Shattered by Recent Document Shredding

November 19, 2008, Washington, DC – House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Bob Filner (D-CA) released this statement following today’s roundtable discussion on the shredding of veterans’ documents by the VA:

“Today’s roundtable revealed a number of shortcomings within the VA that are hardly new and most definitely failing our nation’s veterans. I am encouraged that the VA came forward and revealed that important documents were slated for the shredding bin. 

“I remain angry that a culture of dishonesty has led to increased mistrust of the VA within the veteran community.  A systemic lack of integrity seems pervasive and that is a shame.

“First, I am not convinced that only 500 documents were saved from the shredding bin.  This is merely a snapshot in time.  The VA was unable to convince me that more documents have not been shredded in the past and I honestly do not know how many records have been destroyed and how many files lost over the past decades.

“Second, we have heard promises from the VA before.  We have heard that the claims process will go paperless.  Training will be improved.  VA’s latest promise is that veterans can submit statements containing information that will be used in the adjudication process in lieu of documents missing from their files.  While this is an important step forward, I am skeptical that this new step will become part of the claims process.

“Additionally, the VA’s outreach has been limited to a reliance on media reports and a message on the VA website.  The VA did not report a systematic way of reaching out to veterans to alert them of new policies that may have huge implications in their claims going forward.

“Finally, Congress has routinely asked VA what it needs to adequately care for veterans and the response has been that it is adequately poised.  This is clearly not adequate care for our veterans.

“Listen, this is a long-term systemic problem that will require uncomfortable changes, long hours, unprecedented cooperation, extraordinary progress, and a new system of independent oversight.  Clearly, the current system of self-reporting and internal regulation is ineffective.  Congress must hold the VA accountable for a job NOT WELL DONE. 

“A complete paradigm shift is necessary and I look forward to working with new leadership to correct the problems plaguing the benefits claims system.  I am pleased that veterans have begun to work on transition issues in the impending Obama Administration.  I plan to work with veterans service organizations, veterans, and the VA to fundamentally change the way that the Veterans Benefits Administration conducts business.”

###

Chairman Filner provided this opening statement to begin the roundtable discussion:

Good morning and welcome to the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs’ roundtable discussion on the very serious issue of the shredding of veterans documents — whether they are claims or other records.

On October 13th of this year, we . . . the Committee and our Veterans . . . were shocked by the disturbing headline:

“SHREDDING OUR TRUST IN THE VA — VA investigators find entire claims and other critical documents in shredding bins at Detroit Regional Office”.

A nationwide review of the VA’s 57 regional offices found 41 had records in their shredder bins that should not have been there.  In all, nearly 500 benefit claims records had been erroneously slated for destruction, including claims for compensation, notices of disagreement with a claim decision, and death certificates.

These actions completely shatter confidence in the whole VA system.  These documents are matters of life and death for some of these veterans.  This episode has further strengthened my belief that VA desperately needs new leadership, and it needs new leadership today.  These incidents and “mistakes,” all occurring to the detriment of our veterans and never to their benefit, remind me more of the Keystone Cops rather than a supportive organization dedicated to taking care of our veterans.

Shortly, we will hear from Admiral Patrick Dunne, the Under Secretary for Benefits for the VA, who will give an overview of the situation and an update on the VA’s actions regarding this intolerable situation.  I suspect that his comments will generate some lively discussion on the issue about how we can best proceed from this point and never allow this to occur again.

I purposefully chose this “roundtable” format, and invited stakeholders in the veterans community, so that we can address this issue, have an interactive discussion, and get to practical solutions to solve these problems.  Concerns have been raised that this meeting has not been called a hearing.  These concerns are unfounded and I think our veterans care less about what we call it and more about what we do.  It is vital that we quickly get to the bottom of this and take concrete steps to correct and fix this today — not tomorrow or next week.  We need to hear what the VA is doing and the internal controls and protections that seemingly were in place to prevent this, and what has been done since the incident.  As I said earlier, “These documents are matters of life and death for some of these veterans.”

I believe this is a critical juncture for the VA.  It is on the verge of completely losing the trust and confidence of the people that it is supposed to represent…the very same people it has been entrusted to care for.

I believe the following statement in the article I cited previously adequately sums up the current feelings of our veterans:

“This is not business as usual. The recent revelations of the willful and wanton destruction of vital veteran’s records are not just another ‘isolated incident.’  We have now moved to the next level of the game.  What was maddening last year is now possibly criminal.”

So this morning we are going to attempt to get a better idea of the scope of this problem and what the VA is doing to respond to it.  What specific steps has the VA taken and what has it done to begin to rectify the problem?

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VA Officials Investigate Mishandled Documents at Benefits Offices in S.C.

November 6, 2008, Columbia, SC – Veterans Affairs officials are investigating why 95 records were erroneously dumped in a shredder bin at the VA office in Columbia.

An unidentified employee at the Columbia office is under investigation for mishandling the documents, which include new benefits claims and other personal files, VA officials said.

“I can’t discuss in detail what action may be taken against an employee in this instance until the investigation is complete,” VA press secretary Alison Aikele said Wednesday.

In South Carolina, the possible destruction of benefit claims could affect some of the state’s 413,000 veterans. The shredding probe involves the VA’s benefits offices, not the hospitals.

So far, few veterans suspect they might have a problem resulting from their benefit claim being erroneously shredded.

“We don’t know how many, we don’t know why it happened,” said Rodney Burne, quartermaster of the Veterans of Foreign Wars S.C. department. “It will be interesting to find out.”

The documents slated for destruction were found in the shredder bin Oct. 3 as part of the agency’s inspector general’s review of how veterans records and claims are handled.

The probe discovered 41 of the VA’s 57 regional offices, including Columbia, had 500 records wrongly slated for shredding. The VA further determined that half of those records were found in shredder bins at the Columbia office and at two other offices, St. Louis and Cleveland.

Forty-six of the records — or about half discovered in the shredder bin at the Columbia office — were either new claims for benefits or supporting documents.

Other claims included burial and death benefits, notices of clients’ disagreements with VA rulings, and documents for education benefits.

The House Veterans Affairs Committee, whose membership includes U.S. Rep. Henry Brown, R-S.C., plans to look into the issue in mid-November, an aide said.

Officials from the VA as well as representatives of veterans service organizations will be invited to the discussion.

Brown called the reports “troubling,” and added “there is never any excuse for the shredding of documents, especially when they jeopardize the benefits our veterans are entitled to.”

Brown said the incident “shows how important it is for the VA to focus on modernizing its information technology systems and establishing clear safeguards.”

The shredding issue was first reported by vawatchdog.org, a Web site run by Army veteran Larry Scott, of Vancouver, Wash.

Scott learned records were erroneously dumped in shredder bins at the VA’s Detroit office. VA investigators discovered Detroit was just part of the problem, so they ordered all 57 offices to check their shredder bins.

The fact that the Columbia office would have the most records in the shredder bin wasn’t a surprise, Scott said.

The Columbia office has a reputation as a “troubled office,” meaning it has a low clearance rate of veterans’ claims.

In 2005, the VA reported Columbia had the third-highest remand rate of the agency’s 57 regional offices. A remand is a benefit case that, once appealed, must be redone.

The VA said 50.1 percent of 3,095 cases filed with the Columbia office had to be remanded. The agencywide average was 44.3 percent.

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Admirals, Generals: Let Gays Serve Openly in Our Military

More than 100 call for repeal of military’s ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy

November 18, 2008, Annapolis, MD – More than 100 retired generals and admirals called Monday for repeal of the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy on gays so they can serve openly, according to a statement obtained by The Associated Press.

The move by the military veterans confronts the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama with a thorny political and cultural issue that dogged former President Bill Clinton early in his administration.

“As is the case with Great Britain, Israel, and other nations that allow gays and lesbians to serve openly, our service members are professionals who are able to work together effectively despite differences in race, gender, religion, and sexuality,” the officers wrote.

While Obama has expressed support for repeal, he said during the presidential campaign that he would not do so on his own — an indication that he would tread carefully to prevent the issue from becoming a drag on his agenda. Obama said he would instead work with military leaders to build consensus on removing the ban on openly gay service members.

“Although I have consistently said I would repeal ‘don’t ask, don’t tell,’ I believe that the way to do it is make sure that we are working through a process, getting the Joint Chiefs of Staff clear in terms of what our priorities are going to be,” Obama said in a September interview with the Philadelphia Gay News.

Tommy Vietor, a spokesman for Obama’s transition team, declined comment.

Flash point for Clinton

The issue of gays in the military became a flash point early in the Clinton administration as Clinton tried to fulfill a campaign promise to end the military’s ban on gays. His efforts created the current compromise policy — ending the ban but prohibiting active-duty service members from openly acknowledging they are gay.

But it came at a political cost. The resulting debate divided service members and veterans, put Democrats on the defensive and provided cannon fodder for social conservatives and Republican critics who questioned Clinton’s patriotism and standing with the military.

Retired Adm. Charles Larson, a four-star admiral and two-time superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy who signed the statement with 104 other retired admirals and generals, said in an interview that he believed Clinton’s approach was flawed because he rushed to change military culture.

Larson said he hoped Obama would take more time to work with the Pentagon. Joining Larson among the signatories was Clifford Alexander, Army secretary under former President Jimmy Carter.

“There are a lot of issues they’ll have to work out, and I think they’ll have to prioritize,” Larson said, noting that the new administration will immediately face combat-readiness issues and budget concerns. “But I hope this would be one of the priority issues in the personnel area.”

The list of 104 former officers who signed the statement appears to signal growing support for resolving the status of gays in the military. Last year, 28 former generals and admirals signed a similar statement.

Generational shift cited

Larson, who has a gay daughter he says has broadened his thinking on the subject, believes a generational shift in attitudes toward homosexuality has created a climate where a repeal is not only workable, but also an important step for keeping talented personnel in the military.

“I know a lot of young people now — even people in the area of having commands of ships and squadrons — and they are much more tolerant, and they believe, as I do, that we have enough regulations on the books to enforce proper standards of human behavior,” Larson said.

The officers’ statement points to data showing there are about 1 million gay and lesbian veterans in the United States, and about 65,000 gays and lesbians currently serving in the military.

The military discharged about 12,340 people between 1994 and 2007 for violating the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, according to the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, a military watchdog group. The number peaked in 2001 at 1,273, but began dropping off sharply after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Last year, 627 military personnel were discharged under the policy.

Political observers say that even though the issue may not be as controversial as it was when Clinton addressed it, it’s impossible to forget what happened then.

Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia, said Obama is unlikely to tackle the issue early on. Sabato said he expects Obama to focus on economic recovery and avoid risking the spark of a distracting “brush fire” controversy at the outset.

“I can’t imagine that he will do this right in the beginning, given the Clinton precedent,” Sabato said.

Aaron Belkin, who has studied the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy as director of the Palm Center at the University of California at Santa Barbara and organized the officers’ statement, said how Obama addresses the issue will be the first test for the new president on gay rights.

“Everyone is going to be interested to see how he responds,” Belkin said.

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Veterans Day Diferent for Anti-War Vets

November 17, 2008 – Veterans Day commemorations took place last week, but for some veterans, the day took on a different meaning.

Just the day before, 15 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans and their supporters pled “not guilty” to charges of disorderly conduct for demonstrating at the third presidential debate in October.

Known as the Hempstead 15, these members of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans Against the War were nonviolently attempting to deliver to CBS moderator Bob Schieffer one question they had for each of the candidates.

The group of mainly Army and Marine Corps sergeants were frustrated with the loss of media interest with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan during the election cycle and demanded attention be paid to veterans’ needs.

Matthis Chiroux, an Army sergeant who served in Afghanistan, asked Schieffer why the government refused to adequately fund veterans’ care, “while simultaneously lining the pockets of the richest with $700 billion in taxpayer (including service members and veterans’) money.”

Several were hurt by the police that day, including Iraq vet Sgt. Nick Morgan, who had his cheekbone broken when a police officer on a horse trampled him as he was standing on the sidewalk.

“‘Support our troops’ should at least mean: Don’t step on their faces when they are trying to exercise free speech,” Bob Keeler opined in Newsday.

The total financial cost of the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, which includes the future long-term care for the staggering number of U.S. military casualties, will be between $3 and $5 trillion, said economist Joseph Stiglitz at a talk on campus recently.

But the human cost is incalculable.

Of the 1.64 million service members who have served either in Afghanistan or Iraq, a Pentagon-sponsored research and development study found that approximately 300,000 of them suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder or major depression, and 320,000 experienced a probable traumatic brain injury during their deployment.

A class-action lawsuit by Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans United for Truth revealed in May that 18 American war veterans kill themselves every day – accounting for more daily U.S. deaths due to suicide than from combat.

Additionally, there are 1,000 attempted suicides every month – a statistic that Dr. Ira Katz, the head of the Veterans Affair’s Mental Health Division, secretly advised a spokesperson to keep hidden from CBS news.

The lawsuit also revealed that 287,790 returning Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans filed a disability claim with the Veterans Administration as of March 25.

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