DoD finds officers made mistakes with Hasan - Navy News | News from Afghanistan & Iraq - Navy Times

Quick Links

Print Email
Bookmark and Share
http://www.navytimes.com/news/2010/01/ap_hood_risks_011510w/

DoD finds officers made mistakes with Hasan


By Anne Flaherty - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Jan 15, 2010 21:30:46 EST

The military remains vulnerable to another Fort Hood-like massacre with religious radicalization on the rise and too little attention being paid to internal threats, senior Pentagon officials said Friday.

An internal investigation into the shooting at the Texas Army post in November found that several officers failed to use “appropriate judgment and standards” in overseeing the career of Army Maj. Nidal Hasan and that their actions should be investigated immediately.

Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, has been charged with killing 13 people.

“I would ask all commanders and leaders at every level to make an effort to look beyond their day-to-day tasks and be attuned to personnel who may be at risk or pose a danger,” said Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

Separately, the FBI said it would revise its own procedures to make sure that when it investigates a member of the military, it notifies the Pentagon. In the Hasan case, a local joint terror task force run by the FBI with some military personnel examined Hasan but did not alert the Defense Department about the investigation.

The FBI also says it will increase training for task force members to search bureau databases better when conducting investigations.

Lawmakers including Rep. Ike Skelton, the Missouri Democrat who chairs the House Armed Services Committee, and Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn called the findings unacceptable.

“We go to great lengths to keep our troops safe in overseas theaters of combat; when they return home, we cannot let our guard down,” said Cornyn, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

A separate White House assessment concluded the government does not do enough to share information on “disaffected individuals” and that closer scrutiny of some information is needed by intelligence and law enforcement officials.

A particular worry is “self-radicalization” by individuals seeking out extremist views, said Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“There is clearly more and more of that going on, and how much of it we have in the military is something that we ought to really understand,” Mullen said.

The Hasan case has taken on heightened importance in recent weeks because of its parallels to the attempted bombing of a Detroit-bound passenger jet. Both cases are linked by U.S. officials to a radical cleric in Yemen and expose a failure by intelligence services to prevent the attacks.

According to two officials familiar with the case, as many as eight Army officers could face discipline for failing to do anything when Hasan displayed erratic behavior early in his military career. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because that information has not been publicly released.

The officers supervised Hasan when he was a medical student and during his early work as an Army psychiatrist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.

The review did not consider whether the shootings were an act of organized terror and did not delve into allegations that Hasan was in contact with the cleric. Those questions are part of the separate criminal case against Hasan.

Hasan was described as a loner with lazy work habits and a fixation on his Muslim religion. He was passed along from office to office and job to job despite professional failings that included missed or failed exams and physical fitness requirements.

Hasan was often late or absent, sometimes appeared disheveled and performed to minimum requirements. The pattern was obvious to many around him, yet not fully reflected where it counted in the Army’s bureaucratic system of evaluation and promotion, investigators found.

Hasan nonetheless earned some good reviews from patients and colleagues. His promotion to major was based on an incomplete personnel file, one official said, but also on performance markers that Hasan had met, if barely.

Hasan showed no signs of being violent or a threat.

Retired Adm. Vernon E. Clark and former Army Secretary Togo D. West Jr., who led the Pentagon’s two-month investigation, told reporters that there were discrepancies between Hasan’s performance and his personnel records.

“There is not a well-integrated means to gather, evaluate, and disseminate the wide range of indicators that could signal an insider threat,” Clark said.

Their investigation also found that his top-level security clearance had not been investigated properly. Had policies been followed properly, investigators say, his clearance may have been revoked “and his continued service and pending deployment would have been subject to increased scrutiny.”

The investigation found there are no policies and procedures in place to improve chances that officials will prevent another attack. Gates and the study’s authors said the threat was not profound, but one attack would be too many.

“We will prepare harder, plan more diligently, and seek to see around the corners of our future to find the signs of an emerging potential next event,” West said.

The inquiry also questions whether the Pentagon is committed fully to FBI-run Joint Terrorism Task Forces. The report calls on the Defense Department to staff fully those teams of investigators, analysts, linguists and others so the Pentagon can see quickly information collected across government agencies about potential links between troops and terrorist or extremist groups.

Gates said the latest Pentagon report raises “serious questions about the degree to which the entire Department of Defense is prepared for similar incidents in the future, especially multiple simultaneous incidents.”

He said he has directed Army Secretary John McHugh to implement many of the report’s recommendations by midyear.

__________

AP National Security Writer Anne Gearan contributed to this report.

Videos You May Be Interested In

Leave a Comment





The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences via AP Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan is accused of killing 13 soldiers and wounding more than 30 in a mass shooting at Fort Hood on Nov 5.

Contests and Promotions


promo Enter our 2012 Red Carpet Contest!
Predict who will get the statues on Hollywood's big night and win a $200 Fandango Gift Card!

Click Here To Enter.
promo Win Tactical Night Vision Goggles!
Enter to Win the Military Times Sweepstakes!

Click Here To Enter.

Free Stickers


promo Click here and we'll send you a FREE AFGHANISTAN, IRAQ, VIETNAM, or DESERT STORM sticker.
some text

Marketplace

Mil-Mall


2011 Insider's Guide To Military Benefits
This handbook for military life includes essential information on pay and benefits, housing, education, health care and more.

Military Discounts


Save on your purchases!
In honor of your military service, you can find regular and name brand products at a special discount.

Shoplocal

  Shop Local
Local Online Deals
Find the best deals at your local stores.