WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawmakers on Wednesday criticized leaders of an internal
Pentagon inquiry into the deadly Fort Hood shootings for refusing
to discuss why the accused gunman moved through the military's
ranks despite repeated concerns over his performance and
behavior.
During a House Armed Services Committee hearing, Togo West and
Vern Clark said Defense Department attorneys told them that they
could not delve into a restricted portion of the review about Army
psychiatrist Nidal Hasan's official personnel records.
Doing so in a public setting would compromise "the integrity of
the ongoing military justice process," West, a former Army
secretary, and Clark, a retired Navy admiral, told the
committee.
But several members of the panel disputed that.
"When is the right time to have this discussion?" said Rep. Vic
Snyder, D-Ark.
"I read the classified portion of the report and it was a
finding of facts prior to the tragedy," added Rep. Mike Coffman,
R-Colo. "It ought to be available to the American public."
Hasan's supervisors sanitized his performance appraisals in the
years prior to the shootings, according to government documents
obtained by The Associated Press that reveal concerns about him at
almost every stage of his Army education.
Officers in charge of Hasan loaded praise into the alleged
gunman's record despite knowing he was chronically late for work,
saw few patients, disappeared when he was on call and confronted
those around him with his Islamic views.
The materials also disclose concerns that the
psychiatrist-in-training might have been developing a psychosis,
according to the documents, yet no mental health evaluation was
done.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates last week released the
results of the review led by West and Clark that found several unidentified medical officers failed to use
"appropriate judgment and standards of officership" when reviewing
Hasan's performance as a student, internist and psychiatric
resident.
Gates withheld details, noting disciplinary action is
possible.
The disjointed picture emerges through the information gathered
during the internal review. The material shows that the same
supervisor who meticulously catalogued Hasan's problems suddenly
swept them under the rug when graduation arrived.
Nothing in this record points specifically to a risk Hasan would
turn violent.
On Nov. 5, according to witnesses, Hasan walked into a
processing center at Fort Hood where troops undergo medical
screening and opened fire with a pair of handguns. Thirteen people
were killed and many more were wounded.
Hasan has been charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder and
32 counts of attempted premeditated murder. Authorities have not
said whether they plan to seek the death penalty.
After the Fort Hood shootings, Gates appointed West and Clark to
examine the procedures and policies for identifying threats within
the military services.
Click here to access a copy of the Hasan review from the
Department of Defense.