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E-mails suggested Hasan subpar for Army | ||||||
2010-03-17 | ||||||
![]() The communications are the latest in a series of early signs that showed officers had reason to suspend Maj. Hasan's training, and perhaps re-evaluate his suitability as a military physician, but failed to do so. Yet, his bosses at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington allowed him to complete his residency in 2007, enter an advanced fellowship program, win promotion to major and transfer to Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009.
An Army inquiry released in January recommended the service look at disciplining Maj. Hasan's medical superiors who failed to raise red flags about his conduct, and instead passed him along to the next program and command. The e-mails reviewed by The Washington Times were among the report's restricted annex material not released to the public. The e-mails show superior officers had plenty of problems with Maj. Hasan. In May 2007, as a then-Capt. Hasan approached a June 30 date to complete his residency in psychiatry, his direct supervisor warned higher-ups he had failed a physical by being overweight. "He is a chronically somewhat unprofessional officer with a somewhat poor work ethic," Maj. Scott Moran, residency director, wrote in e-mail to a superior. Maj. Moran said he was preparing to put Maj. Hasan on probation and extend his residency.
In addition to the weight issue, another development could have slowed or stopped Maj. Hasan's advancement. "There is another twist," Maj. Moran wrote on May 11, 2007. He told a second superior that Maj. Hasan did not have sufficient months in a psychiatric clinic to complete his residency. "I am not trying to hose this guy, but keep everything on the up and up," Maj. Moran wrote.
Then came Maj. Hasan's research project that was required for completing the residency. Walter Reed calls the practice, "Psychiatry Scholarly Activity Oral Presentation at the Psychiatry Regularly Scheduled Conference." Maj. Hasan chose not a psychiatric topic, per se, but one titled, "Koranic World View as it Relates to Muslims in the U.S. Military." The slide presentation promoted Islamic law over the U.S. Constitution. At first, Maj. Moran was appalled. "This is not scholarly project level," he e-mailed other staff members. "[We] are going to meet with him this AM and counsel him."
Maj. Hasan e-mailed back, "Here are some revision [sic]." He eventually delivered the slide show June 20, and graduated 10 days later. One staff supervisor was ecstatic. "Dr. Hasan does an excellent job speaking without 'reading' slides!" he wrote on a "resident evaluation." "His balance of academic knowledge and personal awareness is remarkable." But there was a dissenter among the graders. "I must admit that I am confused as to how this is acceptable as a scholarly activity," the supervisor wrote. "While information about Islam, this seems to be a history/religious class report rather than a psychiatric scholarly activity. I would expect better academic efforts from a graduating resident." Charles Gittins, attorney for Maj. Moran, said the e-mails show his client was trying to hold Maj. Hasan to Army standards. "He did everything he could to hold the guy to standards, and he was only with the guy for 14 weeks before Hasan graduated from the residency program," Mr. Gittins said. The Army has yet to take any disciplinary action against Maj. Moran or other supervisors, as recommended by the inquiry. The inquiry, led by former Army Secretary Togo West and former Chief of Naval Operations Vern Clark, concluded: "We believe that some medical officers failed to apply appropriate judgment and standards of officership with respect to the alleged perpetrator. These individuals failed to demonstrate that officership is the essence of being a member of the military profession, regardless of the officer's specialty." | ||||||
Posted by:Steve White |
#7 Thirteen people dead because no one was willing to put THEIR career on the line to stop this terrible, terrible excuse for an officer or a medical person. The people that failed also need to be quietly let go, but they won't be. The military is just far too short of medical people, especially doctors. |
Posted by: Old Patriot 2010-03-17 13:44 |
#6 fry him in bacon grease |
Posted by: bman 2010-03-17 11:18 |
#5 No kidding! What a surprise! Kills his fellow soldiers in the name of jihad and there is a question about his fitness? |
Posted by: JohnQC 2010-03-17 10:07 |
#4 The guy was so mediocre he was only fit for promotion. |
Posted by: kcs 2010-03-17 04:55 |
#3 Behold diversity! One staff supervisor was ecstatic. "Dr. Hasan does an excellent job speaking without 'reading' slides!" he wrote on a "resident evaluation." Damning with faint praise. Notice the absence of rank? My personal favorite...."This officer is in full compliance with the Army Energy Conservation Progam." |
Posted by: Besoeker 2010-03-17 03:57 |
#2 This is our military? What a disgrace. |
Posted by: lex 2010-03-17 03:20 |
#1 "You see! I knew he was a victim of racism!" |
Posted by: g(r)omgoru 2010-03-17 01:58 |