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Senate Report: Fort Hood Massacre Was Preventable

By Brenda Walker

02/04/2011

When the Pentagon prepared its own written report about the 2009 Fort Hood mass murders by Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, it was a total whitewash, that the Army ignored plenty of warning signs that Hasan had hostile Islamic views. One reason is that his superiors were entranced by the diversity twofer of having a Muslim psychiatrist.

Shortly after the Fort Hood attack, General George Casey stated, “And as horrific as this tragedy was, if our diversity becomes a casualty, I think that’s worse.”

The remark by the Army’s top officer was an indication of how far down the trail of diversity nuttiness the military has gone. Thirteen people were killed (shown below) and 32 wounded in Hasan’s jihadist attack, but to General Casey, the highest good is not defending the nation or the Army’s taking care of its own but diversity uber alles.

Today, however, the Senate Homeland Security Committee (chaired by Joe Lieberman and Susan Collins) published its own report: A Ticking Time Bomb: Counterterrorism Lessons from the Government’s Failure to Prevent the Fort Hood Attack. (Watch their 37-minute press conference on C-SPAN.)

The title tells a lot. It’s a good thing when responsible persons in the government recognize the principle of preventable violence. As British MP and visionary Enoch Powell wisely observed in 1968, “The supreme function of statesmanship is to provide against preventable evils.”

(And since I’m in a quoting mood, here’s another, from the founder of modern Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew, who has endeavored to make multiculturalism work in his crowded city-state, “I would say today, we can integrate all religions and races except Islam.”)

And Islam is a preventable evil in America. We can stop its intrusion via immigration if we have the strength. Major Hasan was the son of Palestinian Muslims and he lives by an alien code that is fundamentally opposed to our Western values.

Anyway, back to the report. The Committee’s press release was thorough, and various news reports appeared today.

A Fox News report included remarks from Senators Lieberman and Collins:

Senators criticize FBI, Army in Fort Hood tragedy, Associated Press, February 3, 2011

A Senate report on the Fort Hood shooting is sharply critical of the FBI’s failure to recognize warning signs that an Army psychiatrist had become an Islamist extremist and amounted to a “ticking time bomb.”

The report concluded that both the Defense Department and the FBI had sufficient information to detect that Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan had been radicalized to violent extremism, but they failed to understand and act on it. It said the FBI’s top leaders must exercise more control over local field offices and put to better use the intelligence analysts who should have been able to connect the dots.

Hasan is charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder in the November 2009 shooting rampage on the Texas military post.

“Our report’s painful conclusion is that the Fort Hood massacre could have, and should have, been prevented,” said Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, I-Conn., calling it a heartbreaking tragedy of errors.

Many of the report’s criticisms have been aired over the past year in other investigations of shooting. The Senate report stresses that the FBI’s move to become more intelligence-driven has been hampered by internal conflicts that must be addressed.

And it says the bureau’s failure to use its analysts well contributed to it overlooking the significance of communications with known terrorists transmitted by Hasan.

A joint terrorism task force overseen by the FBI learned late in 2009 of Hasan’s repeated contact with U.S.-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who encouraged Muslims to kill U.S. troops in Iraq. The FBI has said the task force did not refer early information about Hasan to superiors because it concluded he wasn’t linked to terrorism.

The Senate report was released Thursday by Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, and its ranking Republican, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine. It is being delivered to the president and the heads of the FBI, Defense Department and Department of Homeland Security.

It charges that evidence of Hasan’s radicalization was “on full display” to his superiors, and that an instructor and colleague “each referred to Hasan as a ‘ticking time bomb,’” but no action was taken to discharge him and his evaluations were sanitized.

“This is not a case where a lone wolf was unknown to the FBI, unknown to the military officials, until he struck,” said Collins.

More broadly, the report said that the Pentagon has failed to make necessary changes to identify violent Islamic extremism as a danger so that commanders will more readily watch for it and discharge service members who express those views.

Military supervisors, the report said, had the authority to discipline or discharge Hasan. But it concluded that the Defense Department did not inform or train commanders about how to recognize someone radicalized to Islamic extremism or how to distinguish that from the peaceful practice of Islam.

The enemy — Islamist extremists — must be labeled correctly and explicitly, the report said, in order for the military to counter the extremism.

Asked for comment on the Senate report’s criticism, an Army spokesman said the Army will continue to make adjustments.

“We will closely examine the report’s findings and recommendations,” said Col. Tom Collins. “The Army has already implemented numerous concrete actions that have made our soldiers, families and civilian employees safer. There is still more work to do, but the Army is committed to doing all we can to learn from this tragic event.”

The FBI, in a written statement, said it agrees with much of the report and had already identified several of the same areas of concern during an internal review and made changes. The FBI also noted that the report acknowledged the bureau’s progress in disrupting terrorist plots by homegrown extremists.

There have been efforts to revise procedures to ensure the Pentagon is notified when a member of the military is being investigated, and officials have said they will increase training for task force members to better search bureau databases when conducting investigations.

The Senate report also recommends that the Defense Department ensure that personnel evaluations are accurate, particularly in regard to Islamist extremist behavior. And it says statements by Hasan expressing support for Osama bin Laden and charging that the U.S. was at war with Islam indicated his sympathy for extremistscould have been sufficient grounds to discipline or discharge him.

Hasan’s psychiatry supervisors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center had expressed concerns in May 2007 about what they described as Hasan’s “pattern of poor judgment and lack of professionalism.”

The senators said they don’t believe anyone has been disciplined for the failures, but that officials may be waiting until after legal proceedings take place.

Hasan is in custody, and a mental health evaluation has just been completed. A brigade commander who received the report is expected to make a recommendation next month on whether Hasan should stand trial and face the death penalty. A commanding general will make the final decision.

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