One step forward, two steps back

For a change, a Bush administration scandal seemed to be producing real results. Revelations about U.S. war veterans, recuperating at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, living in deplorable conditions and being ignored by a callous bureaucracy captured the political world’s attention. Usually, under these circumstances, the White House would stall for time, and wait for the storm to blow over. This time, the Bush gang took action and relieved Maj. Gen. George Weightman, the head of Walter Reed since August, of his command

Finally, the political world said, something resembling accountability from the Bush administration. Walter Reed’s treatment of outpatients was a disgrace, it was exposed to sunlight, and within a week, the facility’s director was fired. This is how the process is supposed to work.

And then we learned who the new head of Walter Reed is going to be: Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley.

At first I thought this was somebody’s poor attempt at humor. Literally yesterday, on the front page of the Washington Post, we learned that Kiley, who was head of Walter Reed through 2004, heard complaints from troops, their families, veterans’ advocates, and even a member of Congress about the awful treatment of the veterans, but he chose to do nothing. Kiley lived right across the street from Building 18, where war wounded were “housed among mice, mold, rot and cockroaches,” but apparently didn’t cross the street often.

Worse, when Americans first started hearing about this scandal earlier in the week, it was Kiley who downplayed its significance, insisting that the problems in Building 18 “weren’t serious and there weren’t a lot of them.” He was covering his own ass — since the problems erupted during his tenure in 2003 and 2004.

The Bush administration, in other words, has picked the man chiefly responsible for the problems at Walter Reed to be in charge of Walter Reed.

Just yesterday, I wrote that the Bush gang has a “tendency to reward those who screw up the most,” but this is painfully ridiculous.

A WaPo editorial noted just how little sense this makes.

Much of The Post’s article detailed the abuse by omission that Gen. Kiley, not Gen. Weightman, committed, first as head of Walter Reed, then in his current post as Army surgeon general. Gen. Weightman, who very well might deserve his disgrace, has commanded Walter Reed for only half a year, while Gen. Kiley, now back in charge of Walter Reed, headed the hospital and its outpatient facilities for two years and has led the Army’s medical command since. Rep. C.W. Bill Young (R-Fla.) and his wife say they repeatedly told Gen. Kiley about unhealthful conditions in outpatient facilities.

While Gen. Kiley was ignoring Walter Reed’s outpatients, he was assuring Congress that he was doing just the opposite. A staffer for Rep. Thomas M. Davis III (R-Va.) told us yesterday that Gen. Kiley told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in 2005 that the performance of the medical holdover program, which covers 69 of the 76 residents of Building 18, “is a good-news story.” In response to questions Mr. Davis submitted, Gen. Kiley stated, “the Army Surgeon General has made their care the medical treatment facilities’ top priority.” At best, Gen. Kiley was ignorant of the conditions at Walter Reed.

We are glad that the Army is finally taking the issue of outpatient care seriously enough to effectively end the career of a major general for presiding over the disgraceful condition of Building 18. But the evidence compiled so far suggests that Gen. Kiley has been more complicit in the scandalous neglect of Walter Reed’s outpatient facilities for longer than Gen. Weightman has been. It also indicates that the Army’s reshuffle is really about projecting the appearance of accountability, not punishing those most responsible.

The “appearance of accountability” describes so many of the administration’s fiascoes, doesn’t it?

To appreciate just how ridiculous this is, consider this anecdote.

In 2004, Rep. C.W. Bill Young (R-Fla.) and his wife stopped visiting the wounded at Walter Reed out of frustration. Young said he voiced concerns to commanders over troubling incidents he witnessed but was rebuffed or ignored. “When Bev or I would bring problems to the attention of authorities of Walter Reed, we were made to feel very uncomfortable,” said Young, who began visiting the wounded recuperating at other facilities.

Beverly Young said she complained to Kiley several times. She once visited a soldier who was lying in urine on his mattress pad in the hospital. When a nurse ignored her, Young said, “I went flying down to Kevin Kiley’s office again, and got nowhere. He has skirted this stuff for five years and blamed everyone else.”

Young said that even after Kiley left Walter Reed to become the Army’s surgeon general, “if anything could have been done to correct problems, he could have done it.”

Now the Bush gang believes Kiley is the right man to help fix Walter Reed.

Just when I think these people can no longer surprise me, they sink a little further.

Good morning Carpetbagger! How about this storm we’re having? Kind of like the ugly shit-storm in Washington!

  • I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that the Bush administration defined accountability downward. I don’t care what Republicans say, they are not the party of the troops and maybe the troops that still may believe that will have a more open mind or at least take that assertion with a grain of salt.

  • If Gen. Weightman was not kicking ass all over the place to correct these conditions, he deserves what he got.
    As for his replacement, on a weird level it is good for the Dems. More fodder for hearings (that can easily stretch to the next elections) demonstrating how out of touch, ineffectual, and just plain criminal the Anit-democratic party was and will remain.
    Hell, if the Dems could get some of their plutocrats to buy some media outlets, this would be great for turning around that “supports the troops” meme that Republican’ts hold.

  • For all appearances, here’s what happened

    (1) They fired Weightman because he allowed Dana Priest in the building.
    (2) They put Kiley in charge because he’s proven to be good at blocking reporters.

    So it’s not about the conditions, it’s about how well you handle P.R.

    It’s the same Bush philosophy that Bushmen follow. If Bush fails to sell privatizing Social Security, it’s because a 60-city P.R. wasn’t convincing enough, not because the plan was unpopular…

  • I feel sorry for the Bush people. They make imbeciles look prophetic. They suffer from assholiism, a dreaded disorder that allows its sufferer to disregard the real world, while working to manipulate others’ free will. Another symptom is feigning victim while all the while working to vanquish all perceived adversaries. Joe Stalin came down with assholiism in late 1923, and we all know what happened in 1924. These executive branch charlatans gotta go! -Kevo

  • Is this country really in such a bad state that the Sadministration cannot keep up with repairs and maintenance of our military hospitals? (etorical question).

    I once again propose a 10-15% surcharge on each and every government contract that has anything to do with the military or the wars, to be earmarked first to military and veteran healthcare and then to basic military armor, rifles and the like.

  • “The Bush administration, in other words, has picked the man chiefly responsible for the problems at Walter Reed to be in charge of Walter Reed.” – Mr. CB

    And the guy who, better than anybody, knows where even more skeletons and garbage is buried around that place.

    ShrubCo/Repubco is starting to look like a hemophiliac festooned with tourniquets that are leaking blood and barely doing the job. It’s time to speed up the bleeding. Rip off the tourniquets, let the blood drain and watch the damn thing die.

    I sure hope Dems are fixin’ to get all medieval on these worthless, leaking scum. It’s time and the tools are at hand.

  • “In 2004, Rep. C.W. Bill Young (R-Fla.) and his wife stopped visiting the wounded at Walter Reed out of frustration.”

    Surely, it’s his job to do something about these conditions – not just give up. He ought to be ashamed of himself…

  • Either I’m becoming truly cynical (not what I’d consider a virtue), or maybe I’ve become inured to the Bush Crime family through too long exposure to it, but the first thought which occurred to me when I learned of Gen. Weightman’s getting the axe was: they wouldn’t bring back the guy who ignored all the complaints before, would they?

  • The arroogance of this bunch is only overshadowed by their stupidity. It seems as though Bush& Co. are playing a sick game of “chicken” while a lot of innocent people are unwilling passengers in the car. Eventually there will be a crash, and Bush may survive, but his passengers certainly will be part of a bloodbath. As one of his unwilling passengers, I am very uncomfortable.

  • This proves the callous George W. Bush and his administration rewards rather than punishes incompetent and equally callous appointees in responsible positions to the detriment of those they are supposed to serve. Who are the real patriots and supporters of our brave young soldiers? The neocons who show utter disregard for the safety and well-being of those who serve our country or the majority of Democrats and albeit relatively few Republicans who strive for accountability in the best interests of the country rather than “party loyalty”?

  • This just in:

    Walter Reed fallout: Army secretary resigns

    WASHINGTON – Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey abruptly stepped down Friday as the Bush administration struggled to cope with the fallout from a scandal over substandard conditions for wounded Iraq soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

    The surprise move came one day after Harvey fired the two-star general in charge of the medical center in response to disclosures of problems at the hospital compound.

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Harvey had resigned. But senior defense officials speaking on condition of anonymity said Gates had asked Harvey to leave. Gates was displeased that Harvey, after firing Maj. Gen. George Weightman as the head of Walter Reed, chose to name as Weightman’s temporary replacement another general whose role in the controversy was still in question.

  • Gracious, you said it!!
    The trouble with drunk drivers, (and driveby shooters), is they usually survive, and you’re right, it’s us, innocent passengers and bystanders, that get killed.

    It’s time to TAKE the wheel.

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