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  • Walter Reed general loses his command

    Walter Reed general loses his command

    By ROBERT BURNS, AP Military Writer 29 minutes ago

    WASHINGTON - The Army fired the general in charge of Walter Reed Army Medical Center after disclosures about inadequate treatment of
    Iraq vets and other wounded soldiers.


    The action on Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, who was commanding general of the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command as well as Walter Reed hospital, was announced Thursday by Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey.

    In a brief announcement, the Army said service leaders had "lost trust and confidence" in Weightman's leadership abilities "to address needed solutions for soldier outpatient care." He had headed Walter Reed since last August.

    The Army and the Defense Department began their own investigations after The Washington Post published stories last week that documented problems in soldiers' housing and in the medical bureaucracy at Walter Reed, which has been called the Army's premier caregiver for soldiers wounded in Iraq and
    Afghanistan.

    After a visit to the hospital compound last Friday, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said those found to have been responsible for the problems would be "held accountable."

    On Thursday he issued a brief statement endorsing Harvey's action.

    "The care and welfare of our wounded men and women in uniform demand the highest standard of excellence and commitment that we can muster as a government," Gates said. "When this standard is not met, I will insist on swift and direct corrective action and, where appropriate, accountability up the chain of command."

    It was not clear whether Gates insisted on Weightman's firing. A
    Pentagon official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said Gates was "actively involved" in the firing decision.

    In an interview with several reporters two days before the first Post story was published, Weightman acknowledged shortcomings at Walter Reed but also said the problems were magnified because of the facility's location in the nation's capital. "We're a fishbowl," he said, noting that being in Washington makes it easier for complaining patients and their families to draw the interest of members of Congress.

    An outside panel of former military officials and former congressmen, set up last week by Gates, held its first meeting Thursday at the Pentagon. Headed by two former Army secretaries, Togo West and Jack Marsh, the panel is reviewing treatment and administrative processes at Walter Reed and at the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md. It is supposed to report its findings and recommendations by April 16.

    The panel's charter, released Thursday, identifies its main goal as finding the "critical shortcomings" in rehabilitative care, administrative processes and quality of life for injured and sick troops, and to recommend how to fix the problems.

    The problems at Walter Reed pertain not to the quality of medical treatment for wounded soldiers but rather to the care for those who are well enough to be outpatients, living in Army housing at Walter Reed. One building was singled out in the Post reports as being in bad repair, including having mold on interior walls.

    The Army also has acknowledged problems with the system it uses to evaluate wounded soldiers in determining whether they are well enough to return to active duty.

    At a breakfast meeting with reporters Thursday, in which he refused to discuss any aspect of the Walter Reed investigations, Harvey said the Army also was reviewing conditions at its medical centers elsewhere in the country. He would not be more specific.

    Being relieved of command means Weightman is almost certain to have lost his future in the Army.

    A native of Vermont, he graduated from West Point in 1973 and got his medical degree from the University of Vermont. He later served as the surgeon for the 82nd Airborne Division, including during Desert Storm.

    He has held a number of medical commands, including service as a leading surgeon during the initial stages of the Iraq war.

    Weightman's duties at Walter Reed will be assumed temporarily by Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, the commander of U.S. Medical Command, until a permanent replacement is found, Harvey said.

    "The Army is moving quickly to address issues regarding outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center," the announcement said.

    Last week the Army took disciplinary action against several lower-level soldiers at Walter Reed, but officials have declined to publicly confirm any details of those actions.

    The latest news and headlines from Yahoo News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.


    ...........................................................

    "the Army said service leaders had "lost trust and confidence" in Weightman's leadership abilities..." Well thats an interesting choice of words....I think that needs to be applied at all levels of the command structure...Hell a few proper resignations and taking responsibility and MAYBE some of the damage done can be repaired.

  • #2
    Last week the Army took disciplinary action against several lower-level soldiers at Walter Reed, but officials...



    Glad to see it didn't just die there.

    Comment


    • #3
      I believe these guys are just scapegoats for a Bankrupt financial system. The money just simply isn't there and somebody had to take the fall.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Hardball View Post
        I believe these guys are just scapegoats for a Bankrupt financial system. The money just simply isn't there and somebody had to take the fall.



        Possibly that's true. Then again they could have just courtmartialed some corporals and a sgt or too and called it a day.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by gregimotis View Post
          Possibly that's true. Then again they could have just courtmartialed some corporals and a sgt or too and called it a day.
          LOL, yea and bust them down to Buck Private. Yikes

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by gregimotis View Post
            Possibly that's true. Then again they could have just courtmartialed some corporals and a sgt or too and called it a day.
            I dont think so, this is BAAAAAD, WAAAY worse than you've heard yet, or probably ever will.

            Comment


            • #7
              Half Mast for half assed

              Down goes another one.

              The latest news and headlines from Yahoo News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.

              Comment


              • #8
                Army hospital problems said to be systemic

                By Susan Cornwell 32 minutes ago

                WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Problems with treatment of wounded soldiers that created a scandal at the top U.S. military veterans' hospital are prevalent throughout the Army's health care system, lawmakers said on Monday.


                Vice President
                Dick Cheney vowed to fix the substandard conditions at Walter Reed hospital, which have dealt yet another blow to an administration already reeling from public anger over its handing of the
                Iraq and Afghan wars.

                Two weeks after The Washington Post reported that some recuperating soldiers at Walter Reed were living in rodent-infested quarters and trapped in a bureaucratic limbo, Army brass apologized on Monday for the crisis at a U.S. House of Representatives hearing.

                But Democrats were already suggesting the poor treatment of wounded soldiers was linked to what they consider to be a rushed U.S. decision to go to war against Iraq in 2003.

                Rep. John Tierney (news, bio, voting record), a Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee's national security subcommittee, said the problems did not stop with the Washington, D.C., hospital.

                "I also, unfortunately, feel that these problems go well beyond the walls of Walter Reed, and that they are problems systemic throughout the military health care system," he said.

                "Is this just another horrific consequence of the terrible planning that went into our invasion of Iraq?" Tierney asked. In any case, he warned, the problems were now likely to get worse with
                President George W. Bush's recent decision to send more U.S. troops to Iraq.

                Army Secretary Francis Harvey resigned last week over the scandal. The general in charge of the facility, Maj. Gen. George Weightman, was replaced by Maj. Gen. Eric Schoomaker.

                Bush has ordered a wide-ranging review of all U.S. veterans facilities. Cheney said on Monday that they wanted to "find out whether similar problems have occurred at other military and VA (
                Department of Veterans Affairs) hospitals."

                CHENEY PROMISE

                Cheney told an audience of military veterans that the administration would "make sure it never happens again ... We're going to fix the problems at Walter Reed, period."

                The Post revelations were particularly embarrassing to much of official Washington because Bush, senior defense officials and lawmakers have repeatedly visited those in the hospital who served in battle in Iraq and
                Afghanistan.

                "These problems are not unique to Walter Reed," said Rep. Tom Davis, a Virginia Republican. "The crushing complexity and glacial pace of outpatient procedures in medical evaluation boards are Army-wide problems."

                "All the plaster and paint in the world won't cure a system that seems institutionally predisposed to treat wounded soldiers like inconveniences rather than heroes," Davis added.

                More than 3,100 Americans have been killed in Iraq and more than 23,000 have been wounded, although more than half the wounded have returned to duty.

                During Monday's hearing, Weightman publicly apologized to wounded soldiers and their families who testified about substandard conditions and bureaucratic neglect.

                "I promise you we'll do better," said Weightman, who led Walter Reed for about six months until he was fired last week.

                One of those who testified, Annette McLeod, laid the blame on Weightman's predecessor, retired Maj. Gen. Kenneth Farmer, who commanded Walter Reed for two years until last August. She said Farmer would not see her when she tried to complain about delays in tests and treatment for her husband, Cpl. Wendell McLeod, who suffered head injuries in Iraq.

                The latest news and headlines from Yahoo News. Get breaking news stories and in-depth coverage with videos and photos.

                .........................................

                Check out the clip of the wounded soldier testifying about treatment of Vets, it's on the left side of the page.!

                Comment


                • #9
                  This is a good thing!

                  Hopefully the Soldiers and Marines will get better service!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Tom Yum View Post
                    This is a good thing!

                    Hopefully the Soldiers and Marines will get better service!
                    I've gotten the message on this board that all the vets who speak out about piss poor care are actually pro Al Qaeda...

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Panel blames US army over scandal

                      Substandard conditions found at the main US army medical centre in Washington were not an isolated incident, a key congressman has said.

                      The problems extends "beyond the walls" of the Walter Reed medical centre, said John Tierney as his congressional panel held its first hearing into the case.

                      There have been reports of soldiers living in rat-infested buildings.

                      The scandal has already led to the resignation of the civilian head of the army and top generals.

                      Mr Tierney, a Democrat, chairs the national security panel of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which held began its hearings on Monday.

                      "There appears to be a pattern developing here... First deny then try to cover up, then designate a fall guy. In this case I've concerns that the army is literally trying to whitewash over the problems," he said.


                      It wasn't fit for anybody to live in a room like that
                      John Shannon
                      Former patient
                      The hearing also heard from veterans who had stayed at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

                      One, John Shannon, told the committee that there was black mould in the rooms.

                      "It wasn't fit for anybody to live in a room like that," he said.

                      Annette McLeod, the wife of a former patient, told the committee staff at the hospital had given her husband "zero percent".

                      "You need to fix the system," she said. "If you're good enough to go, you're good enough to be taken care of when you leave here."

                      At the weekend President Bush said he was "deeply troubled" by the reports of poor living conditions at the centre - where soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan were treated.

                      Articles in the Washington Post newspaper said patients lived in rat-infested rooms and complained of bureaucracy.

                      Army Secretary Francis Harvey and the head of medical centre, Maj Gen George Weightman, have resigned over the allegations.

                      BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service

                      ..............................

                      "There appears to be a pattern developing here... First deny then try to cover up, then designate a fall guy. In this case I've concerns that the army is literally trying to whitewash over the problems,"



                      He took the words right out of my mouth....it seems the only the example the followers have from the leader to follow has been, "deny, evade, blame someone else for our failure."

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