Tuesday, May 11, 2004

Accountability

The Army Times:

Myers, Rumsfeld and their staffs failed to recognize the impact the scandal would have not only in the United States, but around the world.

If their staffs failed to alert Myers and Rumsfeld, shame on them. But shame, too, on the chairman and secretary, who failed to inform even President Bush.

He was left to learn of the explosive scandal from media reports instead of from his own military leaders.

On the battlefield, Myers’ and Rumsfeld’s errors would be called a lack of situational awareness — a failure that amounts to professional negligence.

To date, the Army has moved to court-martial the six soldiers suspected of abusing Iraqi detainees and has reprimanded six others.

Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, who commanded the MP brigade that ran Abu Ghraib, has received a letter of admonishment and also faces possible disciplinary action.

That’s good, but not good enough.

This was not just a failure of leadership at the local command level. This was a failure that ran straight to the top. Accountability here is essential — even if that means relieving top leaders from duty in a time of war.


2 Comments:

At May 11, 2004 at 6:50 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Horseshit.

The military had an investigation going well before the media irresponsibly plastered these pictures everywhere. Maybe Rumsfeld didn't brief Bush on it, but all that means is that he underestimated what a huge deal this would be when it hit the media.

The remonstrations have already hit the brigadier general level. That's pretty high up. I'd prefer she lose her job for it, but that's just me.

But advocating the removal of Rumsfeld is just political maneuvering to make the GOP look bad.

 
At May 12, 2004 at 3:15 PM, Blogger ian said...

The Army Times is really known for their "political maneuvering". The're always trying to make republicans look bad.

 

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