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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (528102)11/11/2009 8:36:56 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576251
 
US doctors worried suspect was 'psychotic:' report

Published: Wednesday November 11, 2009
rawstory.com
( The Army is totally at fault with this guy. They completely dropped the ball. They were WARNED! )



US military doctors had worried that the suspected gunman in the Fort Hood shootings was "psychotic" and unstable but did not seek to sack him, National Public Radio reported on Wednesday, citing unnamed officials.

Psychiatrists and medical officials who oversaw Major Nidal Hasan, accused of opening fire on fellow soldiers at the Fort Hood base in Texas last week, held a series of meetings between the spring of 2008 and the spring of this year to discuss serious concerns about his work and his behavior, NPR reported.

"Put it this way. Everybody felt that if you were deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan, you would not want Nidal Hasan in your fox hole," one official was quoted as saying.

One official who participated in the conversations had reportedly told colleagues that he was concerned Hasan might leak secret military information to Islamic extremists if he was assigned to Iraq or Afghanistan, NPR said.

Another official "wondered aloud" to colleagues whether Hasan might be capable of killing fellow soldiers in the same way a Muslim sergeant in 2003 had set off grenades at a base in Kuwait and claimed the lives to two comrades, the radio reported.

The officials who discussed Hasan's status were not aware -- as some top Walter Reed hospital officials were -- that intelligence agencies had been tracking Hasan's e-mails to a radical Islamic cleric since December 2008, NPR said.

The NPR report cited interviews with several officials from Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington and the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Maryland.

Officials considered kicking Hasan out of the program but chose not to partly because sacking a doctor is a "cumbersome and lengthy" process that involves hearings and potential legal conflict, sources told NPR.

Officials also believed they lacked solid evidence that Hasan was unstable and were concerned they could be accused of discriminating against him because of his Islamic identity or views.

With Hasan due to leave Walter Reed after six years and transfer to Fort Hood in Texas, officials thought the larger psychiatric staff at that army base would be better placed to provide support to Hasan and to monitor him, according to NPR.

The army psychiatrist and practicing Muslim is accused of killing 13 people in Thursday's shooting spree at Fort Hood.



To: i-node who wrote (528102)11/12/2009 6:28:23 AM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1576251
 
It is unseemly for a president to be whining at all

He's not; you are.



To: i-node who wrote (528102)11/12/2009 6:39:43 AM
From: Road Walker1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576251
 
Today comes news that Obama "wants more choices". That's right. He doesn't "like" the choices he is faced with in Afghanistan. Can you imagine a great president making such a remark?

Good point. Your hero George EXCELLED at making bad choices!