January 23, 2006
Please Remember Ted Westhusing
How do you make evil palatable? How do you live with it? Maybe more importantly, how do you survive surrounded by it?
The Iraq 'Experience' is taking some of our best and brightest.
War is simply to be won--honor, ethics and virtue make appearances only
if beneficial. That's a reality, not a philosophy.
Colonel Westhusing was a textbook soldier,
well thought-of up and down the ranks, devoted to those under his command. But once in the chaos and brutality
that is war, the primitive reigns--the urge for revenge, for visceral
satisfaction and, sadly, the grab for money, is supreme. Many of
the military generals knows this--they reached their lofty positions by
ignoring the ugly and overlooking the inhumanity. Promotions are not
awarded to whistleblowers anytime, anywhere despite the lofty rhetoric.
Nobody explained this to Ted Westhusing.
The mission was most
important, however accomplished.
My condolences to the Westhusing family.
I have printed T. Christian Miller's entire article because of the
'lock box' policies of the Los Angeles Times. My apology to Miller and
the Times.
THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
A Journey That Ended in Anguish
# Col. Ted Westhusing, a military
ethicist who volunteered to go to Iraq, was upset by what he saw. His
apparent suicide raises questions.
By T. Christian Miller
LA Times Staff Writer
November 27, 2005
"War is the hardest place to make moral judgments."
Col. Ted Westhusing, Journal of Military Ethics
WASHINGTON — One hot, dusty day in
June, Col. Ted Westhusing was found dead in a trailer at a military
base near the Baghdad airport, a single gunshot wound to the head.
The Army would conclude that he
committed suicide with his service pistol. At the time, he was the
highest-ranking officer to die in Iraq.
The Army closed its case. But the questions surrounding Westhusing's death continue.
Westhusing, 44, was no ordinary
officer. He was one of the Army's leading scholars of military ethics,
a full professor at West Point who volunteered to serve in Iraq to be
able to better teach his students. He had a doctorate in philosophy;
his dissertation was an extended meditation on the meaning of honor.
So it was only natural that
Westhusing acted when he learned of possible corruption by U.S.
contractors in Iraq. A few weeks before he died, Westhusing received an
anonymous complaint that a private security company he oversaw had
cheated the U.S. government and committed human rights violations.
Westhusing confronted the contractor and reported the concerns to
superiors, who launched an investigation.
In e-mails to his family,
Westhusing seemed especially upset by one conclusion he had reached:
that traditional military values such as duty, honor and country had
been replaced by profit motives in Iraq, where the U.S. had come to
rely heavily on contractors for jobs once done by the military.
His death stunned all who knew him.
Colleagues and commanders wondered whether they had missed signs of
depression. He had been losing weight and not sleeping well. But only a
day before his death, Westhusing won praise from a senior officer for
his progress in training Iraqi police.
His friends and family struggle
with the idea that Westhusing could have killed himself. He was a
loving father and husband and a devout Catholic. He was an
extraordinary intellect and had mastered ancient Greek and Italian. He
had less than a month before his return home. It seemed impossible that
anything could crush the spirit of a man with such a powerful sense of
right and wrong.
On the Internet and in
conversations with one another, Westhusing's family and friends have
questioned the military investigation.
A note found in his trailer seemed
to offer clues. Written in what the Army determined was his
handwriting, the colonel appeared to be struggling with a final
question.
How is honor possible in a war like the one in Iraq?
Even at Jenks High School in
suburban Tulsa, one of the biggest in Oklahoma, Westhusing stood out.
He was starting point guard for the Trojans, a team that made a strong
run for the state basketball championship his senior year. He was a
National Merit Scholarship finalist. He was an officer in a fellowship
of Christian athletes.
Joe Holladay, who coached
Westhusing before going on to become assistant coach of the University
of North Carolina Tarheels, recalled Westhusing showing up at the gym
at 7 a.m. to get in 100 extra practice shots.
"There was never a question of how
hard he played or how much effort he put into something," Holladay
said. "Whatever he did, he did well. He was the cream of the crop."
When Westhusing entered West Point
in 1979, the tradition-bound institution was just emerging from a
cheating scandal that had shamed the Army. Restoring honor to the
nation's preeminent incubator for Army leadership was the focus of the
day.
Cadets are taught to value duty,
honor and country, and are drilled in West Point's strict moral code: A
cadet will not lie, cheat or steal — or tolerate those who do.
Westhusing embraced it. He was
selected as honor captain for the entire academy his senior year. Col.
Tim Trainor, a classmate and currently a West Point professor, said
Westhusing was strict but sympathetic to cadets' problems. He
remembered him as "introspective."
Westhusing graduated third in his
class in 1983 and became an infantry platoon leader. He received
special forces training, served in Italy, South Korea and Honduras, and
eventually became division operations officer for the 82nd Airborne,
based at Ft. Bragg, N.C.
He loved commanding soldiers. But he remained drawn to intellectual pursuits.
In 2000, Westhusing enrolled in
Emory University's doctoral philosophy program. The idea was to return
to West Point to teach future leaders.
He immediately stood out on the
leafy Atlanta campus. Married with children, he was surrounded by
young, single students. He was a deeply faithful Christian in a
graduate program of professional skeptics.
Plunged into academia, Westhusing
held fast to his military ties. Students and professors recalled him
jogging up steep hills in combat boots and camouflage, his rucksack
full, to stay in shape. He wrote a paper challenging an essay that
questioned the morality of patriotism.
"He was as straight an arrow as you
would possibly find," said Aaron Fichtelberg, a fellow student and now
a professor at the University of Delaware. "He seemed unshakable."
In his 352-page dissertation,
Westhusing discussed the ethics of war, focusing on examples of
military honor from Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee to the Israeli army.
It is a dense, searching and sometimes personal effort to define what,
exactly, constitutes virtuous conduct in the context of the modern U.S.
military.
"Born to be a warrior, I desire
these answers not just for philosophical reasons, but for
self-knowledge," he wrote in the opening pages.
As planned, Westhusing returned to
teach philosophy and English at West Point as a full professor with a
guaranteed lifetime assignment. He settled into life on campus with his
wife, Michelle, and their three young children.
But amid the wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq, he told friends that he felt experience in Iraq would help
him in teaching cadets. In the fall of 2004, he volunteered for duty.
"He wanted to serve, he wanted to
use his skills, maybe he wanted some glory," recalled Nick Fotion, his
advisor at Emory. "He wanted to go."
In January, Westhusing began work
on what the Pentagon considered the most important mission in Iraq:
training Iraqi forces to take over security duties from U.S. troops.
Westhusing's task was to oversee a
private security company, Virginia-based USIS, which had contracts
worth $79 million to train a corps of Iraqi police to conduct special
operations.
In March, Gen. David Petraeus,
commanding officer of the Iraqi training mission, praised Westhusing's
performance, saying he had exceeded "lofty expectations."
"Thanks much, sir, but we can do
much better and will," Westhusing wrote back, according to a copy of
the Army investigation of his death that was obtained by The Times.
In April, his mood seemed to have darkened. He worried over delays in training one of the police battalions.
Then, in May, Westhusing received an anonymous four-page letter that contained detailed allegations of wrongdoing by USIS.
The writer accused USIS of
deliberately shorting the government on the number of trainers to
increase its profit margin. More seriously, the writer detailed two
incidents in which USIS contractors allegedly had witnessed or
participated in the killing of Iraqis.
A USIS contractor accompanied Iraqi
police trainees during the assault on Fallouja last November and later
boasted about the number of insurgents he had killed, the letter says.
Private security contractors are not allowed to conduct offensive
operations.
In a second incident, the letter
says, a USIS employee saw Iraqi police trainees kill two innocent Iraqi
civilians, then covered it up. A USIS manager "did not want it reported
because he thought it would put his contract at risk."
Westhusing reported the allegations
to his superiors but told one of them, Gen. Joseph Fil, that he
believed USIS was complying with the terms of its contract.
U.S. officials investigated and
found "no contractual violations," an Army spokesman said. Bill Winter,
a USIS spokesman, said the investigation "found these allegations to be
unfounded."
However, several U.S. officials
said inquiries on USIS were ongoing. One U.S. military official, who,
like others, requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the
case, said the inquiries had turned up problems, but nothing to support
the more serious charges of human rights violations.
"As is typical, there may be a wisp of truth in each of the allegations," the official said.
The letter shook Westhusing, who
felt personally implicated by accusations that he was too friendly with
USIS management, according to an e-mail in the report.
"This is a mess … dunno what I will do with this," he wrote home to his family May 18.
The colonel began to complain to
colleagues about "his dislike of the contractors," who, he said, "were
paid too much money by the government," according to one captain.
"The meetings [with contractors]
were never easy and always contentious. The contracts were in dispute
and always under discussion," an Army Corps of Engineers official told
investigators.
By June, some of Westhusing's
colleagues had begun to worry about his health. They later told
investigators that he had lost weight and begun fidgeting, sometimes
staring off into space. He seemed withdrawn, they said.
His family was also becoming
worried. He described feeling alone and abandoned. He sent home brief,
cryptic e-mails, including one that said, "[I] didn't think I'd make it
last night." He talked of resigning his command.
Westhusing brushed aside entreaties
for details, writing that he would say more when he returned home. The
family responded with an outpouring of e-mails expressing love and
support.
His wife recalled a phone conversation that chilled her two weeks before his death.
"I heard something in his voice,"
she told investigators, according to a transcript of the interview. "In
Ted's voice, there was fear. He did not like the nighttime and being
alone."
Westhusing's father, Keith, said the family did not want to comment for this article.
On June 4, Westhusing left his
office in the U.S.-controlled Green Zone of Baghdad to view a
demonstration of Iraqi police preparedness at Camp Dublin, the USIS
headquarters at the airport. He gave a briefing that impressed Petraeus
and a visiting scholar. He stayed overnight at the USIS camp.
That night in his office, a USIS
secretary would later tell investigators, she watched Westhusing take
out his 9-millimeter pistol and "play" with it, repeatedly unholstering
the weapon.
At a meeting the next morning to
discuss construction delays, he seemed agitated. He stewed over demands
for tighter vetting of police candidates, worried that it would slow
the mission. He seemed upset over funding shortfalls.
Uncharacteristically, he lashed out
at the contractors in attendance, according to the Army Corps official.
In three months, the official had never seen Westhusing upset.
"He was sick of money-grubbing
contractors," the official recounted. Westhusing said that "he had not
come over to Iraq for this."
The meeting broke up shortly before
lunch. About 1 p.m., a USIS manager went looking for Westhusing because
he was scheduled for a ride back to the Green Zone. After getting no
answer, the manager returned about 15 minutes later. Another USIS
employee peeked through a window. He saw Westhusing lying on the floor
in a pool of blood.
The manager rushed into the trailer
and tried to revive Westhusing. The manager told investigators that he
picked up the pistol at Westhusing's feet and tossed it onto the bed.
"I knew people would show up," that
manager said later in attempting to explain why he had handled the
weapon. "With 30 years from military and law enforcement training, I
did not want the weapon to get bumped and go off."
After a three-month inquiry,
investigators declared Westhusing's death a suicide. A test showed
gunpowder residue on his hands. A shell casing in the room bore
markings indicating it had been fired from his service revolver.
Then there was the note.
Investigators found it lying on Westhusing's bed. The handwriting matched his.
The first part of the four-page
letter lashes out at Petraeus and Fil. Both men later told
investigators that they had not criticized Westhusing or heard negative
comments from him. An Army review undertaken after Westhusing's death
was complimentary of the command climate under the two men, a U.S.
military official said.
Most of the letter is a wrenching account of a struggle for honor in a strange land.
"I cannot support a msn [mission]
that leads to corruption, human rights abuse and liars. I am sullied,"
it says. "I came to serve honorably and feel dishonored.
"Death before being dishonored any more."
A psychologist reviewed
Westhusing's e-mails and interviewed colleagues. She concluded that the
anonymous letter had been the "most difficult and probably most painful
stressor."
She said that Westhusing had placed
too much pressure on himself to succeed and that he was unusually rigid
in his thinking. Westhusing struggled with the idea that monetary
values could outweigh moral ones in war. This, she said, was a flaw.
"Despite his intelligence, his
ability to grasp the idea that profit is an important goal for people
working in the private sector was surprisingly limited," wrote Lt. Col.
Lisa Breitenbach. "He could not shift his mind-set from the military
notion of completing a mission irrespective of cost, nor could he
change his belief that doing the right thing because it was the right
thing to do should be the sole motivator for businesses."
One military officer said he felt
Westhusing had trouble reconciling his ideals with Iraq's reality. Iraq
"isn't a black-and-white place," the officer said. "There's a lot of
gray."
Fil and Petraeus, Westhusing's
commanding officers, declined to comment on the investigation, but they
praised him. He was "an extremely bright, highly competent, completely
professional and exceedingly hard-working officer. His death was truly
tragic and was a tremendous blow," Petraeus said.
Westhusing's family and friends are
troubled that he died at Camp Dublin, where he was without a bodyguard,
surrounded by the same contractors he suspected of wrongdoing. They
wonder why the manager who discovered Westhusing's body and picked up
his weapon was not tested for gunpowder residue.
Mostly, they wonder how Col. Ted
Westhusing — father, husband, son and expert on doing right — could
have found himself in a place so dark that he saw no light.
"He's the last person who would
commit suicide," said Fichtelberg, his graduate school colleague. "He
couldn't have done it. He's just too damn stubborn."
Westhusing's body was flown back to
Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. Waiting to receive it were his family
and a close friend from West Point, a lieutenant colonel.
In the military report, the
unidentified colonel told investigators that he had turned to Michelle,
Westhusing's wife, and asked what happened.
She answered:
"Iraq."
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