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Smearing Colonel Vandeveld By Ross Tuttle </directory/bios/ross_tuttle> October 20, 2008
As
the Office of Military Commissions (OMC) was informed of a top prosecutor's intent to resign--and his decision to go on record
with his ethical concerns--it launched a forceful offensive against him. As part of this campaign, leading officials at the
OMC circulated belittling talking points to other staffers and deployed a Soviet-style strategy of punitive and discrediting
psychiatric evaluations.
New evidence sheds light on the inappropriate
and corrupting influence of Brig. General Thomas Hartmann on the military commissions process. The target of this latest push
was Lieut. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, a former military prosecutor, who resigned September 9 and then submitted a damning four-page
affidavit to the war court. Vandeveld had been the lead prosecutor in the case of Mohammed Jawad, a young Afghan accused of
attempted murder. According to his statement, Vandeveld decided to resign due to deep-seated ethical concerns about the treatment
of Jawad in custody and the withholding of "potentially exculpatory evidence" from the defense. Vandeveld characterized the
procedure for providing evidence to the defense as "slipshod [and] uncertain" and concluded, "I am highly concerned to the
point that I believe I can no longer serve as prosecutor at the Commissions."
Vandeveld's resignation came after a string of embarrassing repudiations
of the Guantanámo trials, including three Supreme Court setbacks, the defection of at least four other prosecutors from the
OMC and the disqualification of Brig. Gen. Thomas Hartmann from three separate trials because of political bias and interference.
In an apparent attempt to minimize the impact of this latest rebuke of the OMC, Hartmann prepared talking points against Vandeveld.
Obtained by The Nation, these talking points assert that Vandeveld
is dishonest, "ill-informed" and has violated commission regulations. After
Vandeveld resigned, he made himself available to testify on behalf of the Jawad defense at a pretrial hearing, writing, "I
do believe I have relevant testimony to offer." But the OMC barred him from doing so. The office then circulated the sharply
worded talking points intended to discredit Vandeveld. "They were well prepared to try to discredit [Vandeveld] if this
issue flared up," said a former Pentagon official close to the OMC. Hartmann, the embattled former legal adviser for the
Office of Military Commissions, was removed from his post in September. He was then shifted to a supervisory position overseeing
the commissions within the Pentagon, and he is now reportedly being investigated by his chain of command for ethics abuses.
But he is still exerting unparalleled influence. "He is very intimately involved in the effort to prevent Colonel Vandeveld
from being able to testify," defense lawyer Maj. David Frakt said to the judge during the pretrial hearing. While Hartmann
made a concerted effort to keep Vandeveld's voice off the record, he also apparently attempted to devalue that voice if it
ever became public. According to the defense team, Hartmann ordered Vandeveld to undergo a mental health evaluation after
he submitted his resignation, despite having displayed no previous symptoms of psychological distress. This tactic, as
a means of suppressing dissent, was popularized by the Soviet Union in the late 1950s. In the aftermath of Stalin's violent
and bloody purges, Khrushchev believed he could punish opponents in a more discreet way, announcing, "there are not political
prisoners, only persons of unsound mind." Involuntary hospitalizations and punitive psychiatric evaluations became part of
the regime's strategy and targeted dissenters like Pyotr Grigorenko, a former Soviet general and critic of Khrushchev, and
Leonid Plyushch, a mathematician turned human rights advocate. Grigorenko was forcibly hospitalized in the '60s; Plyushch
in the early '70s. These tactics have not been foreign to the US military. In the late 1980s, Congress conducted hearings
into the misuse of mental health evaluations to discredit whistleblowers, during which two junior officers testified that
they were hospitalized in psychiatric wards after making reports of fraud and misconduct. One major in the military said that
he met other servicemembers who were confined by their commanders for objecting to Army policy. An amendment by then-Congresswoman
Barbara Boxer was eventually passed to curb the abuse of mental health evaluations in the case of whistleblowers. However,
the practice still occurs. The Nation has learned of at least three
other cases of the apparent use of mental health referrals and hospitalization to stifle critics who have witnessed abuse,
fraud or criminal behavior since 9/11. Vandeveld's is just the latest troubling episode. "It's extremely disturbing," says Eugene Fidell, a visiting lecturer at Yale Law School and professor of military law
at Washington College of Law, "especially when you involve a psychiatric evaluation in such a charged setting" like the one
that exists at Guantánamo. And even if there was no intent to smear or tarnish Vandeveld's reputation, Fidell says, the mere
appearance is "horrible." Charlie Clements, president and CEO of the human rights organization Unitarian Universalist
Service Committee, who served as an Air Force pilot during the Vietnam War, worries about the weapon of psychiatric evaluations.
Clements was hospitalized in a psychiatric ward after refusing to fly a mission because of ethical reasons. "For this
to be one of the first actions taken against a man [Vandeveld] who otherwise performs his duties well and without any problems,
it would certainly raise concerns about the abuse of psychiatry," he says. Clements warns that these tactics can be quite
intimidating and that the mere specter of them can serve to chill dissent. Vandeveld was cleared and declared fit for duty,
"to the psychiatrist's credit," notes a former military doctor, who declined to be identified because of involvement in a
related case. But this doctor also suggested the results of the evaluation might say something about the motive in ordering
it, or the imprudence. "Given the implications that it's being used as retribution, unless I have very good reason, I'd
think that any prudent lawyer would have backed off," says the doctor. "And if there was a good reason to refer, the evaluation
would have supported it. But it didn't. This was totally the wrong thing to do." The judge in the Jawad case ultimately
ordered the prosecution to allow Vandeveld to testify. When he did, he spoke about feeling "truly deceived" and said the commissions
were likely incapable of providing justice. The cross-examination by Vandeveld's replacement in the case, Lieut. Col.
Doug Stevenson, echoed the talking points provided by Hartmann, which asserted that Vandeveld made "inaccurate, irresponsible
comments"; "generalities/opinion statements that have zero basis in fact"; and "generalizations about the discovery process."
But Vandeveld's account of the OMC echo criticisms made by other former military prosecutors who have also resigned their
commissions. "It's not the kind of thing [Vandeveld's affidavit] you read and go, There's no way in hell this can be true,"
says former chief prosecutor Morris Davis. "Based on what I observed, I can't say I'm surprised by the things he alleges."
Despite the attempt to prohibit Vandeveld's testimony, in an internal e-mail, Vandeveld's former boss, the current chief
prosecutor, Col. Larry Morris, said he was "inclined to let [Vandeveld] talk to the press if he wants--we have nothing to
fear, and we can refute whatever he or his counsel suggest." However, as of October 20, Vandeveld was under a renewed gag
order, barring him from speaking to the media. Meanwhile, the prosecution is free to make comments about Vandeveld's affidavit
and his testimony at will, as deputy chief prosecutor Col. Bruce Pagel did during a panel at the Military JAG School in Virginia
September 30. Speaking about the provision of evidence to the defense, Pagel said that the documents "were in his [Vandeveld's]
custody and control. He was in the perfect position to make disclosure. He never told me anyone had kept him or forbade him
from making those disclosures." When panel member and ACLU lawyer Hina Shamsi offered a possible explanation for why Vandeveld
may have withheld some documents--because he felt pressure and feared reprisals for appearing too close to the defense (as
Vandeveld mentions in his affidavit)--Pagel joked dismissively, to rousing laughter, "Well, we did torture Colonel Vandeveld
quite a bit."
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