Walter Reed is the Tip of the Iceberg
Walter Reed’s Larger Governmental Issues
The House Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on
National Security and Foreign Affairs continues its investigation into
conditions at Walter Reed tomorrow with a hearing that asks the question, “Is
this any way to treat our troops?”
The answer to this question is clearly a resounding “No.”
The underlying question, which is less clear, is how the Bush administration
allowed the conditions at Walter Reed and military hospitals around the country
to go unaddressed for so long.
Center for American Progress Senior Fellow Scott Lilly spoke
on this issue last month in “Behind
the Mess at Walter Reed.” Lilly argues that for the past six years the
federal government has centralized power and decision making to such an extent
that effectively identifying and solving problems has become near-impossible.
Effective, innovative organizations, Lilly argues,
distribute power downward to middle and lower echelons so that the people who
are the first to see a problem also have the authority to fix it. Yet the Bush
administration has been going in the exact opposite direction. “Not only are
individual employees and their section chiefs expected to parrot the company
line, but agency heads and departmental secretaries are as well,” Lilly explains,
citing a former Secretary of the Treasury who was fired after speculating that
tax cuts might result in large deficits, among others.
This governing style has hit the U.S. Army particularly
hard. Numerous Army officials have been ousted by the heavy hand of the Bush
White House. Highly decorated Army Chief of Staff Gen. Eric Shinseki, for
example, was sacked 14 months before his retirement after telling the Senate
Armed Services that “something in the order of several hundred thousand
soldiers” would be required to police a post-invasion
It’s no surprise, then, that the Walter Reed scandal has so
been treated in much the same way.
Major General George Weightman spent 34 years in the United
States Army before being selected to lead the North Atlantic Medical Command
and
As Lilly points out, “Does anyone think that if George
Weightman had been given the resources to fix the problems at Walter Reed and
take care of the troops in his charge he would have refused to do so? Does
anyone believe that prior to The Washington Post’s public expose demands
for more resources at Walter Reed would have been met with any more tolerance
than that afforded to Mike Parker or Eric Shinseki or Thomas White?”
If we want to work to fix the conditions at Walter Reed and
ensure that problems are identified and solved before they become widespread
issues, there needs to be systematic change. Centralized, top-down decision
making may allow an organization to move very rapidly in the direction chosen
by its leaders, but even a well-informed leadership will fail to see problems
along the way or have the time to order remedies.
The federal government should grant those who are aware of
problems the authority to take action. If it doesn’t, it has only itself to
blame when issues like the scandalous conditions of military hospitals come to
light.
- Behind the Mess at Walter Reed,
by Scott Lilly
Contact Scott
Lilly for additional information and comments:
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jneurohr@americanprogress.org
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To speak with our experts on this topic, please contact:
For print and radio, John Neurohr, Deputy Press Secretary
202.481.8182 or jneurohr@americanprogress.org
For TV, Sean Gibbons, Director of Media Strategy
202.682.1611 or sgibbons@americanprogress.org
For web, Erin Lindsay, Online Marketing Manager
202.741.6397 or elindsay@americanprogress.org