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Several US officers failed to supervise Fort Hood gunman

Rampage at Fort Hood was 'act of terrorism': US official
Washington (AFP) Jan 15, 2010 - The shooting rampage at Fort Hood was "an act of terrorism," a senior US official said on Friday, employing a phrase that the Obama administration has previously avoided to describe the attack. The administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the November 5 shooting spree that left 13 dead at the army base in Texas, was a "terrorist tactic" but the suspected gunman's links to extremist groups remained under investigation. "It certainly in my mind was an act of terrorism," the official told reporters. He said it was unclear if the suspected gunman, army psychiatrist Major Nidal Hasan, was directed to act by outside extremists. "This is an ongoing investigation," said the official. "Motivation is always a difficult thing to determine."

The official made the comment as he presented the findings of a White House review into the assault. Some lawmakers in Congress have been quick to call the Fort Hood rampage an act of terrorism, citing reports Hasan had contacts with a radical Islamic cleric in Yemen, Anwar al-Awlaqi. The same US-Yemeni cleric also has been tied to the Nigerian man accused of trying to blow up a US airliner bound for Detroit on Christmas Day. But officials in President Barack Obama's administration have tended to be careful not to portray the incident as an act of terrorism. Although the alleged shooter's possible ties to outside extremists were still being examined, the official told reporters that extremist propaganda and activity coming from Al-Qaeda's branch in Yemen was cause for serious concern.

"Any interaction with these extremist elements and terrorist elements in Yemen cause me great concern," he said. The White House review of the circumstances around the Fort Hood shooting showed that "more rigorous actions" should have been taken prior to the attack and procedures strengthened to ensure better coordination among intelligence and law enforcement agencies, the official said. Asked if the government could have averted the assault at Fort Hood if key clues had been pieced together in time, the official said: "It's difficult to say." But he said: "Certain things went uncovered, both in terms of information, as well as how information was handled and how information was acted upon."
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Jan 15, 2010
Several US officers who failed to properly supervise the suspected gunman who shot dead 13 people at the Fort Hood military base should be held accountable, an inquiry said Friday.

"As a result of our review, it appeared that there were several officers who did not apply the army's policies to the perpetrator," said Togo West, a former army secretary, who led the review with a former chief of naval operations, Vernon Clark.

The report released Friday recommended the US Army secretary carry out "an accountability review" for those officers, which could include disciplinary measures.

Military and intelligence officials have come under criticism for possibly missing warning signs about US Army Major Nidal Hasan, a psychiatrist charged with the 13 murders in the November 5 attack at the military base in Texas.

Hasan is being investigated for links to Islamic extremism, including his contacts with a radical cleric now in Yemen who blessed the killing spree.

West declined to offer more details about the conduct of the officers overseeing Hasan and that the probe had not identified them by name.

But he said US Army leaders would not have difficulty concluding which officers needed to come under scrutiny based on the report, which included sections that were not released publicly.

The report also said "some medical officers failed to apply appropriate judgment and standards" in assessing Hasan.

In personnel evaluations, medical officers failed to take into account Hasan's overall conduct and instead focused only on his academic work, the report said.

The probe did not look at the role of intelligence agencies in tracking Hasan's contacts with the radical cleric, Anwar al-Aulaqi, which is the subject of another review.

But the report did say joint terrorism task forces needed to be improved and that more military officers should be assigned to them.

Contacts between Hasan and the cleric were picked up by government agencies before the shooting but the US Army was not informed about the link.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates praised the report and said he had ordered immediate steps to be taken based on the findings.

The review portrayed the Pentagon as badly prepared for internal threats and that it failed to share information with commanders about personnel.

The report shows "shortcomings in the way the department is prepared to defend against threats posed by external influences operating on members of our military community," Gates told reporters.

He said he did not believe possible radicals within the military's ranks posed a major threat.

But he said "clearly one is too many."

The Pentagon's policies and methods were outdated and the department needed to adapt to new threats that appeared after the September 11, 2001 attacks, Gates said.

"It is clear that as a department, we have not done enough to adapt to the evolving domestic internal security threat to American troops and military facilities that has emerged over the past decade," he said.

"In this area, as in so many others, this department is burdened by 20th century processes and attitudes, mostly rooted in the Cold War."

The government's counter-intelligence procedures were "mostly designed to combat an external threat such as a foreign intelligence service," he said.

But the report praised the rapid response to the shooting at Fort Hood, saying that within four minutes and 10 seconds of the first emergency call, the attack was stopped and the suspected gunman disarmed.



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Yemen Qaeda chiefs killed in air strike: senior official
Sanaa (AFP) Jan 15, 2010
An air strike against an Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) convoy in north Yemen on Friday killed six suspected leaders of the group including its military chief, a senior Yemeni official said. Qassem al-Rimi was among 23 people who had made a daring escape from a state security prison in Sanaa in February 2006 that left the government red-faced, and he was on a list of 152 suspects w ... read more







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