It’s not uncommon for presidents to embellish their
accomplishments upon leaving office, but George W. Bush, who will exit the
White House leaving the country in the worst shape since Herbert Hoover, has
gone a step further, moving past exaggeration into outright lying.
Last month, trying to change the emerging historical
consensus about a failed presidency, the White House published two lengthy reports,
“Highlights of Accomplishments and Results of the Administration of George W.
Bush,” and “100 Things Americans May Not Know About the Bush Administration
Record.”
One of the surprising claims that stood out among the
combined 90 pages of so-called accomplishments was the White House’s glowing
assessment of Bush’s record on veterans’ issues. Bush claims he “provided
unprecedented resources for veterans” over the past eight years and provided
“the highest level of support for veterans in American history.”
“The president also increased the benefits available to
those who have served our nation and transformed the veterans health care
system to better serve those who have sacrificed for our freedom,” both reports
claim, adding that he “instituted reforms for the care of wounded warriors . .
and dramatically expanded resources for mental health services.”
The White House made these claims in the face of what former
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld might have called a “known known” -- that the
treatment of veterans returning from deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan has
been a national disgrace, highlighted most dramatically by the neglect and
substandard care given wounded troops at Walter Reed and other military
hospitals.
The budget increases that have occurred mostly were enacted
over Bush’s opposition or related to the fact that injuries from the Iraq war
far exceeded the administration’s rosy projections in early 2003. The Bush team
especially underestimated how many cases of post-traumatic stress disorder to
anticipate as well as the number of brain injuries, which have been endemic to
the Iraq war where insurgents made effective use of “improvised explosive
devices,” or IEDs.
Before Bush ordered the invasion of Iraq in March 2003,
documents released by the Department of Veterans Affairs said it expected a
maximum of 8,000 cases of post-traumatic stress disorder.
However, according to a study released last year by the RAND
Institute, there are more than 320,000 veterans of the Iraq and Afghan wars suffering
from major depression, PTSD and/or traumatic brain injury. The report found
that the VA has been and continues to be ill-equipped to deal with these cases
when soldiers return from combat, especially after multiple tours.
An Army task force last year also found major flaws in the
way the VA treated and cared for veterans suffering from traumatic brain
injuries.
Bush’s record on VA funding
For his part, Bush stacked the VA with political cronies,
such as former Republican National Committee chairman Jim Nicholson, who as VA secretary
defended a budget measure that sought major cuts in staffing for healthcare and
at the Board of Veterans Appeals; slashed funding for nursing home care; and
blocked four legislative measures aimed at streamlining the backlog of veterans
benefits claims.
Of the 84,000 Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans diagnosed
with post-traumatic stress disorder by VA, only half, about 42,000, had their
disability claim approved by VA. Instead of expediting PTSD claims, Bush’s
political appointees at VA actively fought against mental health claims.
Bush’s appointees also obstructed scientific research into
the causes of Gulf War illnesses dating back 18 years to Operation Desert Storm
and opposed medical research on treatment for 210,000 of those veterans.
As for funding, Bush proposed a 0.5 percent budget increase
for the VA for fiscal year 2006, which amounted to a “cruel mockery” of Bush’s
promises to do everything to support veterans and soldiers, Rep. Lane Evans,
D-Illinois, said at the time.
Evans called Bush’s proposed budget increase for the VA
“grossly inadequate,” saying it would force the VA to “ration” healthcare to
veterans.
VA officials had testified in 2005 that the agency needed at
least a 13 percent increase to meet the needs of hundreds of thousands of war
veterans wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan and others who needed long-term mental
health care.
In early 2007, the Washington Post put a spotlight on the
human consequences resulting from the combination of Bush’s wars and the budget
squeeze
The Post published a series of articles documenting the
substandard conditions at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, which is located
only 4.7 miles from the White House. Wounded vets were housed in rooms with
moldy walls, leaky plumbing and an infestation of vermin, underscoring how out
of touch Bush had become regarding the nation’s veterans.
In response to complaints that some veterans under VA care
were being neglected, Nicholson said in March 2007 that such cases were
“anecdotal exceptions.”
“When you are treating so many people there is always going
to be a linen towel left somewhere,” he said.
In May 2007, the AP revealed that while Nicholson was
pinching pennies on treatment costs and coping with a $1.3 billion budget
shortfall, he awarded “$3.8 million in bonuses to top executives in fiscal
2006″ -- many as much as $33,000.
Simultaneously, Bush was resisting congressional efforts to
beef up the VA’s budget. In May 2007, Bush threatened to veto legislation that
sought a 10 percent -- $3.2 billion -- increase, calling it too expensive. Bush
proposed a 2 percent increase, far below what lawmakers and VA officials said
was needed to treat a dramatic increase in traumatic brain injury and PTSD
cases.
After Congress passed the legislation with the higher VA
spending, Bush backed down on his veto threat but that was largely due to the
fact that every Republican in the Senate, with the exception of Jim DeMint of
South Carolina, supported the measure.
Amid the growing scandals about substandard VA treatment and
inept management, Nicholson resigned in July 2007.
Suicide epidemic
Even after Nicholson’s resignation, the Department of
Veterans Affairs continued to be buffeted by scandals, including a cover-up in
an epidemic of veterans’ suicides and attempted suicides.
Last year, internal VA e-mails surfaced that showed how top
agency officials tried to conceal the information from the public about the
sudden increase in suicides and attempted suicides among veterans that were
treated or sought help at VA hospitals around the country.
And last November, internal watchdogs discovered 500
benefits claims in shredding bins at 41 of the 57 regional VA offices around
the country.
Paul Sullivan, the executive director of Veterans for Common
Sense, a veterans’ advocacy group that sued the VA in federal court, said
attempts by the White House to portray Bush as an advocate for veterans is
beyond shameful.
“Bush is the worst failure for our veterans since Hoover,”
Sullivan said, expressing shock that the president “would shamefully continue
his legacy of lies to the American people as he and his political cronies are
forced to leave office on Jan. 20.”
Sullivan disputed some of Bush’s claims as misleading, such
as the assertion that he doubled funding for the VA. “However, President Bush
failed to disclose that the number of veterans seeking VA healthcare doubled,
from 2.7 million to 5.5 million, and that rising healthcare inflation actually
resulted in a net decrease in spending per veteran by VA during the past eight
years,” he said.
“If not for the intervention of Congress to substantially
increase VA funding beyond Bush’s inadequate budget requests, especially in the
past two years, the situation would have deteriorated from a serious crisis to
a catastrophe at VA.”
Sullivan, who worked at the VA for five years as a project
manager, said Bush failed to the implement the VA’s proposed Mental Health
Strategic Plan, a program aimed at identifying and quickly treating veterans
suffering from major depression and were on the verge of suicide.
“Without implementation, funding, and oversight of the plan,
several suicidal Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans were illegally refused
emergency medical care by VA,” Sullivan said. “Veterans for Common Sense
brought this issue to the attention of VA, and VA refused to act.
“Therefore, VCS sued VA for turning away suicidal veterans.
After we filed our lawsuit, and only after we filed our lawsuit, the VA began a
suicide prevention hotline. In the first 15 months of operation, the hotline
received 85,000 calls and rescued more than 2,100 suicidal veterans.”
As of September 2008, 330,000 Iraq and Afghanistan war
veterans have filed disability claims to the VA, according to the agency. Yet,
54,000 are still waiting for the VA to confirm their claims were received. The
average wait for a disability claim is more than six months.
Additionally, according to VA’s inspector general, 25
percent of the VA’s 55 million patients have to wait more than 30 days for a
doctor’s appointment.
As costly as the treatment of Iraq and Afghan war veterans
already has become, Bush is leaving an even greater budget hole for his
successor.
In the book, The Three
Trillion Dollar War, authors Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes wrote that
future treatment of veterans would continue adding to the total cost of Bush’s
conflicts and would put extraordinary stresses on the VA.
“Even in 2000, before the war,” they wrote, the VA was the
subject of numerous Government Accountability Office studies that “identified
long-standing problems, including large backlogs of pending claims, lengthy
processing time for initial claims, high rates of error in processing claims,
and inconsistency across regional offices.”
But the problems only have grown worse. “In a 2005 study,”
Stiglitz and Blimes wrote, “the GAO found that the time to complete a veteran’s
claim varied from 99 days at the Salt Lake City Office to 237 days in Honolulu.
In a 2006 study, GAO found that 12 percent of claims were inaccurate.”
Homeless veterans
The White House reports on Bush’s so-called accomplishments
also claimed that Bush “reduced the number of homeless veterans by nearly 40
percent from 2001 to 2007. Established VA homeless-specific programs, which
constitute one of the largest integrated networks of homeless treatment and
assistance services in the country.”
That statement rankled Aaron Glantz, a journalist, author
and the Rosalynn Carter Fellow for Mental Health Journalism at the Carter
Center.
“What kind of president pats himself on the back with
200,000 veterans sleeping homeless on the street every night?” Glantz said in
an interview. “What kind of administration puts out self-congratulatory press
releases while over 6,000 veterans commit suicide every year?
“We can only hope that President-elect Barack Obama takes a
very different course once he’s in office. Otherwise, our government will
repeat the shameful disgrace that was its treatment of wounded veterans
returning home from Vietnam.”
Glantz spent three years in Iraq reporting on the war and
recently published The War Comes Home:
Washington’s Battle against America’s Veterans, which documents the
heart-wrenching stories of homeless Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans and the
plight of other veterans who, upon returning home, have been neglected by the
country they served.
Last week, Glantz published a report, Did You Know 200,000 Vets Are Sleeping on the Streets?, that
contradicts the Bush self-congratulations about veterans’ homelessness.
On his transition website, change.gov,
Obama said he intends to “Fix the Benefits Bureaucracy: Hire additional claims
workers, and improve training and accountability so that VA benefit decisions
are rated fairly and consistently. Transform the paper benefit claims process
to an electronic one to reduce errors and improve timeliness.”
To meet that challenge, Obama tapped retired Gen. Eric
Shinseki, a Vietnam War veteran who sustained combat-related injuries, to lead
the VA. Shinseki made headlines back in February 2003 when he testified before
the Senate Armed Services Committee and predicted that several hundred thousand
soldiers would likely be needed to maintain order in post-invasion Iraq.
After facing public criticism from Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, Shinseki was forced into early
retirement. His judgment has since been vindicated, both in regard to likely
ethnic strife in Iraq and on the costliness of the war.
Yet, Bush’s White House is now hoping that its last-minute
propaganda barrage will, if nothing else, cloud some of the memories about its
failures and misjudgments. Bush’s critics, however, are not willing to so
easily forget.
“Contrary to his administration’s latest spin, George W.
Bush’s legacy on veterans is one of shameful neglect,” author Glantz said.
“Rather than care for the tens of thousands of American service members wounded
in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Bush administration has thrown up a series of
barriers to prevent veterans from getting the care they need.”
Simply put -- White House propaganda aside -- veterans’
healthcare has become worse, not better, under Bush’s leadership.
Jason
Leopold is the author of “News Junkie,” a memoir. Visit
www.newsjunkiebook.com
for a preview. His new website is The
Public Record.