Senators urge Army leadership to testify before Congress about Fort Hood firings

Image Credit: Bronte Wittpenn/American-Statesman

In response to a recent independent review that documented years of sexual abuse and violence at the Fort Hood Army post in Killeen, Texas, at least 14 U.S. Army leaders were either fired or suspended earlier this week. Sens. Elizabeth Warren, member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Ed Markey recently urged Army leadership to testify before Congress concerning the systemic abuse taking place on military bases.

Due to the fact that nearly 30
soldiers
assigned to Fort Hood have died this year, an independent
committee was assigned to review the base’s handling of reported sexual
assaults, homicides, and suicides. In August, the body of U.S. Army Sgt. Elder
Fernandes, who had been assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood, was discovered
hanging from a tree. Earlier this year, Fernandes reported that a superior had
inappropriately touched him.

On June 30, the dismembered remains
of Spc. Vanessa Guillén were discovered after she was reportedly murdered by
Spc. Aaron David Robinson, who fatally shot himself before law enforcement
could apprehend him. According to Guillén’s family, she had planned to file a
sexual harassment complaint prior to her murder.

Between 2014 and 2019, an average
of 129
felonies
were committed annually at Fort Hood, including murder, kidnapping,
and sexual assault. The base reportedly has “the most cases for sexual assault
and harassment and murders for our entire formation of the U.S. Army.”

After the report
on Fort Hood was released on Tuesday, at least 14 Army leaders were fired or
suspended, including Col. Ralph Overland, Command Sgt. Maj. Bradley Knapp, and Maj.
Gen. Scott Efflandt, who was in charge of the base earlier this year when Spc. Guillén
went missing. Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Broadwater and Command Sgt. Maj. Thomas Kenny
have been suspended pending the outcome of an investigation into command
climate
and the responses to sexual harassment and assault.

“Our report, I think, was very
clear that the problems at Fort Hood were not the result of one commander, they
were not the result of one administration, but it was really the result of
years of benign neglect in the area of sexual harassment and sexual assault,”
said Jonathan Harmon, a West Point graduate and trial lawyer who served on the
independent committee, during congressional
testimony
on Wednesday.

“The pervasive problems found by
the independent investigation into Fort Hood demonstrate a gross disregard by
Army leadership and the Command at Fort Hood for the safety and well-being of
America’s soldiers,” Sens. Warren and Markey wrote in a joint
statement
. “It should not have taken the dozens of deaths of men and women
of our armed forces at Fort Hood to trigger an investigation.

“While we appreciate the findings
of the independent investigation, it’s been clear that the Army’s leadership
must be held accountable for the harm caused by allowing a climate of
harassment, fear, and retaliation to take hold for so long. The Army must make
immediately clear what steps it will be taking to address the problems outlined
in the report. Top Army leadership should testify before the Senate as soon as
possible, and the incoming Biden administration must continue to ensure that
the problems caused by the lack of leadership and lack of care for the soldiers
serving at Fort Hood are fully resolved.

“When a young person puts on the
Army uniform it becomes our responsibility to keep them safe. The U.S. Army
failed Sergeant Elder Fernandes, Specialist Vanessa Guillen, and their families
and they, like the families of all of the soldiers who have suffered at Fort
Hood, deserve justice.”

FALL FUNDRAISER

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