The Idiot was good kid, but strange. I mean really
strange. His buddies thought he was “a little crazy.” He was
alternately depressed and euphoric, pastoral and warlike. He would
arrive back at our base after a three-day pass with a big wide toothy
grin and enough doughnuts for the whole company. Five minutes later he
would be on the brink of apoplexy, raging against the army, the draft,
his parents, the Koreans. Five minutes after that he would be sitting
alone in a corner of our barracks, staring morosely at his boots for an
hour, seemingly oblivious to things going on around him. After that
hour, we would see him ebulliently bounding down the aisle between the
beds, trumpeting some brilliant new idea to remake the military. And
five minutes later, he would be smashing furniture and throwing boots
and chairs at his comrades. The Idiot’s behaviors were as unpredictable
as they were bizarre.
But he was our only candidate. Long story short: We got him to take the
treasurer’s job, and he dutifully gave us a monthly accounting of how
much money was in our welfare fund, receipts for what was spent, and a
report on likely future expenses.
The rest of us, if we thought about it at all, were happy with our
solution. We thought we’d pulled off a coup. Until December, that is,
just before our company Christmas party. It was then The Idiot told us
we couldn’t have a Christmas party that year, but that this was really
a good thing because he’d spent our money buying toys for poor kids.
The Idiot was court martialed, spent a year in the stockade (Army-speak for jail), and dishonorably discharged.
I haven’t thought about that episode in more than half a century. But
that’s where my mind went as I read the harrowing story of 1st
Lieutenant Elizabeth Whiteside.
Though described by one of her Iraq comrades as “A Soldier’s Officer,”
Lt. Whiteside may finally learn this week whether she will be treated
for severe mental illness and given the appropriate benefits to pay for
her care – or court-martialed and face the possibility of life in
prison.
The charges now being considered against her: Attempting suicide and
endangering the life of another soldier while serving in Iraq.
The military prosecutor, Maj. Stefan Wolfe, argues that, even after
seven years of exemplary service, the 25-year-old Army reservist should
be court-martialed. Under military law, soldiers who attempt suicide
can be prosecuted because their action affects unit order and
discipline and discredits the armed forces.
In Whiteside’s case, prosecutors consider her mental illness "an
excuse" for criminal conduct. But the military psychiatrists at Walter
Reed who examined her after she recovered from her self-inflicted
gunshot wound have diagnosed her with a severe mental disorder,
possibly triggered by the stresses of a war zone.
The prosecutor has warned Whiteside's lawyer of the risk of using a
"psychobabble" defense. But a senior psychiatrist at Walter Reed, asked
to justify his diagnosis of severe mental illness, responded angrily:
"I'm not here to play legal games. I am here out of the genuine concern
for a human being that's breaking and that is broken. She has a severe
and significant illness. Let's treat her as a human being, for Christ's
sake!"
At one point, Whiteside requested that she be allowed to resign to
avoid a court-martial. But the result of that course would mean having
to spend the rest of her life explaining why she didn’t receive an
honorable discharge, living with the still-present stigma being
mentally ill – and probably losing her medical care and benefits.
Walter Reed’s commander, Maj. Gen. Eric B. Schoomaker, a physician and
now Army surgeon general, agrees. He said, "This officer has a
demonstrably severe depression which manifested itself . . . as a
psychotic, self-destructive episode. . .. Resignation in lieu of
court-martial eliminates all of the benefits of medical support this
officer deserves after seven years of credible and honorable service."
But many other members of the uniformed military involved in the case
take the opposite view. One of them said, "Although the sanity board
determined that at the time of the misconduct she had a severe mental
disease or defect, she knowingly assaulted and threatened others and
injured herself."
Whiteside, who is now a psychiatric outpatient at Walter Reed, ran a
medical unit at the very same hospital until 2006, when she volunteered
to deploy to Iraq. She told the Washington Post that seeing so many
casualties at Walter Reed made her feel she was not bearing her full
responsibility.
The bare details: In Iraq, she was assigned as a platoon leader in a
medical company at the Camp Cropper detainee prison, which housed 4,000
suspected terrorists and insurgents, and included such high-security
prisoners as Saddam Hussein and Ali Hassan Majeed, known as "Chemical
Ali."
Whiteside supervised nine medics who worked the night shift at the
prison, ate one meal a day and worked seven days a week, dispatching
drivers, medics and support staff to transport sick and wounded Iraqis
and U.S. troops. Her superiors credit her with her unit's success.
Given the radio handle "Trauma Mama," the high school valedictorian and
ROTC grad told the Washington Post, "I loved our mission because it
represented the best of America: taking care of the enemy, regardless
of what they are doing to us."
Sometime after Hussein’s execution, a nurse in Whiteside’s unit
reported that Whiteside was "freaking out." The nurse found Whiteside
sitting on her bed, mumbling and visibly upset.
When comrades tried to help, Whiteside resisted and told them to leave.
At one point, she fired her pistol into the ceiling. Later, she pointed
the weapon at one of her colleagues, yelling that she wanted to kill
them. When she opened her door she saw armed soldiers approaching. She
slammed the door shut and fired her weapon once into her stomach. She
was still in serious condition when she arrived at Walter Reed a few
days later.
There are many more details I’m not going to try to cover here. The
Washington Post first told Lt. Whiteside’s story in a brilliant report
by Dana Priest and Anne Hull in the December 2 paper.
It’s well worth
reading.
The point of all this is that, despite monumental advances in mental
illness diagnosis and therapy, and endless pronouncements from the
White House and the Pentagon about how deeply concerned they are about
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and other combat-related psychological
problems, the Army doesn’t seem to have moved very far from “The Idiot”
of my 1951 MP unit.
Back then, doctors knew virtually nothing about how to diagnose, much
less treat, his psychological disorder. His buddies thought of him as a
little crazy. So The Idiot was tried, jailed and dishonorably
discharged.
But today, both diagnosis and treatment are real options – and they are
happening every day. They happen when mental health professionals, not
military prosecutors, get listened to and believed.
This week we may find out whether the Army has been listening.