http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/03/harvey070302/Walter Reed woes bring turmoil at the top
By Kelly Kennedy, William McMichael and Gina Cavallaro - Staff writers
Posted : Saturday Mar 3, 2007 8:46:31 EST
The more than 1 million soldiers of the Army, deeply involved on two war fronts, suddenly find themselves serving under leadership tainted by scandal and in critical transition. Army Secretary Francis Harvey is out, pushed out the door by his boss, Defense Secretary Robert Gates.
Read complete coverage of the Walter Reed controversy.
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/03/online_reedarchive_070302/Gates was unhappy with the Army’s response to revelations, reported by Army Times and The Washington Post, that wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington were consigned to squalid quarters and mired in administrative red tape while awaiting care and evaluation for benefits.
“I am disappointed that some in the Army have not adequately appreciated the seriousness of the situation pertaining to outpatient care at Walter Reed,” Gates said in the Pentagon briefing room.
“Some have shown too much defensiveness and have not shown enough focus on digging into and addressing the problems,” Gates said.
“Also, I am concerned that some do not properly understand the need to communicate to the wounded and their families that we have no higher priority than their care, and that addressing their concerns about the quality of their outpatient experience is critically important.
“Our wounded soldiers and their families have sacrificed much and they deserve the best we can offer.”
He took no questions from reporters.
Harvey was at Fort Benning, Ga., the morning of March 2, when he cut short his visit to return to Washington to meet with Gates. Sources told Army Times that Gates asked for Harvey’s resignation. However, in an interview in his office shortly after the announcement, Harvey said he offered Gates his resignation because he believed the Army let down the wounded soldiers. He said the furor has depressed the staff at Walter Reed, and he wanted to prevent any others from leaving or being fired.
“We can’t have them leave,” said Harvey, a former corporate leader appointed to the top Army civilian post in November, 2004. “We can’t have them be so demoralized that they leave. So I figured what the heck, if I offer my resignation, that may stop all this bleeding, and it was accepted.”
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