Saturday, April 19, 2014

Fort Riley quickly overhauls its sexual assault program


As much as Army Sgt. Aiden Hinkley believed in the concept of a one-stop shop of services for sexual assault victims in the military, he and his supervisor weren’t certain anybody would show up.


After all, only two other U.S. Army installations in the world have tried it.


But on April 9, the day of the grand opening, someone did show up.


Just hours after news media and Fort Riley brass toured the Sexual Harassment/Assault Response & Prevention Center on the base near Junction City, a soldier stepped quietly down the nine steps into the basement at 8071 Normandy Road to report an incident that he alleged occurred a month earlier.


Hinkley consulted with the soldier and directed him to legal counsel about 10 steps down the hall. Prior to that day, victims wishing to speak with a lawyer in the staff judge advocate’s office needed to go from Hinkley’s desk at Adams Hall to Building 216, a 10-minute drive.


Anyone seeking to press charges would be referred to the criminal investigation division in Building 403, another 10-minute drive.


With each trip, victims of sexual abuse would pass fellow service members in the parking lots, stairwells and at the occasional checkpoint, complicating a sensitive situation, Hinkley said.


Now the offices share the same hallway in a low-traffic building with other Army functions, allowing people to enter discreetly.


“We want to keep the number of people who know to the smallest possible” until victims decide the best course of action, he said.


The idea struck Hinkley and others within the 1st Infantry Division’s assault response team in the wake of urgent calls from Congress and the Pentagon to address a crisis of sexual abuse.


At a January SHARP conference in Washington, D.C., the Army’s chief of staff, Gen. Raymond Odierno, told those attending that military culture had to change with regard to sexual assault, according to the Army News Service.


“We have to stop it,” said Odierno, calling sexual offenders “an insider threat” to the Army.


Hinkley was there. He and about 30 other Army sexual assault response coordinators from around the globe completed three months of training in late March.


Upon Hinkley’s return to Fort Riley, he and the base’s SHARP program manager, Lt. Col. Andrew Turner, scrambled to put sexual assault reporting, victims’ advocacy and investigative resources under one roof.


They pulled it off in two weeks.


Furniture from base storage was moved into vacant office space to accommodate a waiting room. Posters and banners around Fort Riley encouraged victims to “Speak Up.” News releases announcing the consolidated facility showed up on soldiers’ cellphones.


“We’re already seeing dividends,” Turner said.


It’s not that the SHARP center has been a whir of activity in its first days of operation. At the end of the hall, Capt. Alex Boettcher, special counsel to assault victims, said five people contacted him last week about new or existing cases, slightly more than usual.


For most soldiers reporting sexual harassment or abuse, the first point of entry at Fort Riley is a 24-hour hotline. Many go no further than that.


Hinkley said the SHARP center stands ready to offer counseling and anonymity to victims, even if they choose not to file a report.


Those who seek counseling but want to keep the military out of it are referred to the Crisis Center, a nonprofit civilian agency off base.


“We serve a lot of military-affiliated persons who don’t want to talk with anyone within the military structure,” said Crisis Center executive director Judy Davis.


Most cases she sees stem from domestic violence.


“Boyfriends, girlfriends, husbands, wives,” she said.


A survey last year by the Defense Department found 26,000 troops reporting anonymously that they experienced sexual abuse in 2012, while fewer than 3,400 filed reports.


The findings and a number of scandals related to the prosecution of military personnel spurred Congress to pass legislation sponsored by U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Missouri Democrat, to strengthen sexual assault prevention programs and training.


Lawmakers resisted calls to remove the prosecution of sex crimes from the military chain of command. But the reforms do require the armed services to keep victims safe from retaliation against their allegations, McCaskill said.


She said the reporting of sexual abuse on military bases has jumped 50 percent since reforms were initiated.


“What Fort Riley has done is a terrific idea,” McCaskill said, “and the fact they did it so quickly is an indication that the message has gotten through.”


Hinkley, who enlisted in 1996, said the Army had been moving toward a more aggressive posture regarding sexual assault before the issue erupted in Congress.


“About 2011, I noticed a change” in the tone and attention given the matter at annual training meetings, he said.


Training before then tended to focus on discouraging soldiers from conduct that might lead to victimization, such as excessive drinking or flirting.


Hinkley said the focus now is on identifying and changing the behavior of the potential offender.


“For me, it’s all about making sure the victim is taken care of and gets the resources that person needs,” he said.



Veterans bike through Vietnam to help heal wounds of war


HUE, Vietnam — Whenever Army Maj. Yancy Baer deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan — and when he came home the last time in 2009 to face the amputation of a leg — Vietnam veterans were always there to greet him and lend their support.


Baer is now returning the favor. He and six other cyclists, including three other wounded Afghanistan and Iraq war vets, completed a 320-mile journey earlier this month through the former battlefields of central Vietnam.


Their mission: to raise money for Vietnam veterans who want to return to this southeast Asian country for the first time since the war but can’t afford to make the trip.


“If it wasn’t for Vietnam vets standing up and lobbying for veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, I truly believe we wouldn’t have the care or the warm homecoming that most of us have experienced,” said Baer, 42, of Choctaw, Okla. “It’s a shame their generation didn’t support them the same way.”


Baer lost his left leg below the knee after a noncombat injury in Iraq in 2009. He rode on the bike trip alongside Army Sgt. 1st Class Gabe Monreal, who had his left leg amputated below the knee after a firefight in Afghanistan in 2010. The two buddies met during rehabilitation at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio. Baer plans to retire soon. Monreal remains on active duty.


“The Vietnam veterans are doing stuff for us all the time,” said Monreal, 37, of Corpus Christi, Texas. “We are so spoiled. The support is incredible.”


The cyclists, who rode on behalf of San Antonio-based Operation Comfort, raised $170,000 in corporate sponsorships and personal donations. The money will be used to send at least 25 Vietnam veterans back to the country next year.


The cyclists pedaled up and down mountains in unforgiving heat and rain, along winding roads through cities and villages, rice paddies and jungles, where the vestiges of a war that ended 40 years ago still linger.


Six days later, they ended their journey April 6 in the former imperial capital of Hue, where one of the Vietnam War’s bloodiest battles was fought in 1968. They flew home from Hanoi a few days later.


Thirty riders from the United Kingdom’s Help for Heroes, some of them veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, also participated in the ride.


Among the American contingent were Army Sgt. 1st Class David “Kaweka” Lau, 39, of Olympia, Wash., and Capt. Chris Rosebrock, 28, of Chicago. Their trip coincided with the day two years ago when a suicide bomber struck their foot patrol in Afghanistan, severely wounding both men. The blast killed three other American troops, five Afghan police officers, an interpreter and 11 civilians.


Lau nearly lost his right leg at the hip, but doctors managed to save it. A piece of shrapnel nicked Rosebrock’s femoral artery and he almost died. In many ways, the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Vietnam are the same for those who fought in them, said Lau, who’s also set to retire. Those who survive, he added, face the same gut-wrenching questions, such as “Why did I make it home?”


“It’s deep. It’s hard to put into words,” he said. “Even though their war was 40 years before ours, to sit and talk to them, it’s like talking to a guy who just fought in Afghanistan.”


Despite his own traumatic experience, Rosebrock said he’d gained a deeper appreciation for the rigors that American combat troops faced in Vietnam.


“It gave me a unique perspective of what these guys fought in,” he said. “Because I’m trying to get up a hill on my bike, and scouring for shade for a second, and I look across into this thick brush, and I thought, ‘How did these guys fight in this?’ ”


John O’Connell was the only Vietnam veteran to make the ride. He served as a Marine Corps infantry lieutenant along the demilitarized zone during the bloody year of 1969. He’d never planned to return to Vietnam, but after working with today’s younger veterans, he eventually changed his mind.


O’Connell taught Baer and Monreal how to surf a few years ago in California. Now they, along with Lau and Rosebrock, have helped him achieve the closure that had eluded him for decades.


“I didn’t know what I was going to face here,” said O’Connell, 67, a retired Los Angeles Police Department captain who lives in Shell Beach, Calif. “There were so many bad memories.”


The cyclists passed through some of the places where O’Connell had fought. He remembered being with his Marines: the ones he lost, the ones who are still alive, all of whom he still loves.


“Once we got out to Khe Sanh, it really hit me,” O’Connell said. “I yelled out, ‘My God, I’m back home again.’ ”


“When we got to the Rockpile,” he added — a mountain that U.S. troops had used as an artillery and observation post — “I actually felt a shot of joy in my heart.”


O’Connell led a prayer near a spot where some of his men were killed 45 years ago.


“It was like a final farewell,” he said, tears welling in his eyes. “I’m going away grateful for having come back to Vietnam, and I am grateful for having come back with guys like these.”


———


Reed and Brown are McClatchy special correspondents based in Vietnam.



Divers begin pulling bodies from South Korean ferry


OKPO, South Korea — After more than three days of frustration and failure, divers on Sunday finally found a way into a submerged ferry off South Korea's southern shore, discovering more than a dozen bodies inside the ship and pushing the confirmed death toll to 49, officials said.


More than 250 people are still missing, most of them high school students on a holiday trip, and anguished families are furious with the pace of rescue efforts. Divers had previously failed to enter the ferry, officials said, because of extremely strong currents and bad visibility due to foul weather. They have yet to find any survivors in the ship.


The penetration by divers into the ferry follows the arrest of the captain on suspicion of negligence and abandoning people in need. Two crew members also were taken into custody, including a rookie third mate who a prosecutor said was steering in challenging waters unfamiliar to her when the accident occurred.


Beginning late Saturday, when divers broke a window, and continuing into Sunday, multiple teams of divers have found various routes into the ferry, discovering bodies in different spots, coast guard official Koh Myung-seok said at a briefing. Thirteen bodies had been found in the ship, and three others were found floating outside, said coast guard official Kim Jin-cheol.


Meanwhile, on an island near the submerged ferry, about 200 police in neon jackets blocked about 100 relatives of missing passengers who'd been walking on a main road in an effort, they said, to travel to the presidential Blue House in Seoul to voice their complaints to the president.


"The government is the killer," they shouted as they pushed against a police barricade.


"We want an answer from the person in charge about why orders are not going through and nothing is being done," Lee Woon-geun, father of missing passenger Lee Jung-in, 17, said. "They are clearly lying and kicking the responsibility to others."


Relatives are desperate to retrieve bodies before they decompose beyond recognition, Lee said.


"After four or five days the body starts to decay. When it's decayed, if you try to hold a hand it might fall off," he said. "I miss my son. I'm really afraid I might not get to find his body."


The ferry's captain, Lee Joon-seok, 68, was arrested along with one of the Sewol's three helmsmen and the 25-year-old third mate, prosecutors said.


Lee, speaking to reporters Saturday morning as he left the Mokpo Branch of Gwangju District Court to be jailed, defended his much-criticized decision to wait about 30 minutes before ordering an evacuation.


"At the time, the current was very strong, the temperature of the ocean water was cold, and I thought that if people left the ferry without (proper) judgment, if they were not wearing a life jacket, and even if they were, they would drift away and face many other difficulties," Lee said. "The rescue boats had not arrived yet, nor were there any civilian fishing ships or other boats nearby at that time."


The Sewol had left the northwestern port of Incheon on Tuesday with 476 passengers on an overnight journey to the holiday island of Jeju in the south, including 323 students from Danwon High School in Ansan. It capsized within hours of the crew making a distress call to the shore a little before 9 a.m. Wednesday. Most of the missing passengers are believed to be trapped inside the 6,852-ton vessel.


With the chances of survival increasingly slim, it is shaping up to be one of South Korea's worst disasters. The loss is more keenly felt because of so many young people, aged 16 or 17, on board. The country's last major ferry disaster was in 1993, when 292 people were killed.


By the time the evacuation order was issued, the ship was listing at too steep an angle for many people to escape the tight hallways and stairs inside. Several survivors told The Associated Press that they never heard any evacuation order.


Senior prosecutor Yang Jung-jin told reporters that the third mate was steering the ship Wednesday morning as it passed through an area with lots of islands clustered close together and fast currents. According to investigators, the accident came at a point where the ship had to make a turn. Prosecutor Park Jae-eok said investigators were looking at whether the third mate ordered a turn so sharp that it caused the vessel to list.


Yang said the third mate has six months of experience, and hadn't steered in the area before because another mate usually handles those duties. She took the wheel this time because heavy fog caused a departure delay, Yang said, adding that investigators do not know whether the ship was going faster than usual.


Helmsman Park Kyung-nam identified the third mate as Park Han-kyul. The helmsman who was arrested, 55-year-old Cho Joon-ki, spoke to reporters outside court and accepted some responsibility.


"There was a mistake on my part as well, but the steering had been turned much more than usual," Cho said.


Lee has four decades of experience at sea. He had been captaining ferries for 10 years by the time he was interviewed by the Jeju Today website in 2004, and said he had sailed on ocean freighters for 20 years before that.


But he was not the Sewol's main captain, and worked on the ship about 10 days a month, helmsman Oh Yong-seok said.


Lee was not on the bridge when the ship began to list. "I gave instructions on the route, then briefly went to the bedroom when it happened," he told reporters.


According to the court, Lee faces five charges, including negligence of duty and violation of maritime law, and the two other crew members each face three related charges.


Lee was required by law to be on the bridge helping his crew when the ferry passed through tough-to-navigate areas, said Yang, the senior prosecutor.


Yang said Lee also abandoned people in need of help and rescue, saying, "The captain escaped before the passengers." Video aired by Yonhap showed Lee among the first people to reach the shore by rescue boat.


Yang said the two crew members arrested failed to reduce speed near the islands and failed to carry out necessary measures to save lives.


It's not clear why the two crew members made the sharp turn, Yang said. He said prosecutors would continue to look into whether something other than the turn could have made the ferry sink, but he added that there were no strong waves that could have knocked down the ferry at the time.


Prosecutors will have 10 days to decide whether to indict the captain and crew, but can request a 10-day extension from the court.


Three vessels with cranes arrived at the accident site to prepare to salvage the ferry, but they will not hoist the ship before getting approval from family members of those still believed inside because the lifting could endanger any survivors, said a coast guard officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.


___


Klug reported from Seoul. Associated Press writers Youkyung Lee and Jung-yoon Choi in Seoul and Gillian Wong in Jindo, South Korea, contributed to this report.



Boredom, drugs, low morale: The struggle to stay on high alert for a nuclear Armageddon


WASHINGTON — Every day 90 uniformed men and women in their mid-20s ride elevators 40 to 60 feet below remote fields in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, North Dakota and Nebraska in rote preparation for improbable nuclear Armageddon.


They spend some of their 24-hour alerts seated in front of steel Minuteman III missile launch control panels mounted on shock absorbers, with toggle switches capable of hurling 10 to 50 nuclear warheads — each with 20 times the explosive force of the Hiroshima bomb — to the other side of the globe, at speeds of 15,000 mph.


But their day-to-day enemy, for decades, has not so much been another superpower, but the unremitting boredom of an isolated posting that demands extreme vigilance, while also requiring virtually no activity, according to accounts by missileers and a new internal review of their work.


That understandable boredom, when paired with the military's sky-high expectations for their workplace performance, has pushed some of them to use drugs, others to break the rules, and still more to look for any way out.


The millennials who populate this force can watch television, read, study, or sleep in their cramped, often damp quarters. But their checklist routines are typically unvarying, and their moment-to-moment responsibilities are few, and the temperature underground — like the policy requiring their presence — is unnervingly stuck in the mid-60s.


Referring implicitly to the officers' ability to wreak almost unimaginable destruction on foreign populations, Col. Robert Vercher, the commander of a missile wing at North Dakota's Minot Air Force Base, told the Air Force's news service in February that "there is no other Air Force unit, other than our sister ICBM wings, where we put this much responsibility on very junior Airmen."


Their official job criteria require that they have a "positive attitude toward nuclear weapons duty." Those who don't feel up to detonating such warheads are generally referred either to chaplains, legal counsels, or "mental health clinicians," the Air Force says, to try to set them straight. Moreover, until recently, the Air Force's policy dogma for the force — dating at least from a 2007 episode in which the command lost track of six nuclear warheads fitted atop cruise missiles for a day — is that mistakes cannot be made.


"Perfection is the expectation" for "America's frontline missile operators," an article from the Air Education and Training Command stated in late 2011. "In what you do every day, there is no room for error, none," Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel reiterated during a visit to Wyoming's F.E. Warren Air Force Base three months ago.


But now — when the national nightmare typically involves a terrorist's smuggled bomb on the subway rather than another nation's missile attack over the North Pole — even the Air Force admits that motivating these young officers to fulfill the service's standard of perfection in their ICBM knowledge and skills is essentially an unachievable goal.


Lt. Gen. James Holmes, a former fighter pilot who is now vice commander of the Air Force's training command, acknowledged as much in a revealing 268-page report he completed in February about the grim life of the missileers. Senior Air Force leaders, he said, had repeatedly ordered a "zero defect" nuclear culture that is "unrealistic and unobtainable." The consequence of making such demands was not to improve performance but to worsen morale and promote dishonesty, the report concluded.


"Leadership's focus on perfection led commanders to micromanage their people … imposing an unrelenting testing and inspections [regime] with the goal of eliminating all human error," Lt. Gen. Stephen Wilson, commander of the Air Force's Global Strike Command, said as he endorsed the Holmes report, which was released in late March. "This approach is unrealistic."


The Air Force is now planning to ask for less perfection from its 9,600-member missile corps, a result that is practical, or perhaps inevitable, given the job's inherent limitations, even if it is also a disquieting standard for a group with its fingers on such consequential buttons.


Ecstasy and amphetamines


Holmes' report was sparked by an Air Force probe of drug dealing by two lieutenants in contact with the nuclear missile workforce, which began last August and quickly blossomed into an investigation of widespread cheating on the missileers' proficiency tests at the Malmstrom Air Force Base, a Montana facility with 150 nuclear-tipped Minuteman III missiles.


The drug-dealing probe — which may be the most alarming aspect of the current tumult — remains open, and the Air Force has said little about it. But the two officers at its center, both in administrative jobs, allegedly sent messages to 11 others about "specific, illegal drug use … [including] synthetic drugs, ecstasy, and amphetamines," according to the Holmes report.


Two of those who received these messages about drugs at Malmstrom were combat crew members — those with responsibility for actually launching Minuteman missiles, according to a spokeswoman for the Global Strike Command that oversees the missile force. Another recipient was a missile combat crew member at Warren, in Wyoming, which has another 150 Minuteman IIIs.


The Defense Department likes absolutes, at least in its policies. It has a stated zero tolerance for drug abuse and mandates frequent urine testing for its nuclear weapons officers. But drug use of some kind has a long history in the nuclear missile corps, according to Bruce Blair, a former deputy missile combat crew commander who is now a research scholar at Princeton University and advocates eliminating the Minuteman force.


During his four years at Malmstrom in the early 1970s, Blair recalled recently, he sometimes passed the time by eavesdropping on radio chatter by security guards on patrol. He discovered their discussions were often about where to find bags of pot deliberately stashed near missile silos. On his final day on alert in a launch capsule in 1974, Blair added, security officers with dogs swept through the command quarters overhead and snagged the cook, the security chief and the facility manager.


"Everybody [topside] was high," Blair said. "They were all relieved of duty."


A spokesman at Malmstrom said the base had no records of incidents that old. But ridding the missile corps of all drug or alcohol abuse is clearly a steep challenge, given that between 14 and 20 percent of Americans in their 20s have told federal surveyors they recently used illicit drugs.


The Air Force's rulebook states that drug dealing and the use of hallucinogens or any other drug that might cause "flashbacks" are grounds for permanent removal. But the service can be forgiving of those involved in drug and alcohol incidents that fall short of what it considers "abuse" and "dependency." These personnel can be reinstated to critical nuclear weapons positions if they undergo rehabilitation and "display positive changes in job reliability and lifestyle."


Drug or alcohol abuse, and other problematic behavior, is meant to be caught by the Defense Department's Personnel Reliability Program, which screens and monitors all those with access to nuclear weapons and technical knowledge about them. Eighteen years after the incident described by Blair, nearly 4 percent of the nuclear workforce — or about 2,600 individuals — were typically "decertified" every year, for reasons that included "substance abuse, negligence, conviction of a serious offense, and poor physical or mental condition," according to a 1992 report by the congressional watchdog agency then known as the General Accounting Office.


"During our review … we found cases where individuals had been certified for nuclear-related positions despite evidence that they had been convicted for driving while intoxicated or they had admitted to pre-service drug use," the GAO's report stated. At one base visited, investigators found six of 54 personnel had pre-service drug use, mostly involving pot, because the rules at the time allowed precisely six "pre-service experimental" tokes per person.


Fifteen years later, when the nuclear weapons workforce was much smaller, annual decertifications had dropped to 1.83 percent, or about 310 personnel from all three services, according to a 2009 Defense Science Board report, including 140 in critical missile launch or maintenance positions. No details about why these workers were removed in 2007 have been made public, nor does the department publish decertification data from other years.


But last year, according to the Global Strike Command public affairs office, fewer than 30 officers were decertified from critical, nuclear weapons-related, bomber and missile launch or maintenance positions in the Air Force. Four of these were for drug-related problems. An additional 275 or so members of the command's security force — roughly 4 percent — were also decertified that year, including 31 for drug-related problems.


Crushing the rule violators


The Air Force has tried to lend morale-boosting drama to the 50-year-old Minuteman launch jobs, with a colonel flogging the missileers in an email last April to act like they're on a "go-to-war team" and a visiting general comparing them in a March speech to Babe Ruth or Ty Cobb, always ready to "knock one out of the park."


It also asks its missile combat crews to spend about 40 days a year in a $9.7 million launch simulator at Vandenberg Air Force Base, where they are supposed to become acclimated to reading codes, turning keys and flipping the switches that would bring death to millions.


But most missileers decline that assignment, and many chafe at being stuck underground for so much of their four-year tours, with little hope of rapid advancement or deployment to a more interesting location. Their chief opportunity, after the first two years, is to shift to the chair next to them, moving from deputy launch commander to commander.


What they most want to do is to sit "fewer alerts," as recent Air Force focus groups have revealed.


In trying to create a happier workforce, the Air Force has known for years that it faces long odds: "The most difficult issue and the one with the most long-term implications is the widespread perception in both the Navy and Air Force that a nuclear forces career is not the highly promising opportunity of the past era," an internal Pentagon study concluded in 1998.


By 2008, when the Defense Science Board surveyed more than 8,000 nuclear weapons personnel, the Air Force in particular had lower morale than the other services. Just 37 percent said they wanted to perform "nuclear deterrence related work" until they retired — compared with 62 and 83 percent of those surveyed in the Navy and Army, respectively — and fewer in the Air Force said they were willing to recommend their organization as a good place to work.


A confidential study by the RAND Corp. last year confirmed that behavioral and morale problems were more severe among missile force members than others within the Air Force, according to an Associated Press account. The court martial rate among missileers was more than double the overall Air Force rate in 2011 and 2012, as were rates of spousal abuse, although the Air Force says the rates have since declined.


But the pale motivation and weak discipline of some missileers came more forcefully to the public's attention last May, when a missile group commander at Minot Air Force Base wrote a lacerating email to his combat crew members that leaked to the Associated Press. Calling attention to low scores during recent inspections — including some marginal performances in the missile launch simulator — Lt. Col. Jay Folds wrote that "we're discovering such rot in the crew force" that officers from other missile fields were being summoned "to come pull alerts at Minot while we fix ourselves."


Fields demanded that his missileers "crush any rules violators," including those "that do so on purpose." He told them to turn off their televisions and improve their test performance, and to stop leaving missile silo blast doors open while they slept — a routine that launch capsule veterans say has long been commonplace, despite the obvious security risks.


"No more questioning the rules and orders of the officers appointed over you!" Fields ordered in the email, according to a full copy obtained by the Center for Public Integrity, promising "consequences" for those who continued to "bad mouth" their work. "Gone is … the environment where we handed things to you on a silver platter because we thought that's the way you take care of the crew force." Seventeen combat crew officers were pulled from alert duty for two months.


In subsequent months the missile force's problems — and public awareness of them — only worsened. When investigators probing the alleged drug ring seized the cellphones of suspects at Malmstrom, they discovered that dozens of lieutenants on missile combat crews had been exchanging questions and answers from their proficiency tests for nearly two years.


The tests, administered every month, covered the handling of codes, missile operations, and responding to "emergency war orders" — the authority to unleash nuclear destruction. Ten officers had texted or received a classified test answer without safeguards. They did so, the Holmes report said, because they needed perfect scores to be promoted to other, aboveground Air Force jobs.


Senior Air Force officers responded in March by ordering nine of that base's group and squadron leaders — all colonels and lieutenant colonels — removed from alert duties, on the grounds that they were not monitoring their crews sufficiently to detect the cheating. The overall commander of Malmstrom's missile wing resigned.


As for Fields, a year after berating his missile crews he is no longer in his post, having accepted an academic fellowship at Harvard University. Meanwhile, the Air Force has decided a gentler management approach is better-suited to keeping the millennials happy. "Occasionally, we're going to … [swing] and miss, and I'm OK with that," Wilson, the Global Strike Command head, startlingly told Malmstrom's missileers during a Feb. 26 visit. "I'm good with striking out — that's what makes us better. It is OK to fail."


The Air Force also decided to refurbish more launch control centers, revise some of its testing materials, and try to create more attractive career paths. The Personnel Reliability Program has been overhauled to strip away some higher-level reporting requirements and push oversight and decision-making down to the local commands.


In taking a wider view of the test cheating problem, Holmes wrote that he was following the "Reason Model of Human Error." That's a slightly garbled name for the theory propounded in 1990 by University of Manchester social psychologist James T. Reason that complex systems — particularly those with highly perfected mechanical devices at their heart — can fail, sometimes catastrophically, due to mistakes made by the executives who create and manage them.


Reason's insights from studying air traffic controllers, hospitals and nuclear power plants prompted him to be hired by railways and airlines in an effort to anticipate when poor supervisory practices — including excessive corner-cutting, undue budget reductions, and the setting of unrealistic performance expectations — might culminate in unsafe acts. One of his most famous presentations included a series of Swiss cheese slices, representing checks and safeguards, with the holes unexpectedly lined up so that a catastrophe could still occur.


But while the Air Force has embraced this theory in name, its leadership still rejects any suggestion that its complex missile system has any inherent flaws, that cheating or other problems are widespread at the two other missile bases, or that workers' shortcomings at Malmstrom were well-known up the chain of command. "There was a few, handful of people that were at the crux of this problem," Wilson, head of the Global Strike Command, told reporters on March 27, mentioning four in particular, three of whom he said were involved with drugs.


The missile wing commander who resigned, Col. Robert W. Stanly II, struck a similar theme in a grumpy resignation note saying "just one solitary airman" could have let any higher-ups know of the rule-breaking, so they could have leapt into action. He said the "extraordinary selfish actions of officers entrusted with the most powerful weapon system ever devised" had kept everything hidden.


'Really unhappy' missileers


A somewhat different account is buried in the bowels of the Holmes report. It says that focus groups and a survey at Malmstrom indicated that many of those who passed through the training at Vandenberg were "conditioned" to expect test coaching at the missile bases. Many crew members believed test sharing was widespread and that the rewards justified the risks. Sixty percent said their squadron leaders knew about it.


"Cheating has been going on for years; however, leadership pretends that the cheating is not happening," said one of the focus group participants. "You can talk yourself into doing things that you wouldn't ordinarily do because you see a culture of compromises and a leadership that's aware of what's going on and tolerates it," said another.


After the embarrassing RAND Corp. report on low morale last year, the commander who oversaw the entire 450-missile Minuteman III force, Maj. Gen. Michael J. Carey, told the Associated Press that morale at Minot is "not bad" and that missileers there are "not unhappy." But the following month, when Carey joined seven other American officials on an official trip to Moscow, he told them that "his group had the worst morale" and the Air Force's leadership "wasn't supporting him," according to an October 2013 report by the service's inspector general.


"They've done a study and saw that his … you know, the missile bases or everyone is really unhappy," one of the Americans on the trip quoted him as saying. "He is trying to make it better and leadership is not helping out and not listening to him."


It's true Air Force leaders are not listening to Carey today. He was removed from his post after the service's inspectors concluded he engaged in inappropriate behavior on the trip besides publicly savaging his Air Force superiors.


Specifically, witnesses said he drank excessively, including from an open vodka bottle handed to him by his hosts; he insistently demanded that the band at a Mexican restaurant in the Russian capital let him sing or play the guitar onstage; and he repeatedly sat or walked with Russians instead of members of his own group, including several attractive women who showed up at two restaurants and kissed him on the cheek.


According to the report, he also spent most of an evening talking with the cigar shop saleswoman at the Moscow Marriott hotel, who he later recalled "was asking questions about physics and optics." He said he recalled thinking, "Dude, this normally doesn't happen."


The lesson appears to be that there's no immunity, among the missileers at various ranks, from poor judgment and low spirits while pursuing their marginalized profession.


Reporter Douglas Birch contributed to this report. This story was published by the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit, independent investigative news outlet. For more of its stories on this topic go to publicintegrity.org.



South Korean police arrest ferry captain, two crew members


MOKPO, South Korea — The captain of the ferry that sank off South Korea, leaving more than 300 missing or dead, was arrested early Saturday on suspicion of negligence and abandoning people in need — three of whom were seen lifeless in the drowned vessel by a diver who was unable to get them out.


Rescuers planned 40 dives Saturday in an attempt to enter the ferry and retrieve at least some of the more than 270 people missing. A civilian diver saw the three bodies inside the ship through windows but was unable to break the windows, said Kwon Yong-deok, a coast guard official. Strong currents and rain made it difficult to get inside the ferry, where most of the passengers are believed to have been trapped, coast guard spokesman Kim Jae-in said.


So far 29 bodies have been recovered since Wednesday's disaster off the southern South Korea coast. As the last bit of the sunken ferry's hull slipped Friday beneath the murky water off southern South Korea, there was a new victim: a vice principal of the high school whose students were among the passengers was found hanged, an apparent suicide.


Prosecutors said the ferry captain, Lee Joon-seok, 68, was arrested early Saturday along with the third mate, a 25-year-old woman identified only by her surname, Park, and helmsman Cho Joon-ki, 55. Lee faces five charges including negligence of duty and violation of maritime law, and the crew members each face three related charges, according to the Yonhap news agency.


Investigators said the accident came at a point where the ship had to make a turn, and prosecutor Park Jae-eok said investigators were looking at whether the third mate ordered a turn so sharp that it caused the vessel to list.


The sharp turn came between 8:48 a.m. and 8:49 a.m., but it's not known whether it was done voluntarily or because of some external factor, said Nam Jae-heon, a spokesman for the Maritime Ministry.


Senior prosecutor Yang Jung-jin said earlier that Lee was not on the bridge when the ferry Sewol was passing through an area with many islands clustered closely together. Yang said the law requires the captain to be on the bridge in such situations to help the mate.


Yang said Lee also abandoned people in need of help and rescue, saying "The captain escaped before the passengers." Video aired by Yonhap showed Lee among the first people to reach the shore by rescue boat.


"I am sorry to the people of South Korea for causing a disturbance and I bow my head in apology to the families of the victims," Lee told reporters after his arrest, as he left the Mokpo Branch of Gwangju District Court to be jailed.


"I gave instructions on the route, then briefly went to the bedroom when it (the sinking) happened," he said.


The captain defended his decision to wait before ordering an evacuation.


A transcript of a ship-to-shore radio exchange shows that an official at the Jeju Vessel Traffic Services Center recommended evacuation just five minutes after the Sewol's distress call. But helmsman Oh Yong-seok told The Associated Press that it took 30 minutes for the captain to give the evacuation order as the boat listed. Several survivors told the AP that they never heard any evacuation order.


"At the time, the current was very strong, temperature of the ocean water was cold, and I thought that if people left the ferry without (proper) judgment, if they were not wearing a life jacket, and even if they were, they would drift away and face many other difficulties," Lee told reporters. "The rescue boats had not arrived yet, nor were there any civilian fishing ships other boats nearby at that time."


Yang said the other crew members arrested failed to reduce speed near the islands, conducted a sharp turn and failed to carry out necessary measures to save lives.


Cho, the helmsman arrested, accepted some responsibility outside court. "There was a mistake on my part as well, but the steering (gear of the ship) was unusually turned a lot," he told reporters.


Prosecutors will have 10 days to decide whether to indict the captain and crew, but can request a 10-day extension from the court.


The Sewol had left the northwestern port of Incheon on Tuesday on an overnight journey to the holiday island of Jeju in the south with 476 people aboard, including 323 students from Danwon High School in Ansan. It capsized within hours of the crew making a distress call to the shore a little before 9 a.m. Wednesday.


With only 174 known survivors and the chances of survival becoming slimmer by the hour, it was shaping up to be one of South Korea's worst disasters, made all the more heartbreaking by the likely loss of so many young people, aged 16 or 17. The 29th confirmed fatality, a woman, was recovered early Saturday.


Only the ferry's dark blue keel jutted out over the surface on Friday, and by that night, even that had disappeared, and rescuers set two giant beige buoys to mark the area. Navy divers attached underwater air bags to the 6,852-ton ferry to prevent it from sinking deeper, the Defense Ministry said.


Divers have been pumping air into the ship to try to sustain any survivors. Three vessels with cranes arrived at the accident site to prepare to salvage the ferry, but they will not hoist the ship before getting approval from family members of those still believed inside because the lifting could endanger any survivors, said a coast guard officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.


Police said the vice principal who was found hanged from a tree on Jindo, an island near the sunken ship where survivors have been housed, had been rescued from the ferry.


Identified as Kang Min-kyu, he was the leader of the students traveling on a school excursion. In his suicide note, Kang said he felt guilty for surviving and wanted to take responsibility for what happened because he had led the trip, according to police.


He asked that his body be cremated and the ashes scattered where the ferry went down.


The country's last major ferry disaster was in 1993, when 292 people were killed.


Chonghaejin Marine Co. Ltd, in Incheon, the operator of the ferry, added more cabin rooms to three floors after its 2012 purchase of the ship, which was built in Japan in 1994, an official at the private Korean Register of Shipping told the AP.


The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the matter was still under investigation, said the extension work between October 2012 and February 2013 increased the Sewol's weight by 187 tons and added enough room for 117 more people. The Sewol had a capacity of 921 when it sank.


As is common in South Korea, the ship's owner paid for a safety check by the Korean Register of Shipping, which found that the Sewol passed all safety tests, including whether it could stabilize in the event of tilting, the official said.


Prosecutors raided and seized materials and documents from the ship's operator, as well as six companies that had conducted safety checks, revamped the ship, or loaded container boxes, a sign that investigators will likely examine the ship's addition of rooms and how containers were loaded.


Klug reported from Seoul. Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Jung-yoon Choi in Seoul contributed to this report.



Friday, April 18, 2014

After Russian moves in Ukraine, NATO reassurances ease fears in Baltics


LONDON — For decades, NATO has expanded inexorably outward, taking on new members and new missions that have carried it far beyond its original mandate in Western Europe and deep into the former Soviet sphere.


But Russia's intervention in Ukraine has sent shivers down the spines of Eastern European countries from Estonia in the north to Bulgaria in the south. NATO's newest members have been left feeling vulnerable and wondering whether the world's most powerful military alliance is truly committed to their defense.


Concerns have been especially acute in the Baltics, where nations that were once part of the Soviet empire now stare out across the Russian border and fear that they could be next on Russian President Vladimir Putin's hit list.


Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — like Ukraine — have significant Russian-speaking populations, people who Putin has suggested should, by all rights, be living in Russia. Unlike Ukraine, the Baltic nations are part of NATO, having joined in 2004.


But NATO has long resisted placing much of a footprint in the Baltics, concerned that doing so would jeopardize ever-precarious cooperation with Moscow.


Now that that cooperation is on life support, NATO has begun to pivot, announcing this week that it plans to substantially boost its air, sea and ground presence in the Baltic states.


The decision has brought some relief in the lightly defended Baltics, but also questions about why NATO did not act earlier to try to deter Russia with a more robust show of strength on its eastern flank.


"Of course, we always wanted to see a more permanent presence from our NATO allies here. But before, it was not considered so urgent," Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Paet said in an interview. "Now, the circumstances have changed."


Paet said that as part of NATO's renewed commitment to the Baltics, NATO warplanes would, for the first time, regularly police the skies from an Estonian air base. Other measures are still under discussion, he said, including the stationing of U.S. ground forces in his country — a development that Paet said he would welcome.


After meetings with U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, Polish Defense Minister Tomasz Siemoniak said in an interview with Washington Post editors Friday that he expected a plan to dispatch U.S. ground troops to Poland, and likely the Baltics, to be announced next week.


Until now, NATO has been deliberately vague about plans for the positioning of its ground forces in Eastern Europe, a strategy that is in part intended to keep Moscow guessing but also reflects the lingering divisions with NATO over how far to go in provoking the Russian bear.


NATO is a mutual defense organization, meaning that an attack on one nation is considered an attack on all. But for years after the tiny Baltic nations joined the alliance, NATO stalled in developing plans for how to defend its newest members. The alliance also avoided training exercises in the Baltics, out of deference to Putin's complaints that NATO was reaching too far into his orbit.


The defense plans were drawn up only after Russian forces entered Georgia in 2008, and major training exercises remained largely off the table until the recent crisis.


Kurt Volker, the U.S. ambassador to NATO under presidents Obama and George W. Bush, said the delay was a mistake and that the alliance still is not doing enough to deter Russian advances.


"It's a reactive stance. We're saying to the Russians, 'You do more, and we'll do more,' " Volker said. "Frankly, Russia's not impressed by that."


Other NATO members have openly campaigned for the alliance to seize on the current crisis to make a major and lasting statement in Eastern Europe. Poland has been the most outspoken, with Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski calling for the alliance to permanently station 10,000 troops in his country.


"For a long time, we've been considering the prospect of NATO, post-Afghanistan," said Siemoniak, the Polish defense minister. "Now we have an answer to this question. It is that NATO must be able to respond to what is happening in Europe."


Russia has argued that any mass deployment of NATO forces in Eastern European would violate the 1997 Founding Act, which covers the terms of cooperation between Moscow and NATO. Polish officials say that with 40,000 Russian troops allegedly massed on Ukraine's eastern border, that deal has been voided.


But that view is not widely shared in NATO, and the alliance has been careful to avoid doing anything that could give Russia a pretext for escalation. Germany, which has extensive economic ties to Russia, has led the push for restraint.


"If we go down the direction of military threats, it's easier to call our bluff," said Constanze Stelzenmüller, a senior fellow with the German Marshall Fund, who favors the use of stiff economic sanctions.


But Stelzenmüller said German officials understand what makes Eastern European leaders so nervous, given the seemingly erratic nature of Putin's recent behavior.


"The logic that Putin seems to be operating under is not the same logic that led us to believe that we could cooperate with and have pragmatic compromises with Russia," she said.


When Putin held a televised question-and-answer session Thursday, it was evident that NATO's push into Eastern Europe still rankled.


"We were once promised in Munich that after the unification of Germany, no expansion of NATO would happen to the east," the Russian president said. "Then it started to expand by adding former Warsaw Pact countries, former USSR countries. I asked: 'Why are you doing that?' They told me, 'It is not your business.' "


If NATO had expanded further still to Ukraine, Putin said, Russia would have lost critical access to the Black Sea.


But Ukraine did not join NATO, and now the country's territorial integrity has been compromised.


Baltic officials say they do not believe that Russia is planning operations in their countries like the one in Ukraine, and they cite the threat of a NATO response as a key reason.


"Article Five is absolutely a red line," said Andrejs Pildegovics, Latvia's state secretary for foreign affairs, referring to the provision in NATO's charter that guarantees collective defense. "All allies should have full protection."


But there is no question that Baltic officials are deeply apprehensive about what could happen if Russia succeeds in breaking off even more of Ukraine, after annexing Crimea last month.


This week, the head of Latvia's national security committee accused Russian agents of quietly surveying Latvian opinion on the country's eastern border — behavior that mirrors the lead-up to the Crimean invasion.


About a quarter of Latvia's 2 million people are ethnically Russian, but Latvian voters in 2012 rejected a referendum that would have made Russian the country's second official language. In the nation's Russian-heavy east, there have been periodic calls for greater autonomy from the capital, and officials are worried that those calls will now grow louder, courtesy of covert Russian backing.


"There's a huge difference between Ukraine and the Baltics,'' said Tom Rostoks, a political scientist at the University of Latvia. "But after Crimea, we got the idea that almost anything could happen."



Japan to break ground on new base near disputed Senkaku isles












Japanese activists hold the national flags on Uotsuri island, one of the islands of Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese, in East China Sea, Sunday, Aug. 19, 2012. Japan’s Coast Guard says a group of Japanese activists have landed on Uotsuri island, one of a group of islands at the center of an escalating territorial dispute with China.






TOKYO — Japanese Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera plans to fly to Japan's westernmost island on Saturday to attend the ground-breaking ceremony for a military base that will be the closest to a chain of disputed isles also claimed by China.


Onodera said this week that he planned to attend the ceremony to thank the people of Yonaguni island, which has about 1,500 residents, for hosting the base as part of efforts to boost security around the remote territory. The base is scheduled to come into operation by the end of the financial year starting in April 2015.


Ships and planes from China and Japan have tailed one another around disputed East China Sea islands since Japan bought three of them from a private owner in 2012. Japan's dispatches of fighter jets to pursue Chinese aircraft rose by a third in the past year to a record 415 times, the Ministry of Defense said April 9.


The tensions have soured Sino-Japanese relations at a time when both countries are increasing military spending and seeking a greater role in the region. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has not held a summit with his Chinese counterpart since taking office in December 2012, as resentment also simmers over Japan's past invasion and occupation of much of China.


The Ground Self-Defense Force radar base on Yonaguni will be charged with improving surveillance of the region covering the uninhabited islands, known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese, and providing early warning of any "provocations," according to the Defense Ministry website.


The ministry said it was not yet clear how many troops would be based on Yonaguni.


The construction of the base on the island, which is known for its diving, is opposed by some local residents.


Yonaguni local assemblyman Chiyoki Tasato said in an email he would organize a sit-in protest on the day of the ceremony. "Base-hosting places tend not only to get caught up in war but incidents and accidents also occur in them and the victims are always local people," Tasato said in a speech in September 2012.




'Sequestration baby'? Unusually high number of babies greet Truman dads


NORFOLK, Va. — The wails of small babies almost drowned out the patriotic rock song as the aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman pulled up along a pier Friday morning at Norfolk Naval Station.


The heated tent reserved for mothers who had given birth during the ship’s nine-month deployment was packed. The air smelled of cocoa butter, baby powder and hand sanitizer. A frazzled mom cradled a fussy newborn, bouncing and swaying in rhythm with John Mellencamp.


"Ain't that America, somethin' to see, baby."


Moms brought more than 170 babies to the tent — in strollers, in car seats and in slings — to meet their dads for the first time. It was an unusually high number, even for a massive aircraft carrier with more than 5,000 sailors aboard.


Fewer than 100 babies were born during the aircraft carrier Enterprise’s final deployment in 2012. A year ago, when the aircraft carrier John C. Stennis returned to the West Coast after eight months at sea, only 28 new babies waited at the pier.


A Navy spokeswoman didn’t have an explanation for the surge. But an informal survey of the worn-out moms who packed into the tent Friday revealed a common narrative: Federal budget cuts had messed with family planning.


“She’s a sequestration baby,” one new grandma said, shouting over the music. She laughed, but she wasn’t joking. Her daughter, a new mom, blushed.


Two days before the Truman was scheduled to deploy last February, the Pentagon dropped its requirement to keep two aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf — a cost-saving measure that left Truman families in limbo.


Unsure when or if the ship would deploy, dozens of couples decided to try for a baby. By the time they learned the new deployment date, many were already expecting.


Shaun Schrier took a pregnancy test eight days before the Truman shipped out last July. She was on the phone with her husband, Petty Officer 1st Class Brian Schrier, as two pink lines appeared.


“So did you take it?” the sailor asked.


“Yup,” his wife responded.


Petty Officer 3rd Class Dillon Trotter was training on the ship off the coast of Virginia a few weeks before deployment when he checked his email and read a two-word note from his wife: “I’m pregnant.”


Trotter became lightheaded and his heart raced, he said. The thought of his wife giving birth while he was away terrified him. Sweating, he backed away from the computer and sprinted the length of the ship, through its narrow passageways below deck, until he reached the fantail. He took deep breaths in the open air.


“He has anxiety problems,” his wife, Megan, said Friday while holding her sleeping 2-month-old daughter, Langston.


The change in schedule affected Amanda Roecker in a different way: She became pregnant months before the initial deployment date and had expected her husband home to help with the newborn. She pushed 7-month-old Alyson to the tent in a stroller.


“When it’s national defense versus your personal plans, national defense usually wins,” Roecker said.


While young mothers figured out how to install car seats and learned to function on a few hours of sleep, sailors aboard the Truman were busy steaming more than 67,000 nautical miles and launching fighter jets on 2,900 combat missions over Afghanistan.


Another telling statistic: The ship’s medical crew performed vasectomies on more than 20 sailors while at sea.


Finally, the ship was roped to the pier.


“I just want to take a shower that lasts longer than 45 seconds,” said one mom.


“I’m not changing diapers for a month,” said another.


More moms with babies crowded into the tent — the infants’ cries growing even louder — as sailors filed off the Truman.


Outside, the crowd cheered. Inside, a mom wearing a baby on her chest wiped a toddler’s nose and scolded an older child who had wandered too far away.


Outside, loved ones waved huge flags and banners. Inside, a baby wearing a tiny sailor outfit chewed on the wooden stick of a miniature American flag, oblivious to the excitement.


The first few dads in dress whites stepped inside.


“There he is,” Shaun Schrier shouted, and rushed toward her husband while holding tiny 5-week-old Piper tight against her chest. Brian Schrier wrapped them in his arms.


The sailor had been worried when he received word that his daughter had been born with a heart problem and immediately taken across town to a neonatal intensive care unit. Tears formed in Schrier’s eyes as he held her for the first time.


Similar scenes unfolded around them, where the screams of babies had been replaced with the screams of grown women.


Megan Trotter shrieked. Dillon Trotter hugged his wife, kissed her, then took his baby daughter into his arms.


“Finally,” he said, his shoulders relaxing. “I’m not letting her go.”


He wasn’t feeling anxious anymore.



N.C. community college rate break for vets proposed


RALEIGH, N.C. — Gov. Pat McCrory says he wants to make it easier for new veterans to attend any of North Carolina’s community colleges.


McCrory announced Thursday he’ll seek in his upcoming budget proposal a provision to give the in-state tuition rate to veterans for any of the 58 community colleges. It’s considered a way to encourage them to settle in North Carolina after separation from the military and contribute their skills to the economy.


The governor says more than 60,000 members of the military are expected to leave the service in North Carolina during the next five years as the war in Afghanistan ends.


McCrory made the announcement at the inaugural Women Veterans Summit and Expo in Raleigh.


Student Veterans of America, in partnership with two other prominent veterans groups service organizations, has created an interactive online map that shows which states have colleges and universities that provide blanket in-state tuition to vets and which do not.



New Navy report could clear way for Marines' move from Okinawa to Guam


CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa — The Navy has recommended placing firing ranges on Andersen Air Force Base instead of Guam’s ancient ancestral lands in its latest environmental impact report — largely seen as one of the final hurdles to moving 4,700 Marines and their families off Okinawa as part of the Pacific realignment.


In addition to recommending that Andersen’s Northwest Field be used for the firing ranges, the draft supplemental report released Friday also suggested stretching out the construction over a number of additional years, avoiding the acquisition of non-federal land and lessening the overall strain on Guam’s residents and infrastructure. The draft says there would be fewer people on the island, lower demand for power and potable water and less solid waste and wastewater. Personnel would be concentrated on the island’s northern end.


The Navy’s about-face was applauded Friday by Guam officials who said the recommendations show the process works and are a testament to the collaborative effort between the U.S. military and Guam’s people.


“The administration is pleased,” said Mark Calvo, director of the Government of Guam Military Buildup Office. “Our concerns were heard, and they’re adapting. This is a major milestone in moving forward with the relocation of Marines to Guam.”


Calvo, who is a veteran and distant cousin of Guam Gov. Eddie Calvo, said the stretched- out construction timeline, from an intense seven-year boom to a moderate 13-year schedule, is more manageable for the tiny U.S. territory. It also reduces the military’s footprint.


Calvo said the addition of the Marines to Guam is viewed positively by upwards of 85 percent of the population.


The draft supplemental report is years in the making, following a 2010 Final Environmental Impact Statement and subsequent Record of Decision that deferred a decision on the live-fire training range complex. A 2011 agreement between the Navy and Guam placed the complex along Route 15 in the Pagat coastal area, despite fervent opposition. Pagat is home to ancient indigenous Chamorro graves and archeological sites.


A 2012 agreement between the U.S. and Japanese governments reduced the number of Marines heading to Guam from 8,600 and 9,000 dependents, leading to the reconsideration of certain aspects of the plan, which included alternative sites for the firing ranges.


While the placement of the ranges has always been the most contentious issue, the acquisition of non-federal land also raised Guamanian ire. Plans originally called for the acquisition of 688 acres of non-federal land for the cantonment, which is essentially headquarters, administration, housing and support facilities at Finegayan and more than 1,000 acres for the ranges.


Under the draft supplemental proposal, that non-federal land is no longer needed.


Calvo said the public will have 60 days to comment, followed about a year later by a final Environmental Impact Statement. Then, a few months later, another Record of Decision should follow. If Congress then unfreezes funding for the move, construction can begin.


The Marine move to Guam is seen as a major piece of the realignment of forces in the Pacific and a way to reduce tensions in Japan, which is home to more than 50,000 American servicemembers.


Of the estimated $8.6 billion price tag for Guam redevelopment, Japan has agreed to pay $2.8 billion, of which $907 million has already been transferred. An additional $19 million is budgeted and pending.


Stars and Stripes’ reporter Chiyomi Sumida contributed to this report.


burke.matt@stripes.com



Fake Army Ranger befriended ex-SEAL Marcus Luttrell


Daniel Lee Marshall Jr. didn't just masquerade as an Army Ranger by wearing ribbons or rank he didn't earn, or by driving around in a pickup truck with a Purple Heart license plate he did not deserve.


He embedded himself within the inner circle of ex-Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrel, the storied war hero from Texas portrayed in the book and movie "Lone Survivor."


Now, Marshall wears the orange uniform of an inmate, charged in federal court in Houston with being a felon in possession of a firearm.


When Marshall, 45, was arrested Wednesday by agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, they allegedly found more weapons in his home, as well as an Army uniform with a Ranger patch on the shoulder.


In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Stolen Valor Act, a 2005 law that made it illegal for people to wear military medals they had not earned or to lie about having been awarded such medals. Still authorities on Thursday publicly revealed for the first time Marshall's past and connections to Luttrell to show he could not be trusted enough to be released on bail.


"He represents himself as a Special Forces operator," Assistant U.S. Attorney John Jocher said. He held up photos taken from the Internet which showed Marshall in uniform, as well as other images.


U.S. Magistrate Judge Nancy Johnson ordered he remain in custody and shared her thoughts on the fake veteran scheme.


"It is despicable but not a crime," she said from the bench.


Marshall first got close to Luttrell's family back in 2005 when the sailor was temporarily missing as the only survivor among a group of SEALs in Afghanistan who were overwhelmed by a far larger number of Taliban fighters.


Marshall's friendship with Luttrell soured in 2010 when Marshall was accused of taking a pistol from Luttrell's Texas ranch.


At about the same time, a group of real Rangers, who knew Luttrell and were at a Houston-area gala marking the anniversary of Luttrell's ordeal smoked out Marshall as a fake, and his felonious past came to light.


ATF Agent Christopher Wilhite testified Thursday about his dealings with Marshall in which he had at least twice obtained several military-style guns despite laws that prohibit him from buying them.


Marshall has had several run-ins with the law, including arrests for forgery and credit card fraud.


Federal public defender Natalia Cornelio sought to show that Marshall has never harmed anyone, that it has been more than a decade since he had previously been convicted of a crime.


A man who briefly huddled with Cornelio outside the courtroom, and who said he has known Marshall for 25 years, said he was a good guy who got caught up in trying to help Luttrell's family.


"He made some mistakes, but he is still a good man," said the friend, who did not want to be named. "He goes way out of the way to help people."


He said that Marshall did serve in the military, but he was not sure when, where or in what capacity.


The Department of Defense could not immediately confirm whether Marshall had served.


Luttrell made national news in 2009 when he went on a 40-mile chase over three Texas counties at speeds of up to 100 mph to catch up to strangers in a sedan who shot his dog, a 4-year-old Labrador he'd been given to help him recover from war injuries.


This is not the first high-profile case of stolen valor in the Houston area in recent years.


In 2012, Paul Schroeder of The Woodlands portrayed himself as a highly decorated Special Operations soldier who developed PTSD after serving multiple tours in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Central and South America.


He later confessed that he'd embellished his service record. He had served 10 years in the Army as a military policeman, but never went to war and never served in special operations or earned a silver star. He pleaded guilty and served 30 days.


In 2009, Michael McManus drew scrutiny after he attended a party for newly elected Mayor Annise Parker, while wearing an Army brigadier general's uniform and an outrageous array of medals and distinguished service crosses. He was charged federally but died before the case could be resolved.


His lawyers argued McManus purposely wore a uniform that was over the top not to fool anyone, but to make a statement about the rights of gay Americans to serve in the military.



Thursday, April 17, 2014

Female rabbi, chaplain with 82nd Airborne in Afghanistan, has no regrets


BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan — Army Capt. Heather Borshof expects the questions.


"What's that on your uniform?" passers-by ask the chaplain for the Fort Bragg-based 330th Movement Control Battalion. It's the Ten Commandments topped with a Star of David, the symbol for Jewish chaplains.


"Women can be rabbis?" they ask. Yes, they have served in that role for decades.


Borshof, who deployed with her battalion — part of the 82nd Sustainment Brigade — in November, said she is used to the queries.


A female chaplain is a rare sight in the military. A female Jewish chaplain? There is only one other in the active-duty Army, she said. And Borshof was the first in a generation. She follows in the footsteps of Chana Timoner, who served at Fort Bragg in 1993 and died in 1998 from complications with a virus.


This week, Borshof has hosted two Passover seders at Bagram Airfield, where she is the only rabbi to be stationed long-term. But she said her chief role is to counsel soldiers, no matter their religion.


"I travel for our soldiers," she said, referring to the battalion's 19 movement control teams spread across Afghanistan. "I actually don't travel for the religious community."


Borshof's path to her chaplaincy was not always clear-cut.


A devout child in Manalapan, N.J., Borshof said her parents were nonetheless surprised when she told them her intentions after a trip to Israel.


She was studying to become a rabbi as part of her first year at Hebrew Union College -Jewish Institute of Religion. Borshof said she was impressed by the population, which is required to serve in the military.


That inspired her to serve in her own way.


"Not too many of my colleagues do this," she said.


After participating in a program that allowed her to work with chaplains while in school, Borshof said, she decided to commit to active duty.


She began her career at Fort Belvoir, Va., and moved to Fort Bragg shortly before her unit deployed.


"It's like a different Army," she said of her two duty stations.


The deployment is not always easy. Borshof said it is difficult traveling so often, and her parents worry about her safety.


When she arrived in Afghanistan, Borshof was the only Jewish chaplain here. Two more have since joined her. One is in Kabul, and the other is here for Passover only. Borshof is still called on for special services, such as a Holocaust remembrance ceremony scheduled for later this month.


"It's draining. It's long hours, and it's really no days off," she said. But there are no regrets.


"I wouldn't trade it," Borshof said. "I just feel very fortunate to have the opportunity to work with all the people I do."



Fort Drum soldier dies at Landstuhl after Afghanistan attack




A Fort Drum soldier died Tuesday in Germany of wounds he suffered in a small-arms attack on his unit Saturday in eastern Afghanistan.


According to a news release from the post, Spc. Kerry M.G. Danyluk, an infantryman with the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, was attacked in Pul-e-Alam, Logar province, Afghanistan.


He was taken to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Germany, where he died of his injuries.


Spc. Danyluk, 27, of Cuero, Texas, joined the Army in 2010. He arrived at Fort Drum in March 2013 and deployed with the unit in November. The deployment was the second of his career.


Among his awards and decorations are the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Achievement Medal, the Army Good Conduct Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, the Afghanistan Campaign Medal, the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, the Army Service Ribbon, the NATO Medal, the Certificate of Achievement, the Combat Infantryman Badge and the Parachutist Badge. He completed the Master Driver Trainer Course, the Ranger Assessment Selection Program, the Airborne School and the Combatives Level 1 Course.


He is survived by his mother and father.


Spc. Danyluk is the second 10th Mountain Division soldier to die this year during a deployment. The first was Pfc. Joshua A. Gray, who died of unspecified non-combat-related injuries Feb. 10.




Projected cost of F-35, Pentagon's costliest weapons system, rises $7.4B


WASHINGTON —€” The projected cost to develop and produce Lockheed Martin Corp.'s F-35 fighter, the Pentagon's costliest weapons system, has risen 1.9 percent in the past year to $398.6 billion, according to estimates released Thursday.


The $7.4 billion increase from $391.2 billion includes the aircraft and the engines produced by United Technologies Corp.'s Pratt & Whitney unit for an eventual fleet of 2,443 U.S. planes. At the same time, the Pentagon's independent cost-assessment office said its estimate for operating and supporting the F-35 over its projected 55-year service life has declined $96.8 billion, or 8.7 percent, to $1.02 trillion from $1.11 trillion.


The latest F-35 projection is among annual cost estimates for major weapons that the Pentagon sent to Congress on Thursday. The reports cover a portfolio of 77 weapons the Pentagon projects will cost a combined $1.62 trillion, down from $1.66 trillion for 78 programs in last year's compilation of Selected Acquisition Reports.


The increased cost of making the F-35 stems from revised labor rates for Bethesda, Md.-based Lockheed and its subcontractors, a rise in engine production costs and adjusted forecasts for foreign exchange rates against the dollar, the Defense Department said in a statement. The cost of the airframe program rose $3.1 billion, while the engines' price increased by $4.3 billion.


The rising cost may give pause to other countries as they weigh whether to buy the F-35 or how many to acquire. Among eight original international partners, Italy, Turkey and Canada already have indicated that they are re-evaluating their plans. Newer customers Israel, Singapore, Japan and South Korea also may be affected.


With the latest revision, the projected acquisition cost of the F-35 has climbed 71 percent in inflation-adjusted dollars since the Pentagon signed its initial contract with Lockheed in 2001, even as plans were adjusted to buy 409 fewer aircraft. Congress has approved spending $83.2 billion on the F-35 so far, according to the report.


Air Force Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan, the F-35 program manager, told reporters that the increase doesn't reflect a "program out of control" or that "Lockheed is producing airplanes more poorly."


He cited Air Force and Navy decisions to delay purchases of 37 aircraft beyond 2019 and delayed decisions by allies as reasons. He said exchange rate fluctuations are significant because almost 30 percent of the aircraft is built abroad.


Bogdan blamed Pratt & Whitney for failing to reduce engine costs as fast as promised, which he said accounts for $1.7 billion of the increase.


"Pratt's not meeting its commitment," he said. "It's as simple as that."


The cost of the full 77-weapon portfolio was reduced because the Defense Department plans to buy fewer of some major systems, such as the littoral combat ship, the MQ-9 Reaper armed drone from General Atomics, based in San Diego, and Chicago-based Boeing's P-8 naval reconnaissance aircraft, according to the Defense Department statement.


Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in February that he'll cut the littoral combat ship purchase to 32 vessels, instead of the 52 originally planned, until the Navy develops options for a more survivable ship.


Buying the 32 ships, not including separate modules needed for different missions, is now estimated at $22.6 billion, down from $34 billion for 52. For the first time, the report projected the cost for the modules, setting it at $7.2 billion. The ship is made in two versions by Lockheed and Henderson, Australia-based Austal Ltd.



Snowden asks Putin on live TV show if Russia spies like US


MOSCOW — Edward Snowden, the former U.S. security contractor under asylum in Russia, made a rare appearance Thursday, asking President Vladimir Putin if the nation spies on its citizens like the United States.


"Does Russia intercept, store or analyze in any way the communications of millions of individuals?" Snowden asked the former KGB colonel through a video link from an unidentified location during Putin's annual live call-in show, broadcast nationwide from central Moscow.


Snowden's disclosures about U.S. surveillance last year set off a global debate over the trade-offs between privacy and security. The London-based Guardian and Washington Post shared a Pulitzer prize this week for reporting on his revelations about the top-secret U.S. programs, which have led President Barack Obama to propose limits to surveillance.


"We do it of course, but we don't allow ourselves such a massive, out-of-control scale," Putin said about gathering communications in the fight against terrorism and financial crime, after a hasty translation by one of the television channel's presenters.


"I hope we will not get there," said Putin, who addressed the fugitive formally as "Dear Mr. Snowden." "We don't have the necessary technical means and funds as the U.S. does. Our special services are under strict control by the government and society."


Caitlin Hayden, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, said the White House had no comment on Snowden's appearance.


The United States has charged Snowden with espionage and the administration has repeatedly demanded that he be returned to the U.S., where he faces espionage charges.


Courts have split on whether the National Security Agency's collection of bulk phone records is legal, while both a White House review group and the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board have said the program isn't effective and should be stopped. A majority of the five-member privacy board said the program is illegal.


Snowden has said he worked alone in taking thousands of classified documents, denying claims made by American lawmakers that he was an agent for a foreign government. He was granted one year of asylum in Russia in August, after arriving in June from Hong Kong. It's too early to say if he'll apply for an extension, his lawyer Anatoly Kucherena said in January.


Putin, who said last year that he'd never met the fugitive, has denied that Russian agents have worked with Snowden or invited him to fly through Moscow.


The appearance is a slap at Obama, who is threatening to ratchet up sanctions against Russia for its annexation of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine.


Putin has accused U.S. and European leaders of closing their eyes to threats from extremists and nationalists in the neighboring country, a key transit route for Russian gas to Europe.


Thursday Putin took a jab at the U.S., blaming its surveillance programs for complicating talks with Europe.


"Sometimes it is very difficult to negotiate with them on geopolitical issues," Putin said. "It is hard to negotiate with people who even at home whisper among themselves because they're afraid the Americans are listening in."


While Putin has asserted his right to protect Russian speakers in Ukraine, the government in Kiev has accused Russia of fomenting unrest in its southern and eastern regions.


Snowden cited independent White House investigations and a federal report that mass surveillance programs are "ineffective" in stopping terrorism and they "unreasonably intrude into the private lives of ordinary citizens."


Obama has defended electronic spying as a bulwark against terrorism while promising U.S. citizens and allies that he'll put restraints on the government's sweeping surveillance programs. U.S. data collection programs were expanded during President George W. Bush's administration which, in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the U.S., won passage by Congress of the Patriot Act.


Last month, the U.S. leader released proposals based on recommendations from intelligence proposals for reworking data collection. Under the plan, which parallels legislation proposed in the House of Representatives, the government would no longer keep and hold mass phone records from U.S. companies including AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. Carriers would be instructed to search their records for information based on requests from the government, which would be subject to judicial review.


The fixes proposed by Obama and top lawmakers still would let the government access phone and Internet records even though the NSA would no longer store the data. Technology and Internet company executives, including Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg, have pressed the administration to take more steps to limit surveillance.


With assistance from Vladimir Kuznetsov in Moscow and Chris Strohm and Roger Runningen in Washington.



GI Bill helps military kid choose her college


WASHINGTON, PA. — For months, Trinity High School senior Sydney Dydiw toyed with an important decision.


The 18-year-old applied to at least a dozen colleges and universities, and quickly heard back she had been accepted. But with the commitment deadline quickly approaching, she was desperately holding out for one, Johns Hopkins University.


“Johns Hopkins is the total package for me,” the 18-year-old said before getting word on her application. “I fell in love with the campus ... I’m just trying to put it out of my mind.”


Unfortunately, Dydiw didn’t get in.


“I was anxious and excited,” she said. “I thought I could really get in.”


While she was let down, Dydiw was prepared with a back-up plan; she will attend Case Western Reserve University in the fall.


She’s making the decision just in time.


May 1 is decision day for high school seniors around the country — the final day to notify the school of their choice that they will be part of the fall freshman class.


While some students’ decisions will push the May 1 deadline, others are enjoying the last few weeks of high school without the added stress.


Military kid Marlee DeBolt knew right away that Penn State University’s main campus was the school for her. The Trinity High School senior visited the campus last spring, spent the weekend and fell in love.


“I heard back from them at the end of October and knew it was where I wanted to go,” she said. “It was awesome to have that weight lifted off my shoulders.”


DeBolt, the youngest of three siblings, had some idea of what schools were looking for, based on her older siblings’ experiences.


“I knew I had to separate myself,” she said. “My resumé is huge. I took hard courses and was involved in clubs, musicals, mock trial and student council.”


Increasingly, cost is playing more of a role in prospective college students’ decision about which institution to attend.


A recent survey of the country’s college freshmen found the percentage of students attending their first-choice school reached an all-time low, as cost and the availability of financial aid now plays an influential role in decision-making. The survey, which was conducted by UCLA’s Higher Education Research Institute, found just 57 percent of students end up going to their top school.


weight lifted off my shoulders.”


While cost played a role in DeBolt’s decision, it was for an unlikely reason. DeBolt’s father was a member of the military and was able to pass his GI Bill benefits along to her.


“He signed it over to me,” she said. “For 36 months, they will pay for my tuition.”


While different for each state, DeBolt said Pennsylvania’s GI Bill is tied to the highest in-state tuition at a state-affiliated school, which is the University of Pittsburgh. Nonetheless, DeBolt said she’s still been busy applying for scholarships so she can study abroad. “I’ve been given a great opportunity,” she said. “I don’t want to let anyone down.”



The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Hibernators, troops at hot bases: Work out smart to avoid 'rhabdo'


Soldiers and civilians participate in the Hero Workout of the Day at Kieschnick Gym at Fort Hood, Texas, on Feb. 23, 2013, in memory of 1st Lt. Daren M. Hidalgo, a platoon leader with the 3rd Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment from Vilseck, Germany, who lost his life during an improvised explosive device attack in Kandahar province, Afghanistan. Competitive events such as CrossFit (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Christopher Calvert/Released). Fort Hood is one of the top installations for exertional rhabdomyolysis cases, seen most often in hot climates and competitive workouts such as CrossFit, experts say.

Soldiers and civilians take part in the Hero Workout of the Day at Kieschnick Gym at Fort Hood, Texas, on Feb. 23, 2013. Fort Hood is one of the top installations for exertional rhabdomyolysis cases, seen most often in hot climates and competitive workouts such as CrossFit, experts say. (Sgt. Christopher Calvert/Army)



The summer months are a great time to get outside, play hard and break a sweat. And most troops are fit enough to push through a sweltering dog-day workout.


But danger lurks as the mercury soars and dew points rise, especially for young recruits, combat arms personnel and anyone stationed in brutally hot parts of the U.S.


Neglect your hydration and you may be at risk for muscle breakdown, kidney failure or even death, a condition known as exertional rhabdomyolysis, or “rhabdo.” Rhabdomyolysis occurs when overworked muscles break down, releasing a protein, myoglobin, into the bloodstream. This protein can overwhelm the kidneys, causing damage and, in a worst-case scenario, renal failure.


Last year, 378 active-duty troops experienced potentially life-threatening cases of rhabdo, according to a report from the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center.


The number of cases is down since 2011 but remains 33 percent higher than in 2009, which should serve as a warning to anyone who PTs or leads PT in the summer months when rhabdo cases peak, according to AFHSC researchers.


“Medical providers should consider [rhabdo] … when service members, particularly recruits, present with muscular pain or swelling, limited range of motion or the excretion of dark urine after strenuous physical activity, particularly in hot, humid weather,” the report notes.


Broken down by service, the 378 rhabdo cases last year included 177 in the Army, 35 in the Navy, 50 in the Air Force, 155 in the Marine Corps and one in the Coast Guard.


No deaths occurred, but 168 of those service members were hospitalized.


“Whenever you work out, you have some muscle breakdown. It’s when you try to outdo someone else or you are not ready for repetitive or challenging exercise that you can do severe damage to the muscle fibers,” said Dr. Chris Holstege, director of the Medical Toxicology Division at the University of Virginia Medical School. Holstege is currently treating three civilian cases of rhabdo.


From 2009 to 2013, cases peaked from June to August and were at their highest at the Marine Corps recruit depots in San Diego and Parris Island, S.C.; Lackland Air Force Base, Texas; Fort Benning, Ga.; and at large permanent stations including Fort Bragg, N.C., Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Fort Hood, Texas.


Service members most at risk are recruit trainees under age 20, those of Asian, Pacific Islander or black non-Hispanic descent, those training in the combat arms, particularly in the Army and Marine Corps, and those whose homes of record are in the northeast U.S., according to the study.


The drop in military cases since 2011 is a promising sign that commanders, doctors and troops recognize the dangers of overdoing physical fitness in the heat, Holstege said.


But more can be done to prevent it, he added.


Gradually increasing training and proper hydration, by drinking water and replenishing electrolytes with simple fixes such as powdered or premade Gatorade are key, Holstege said.


Some medications such as statins, antipsychotic drugs and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors can raise the risk of developing rhabdo, as can stimulants such as Adderall or dietary supplements containing stimulants.


Some individuals also may have a genetic susceptibility to rhabdo and other heat-related illnesses but may not find out about their propensity until after they’ve developed the condition, Holstege added.


Rhabdo entered the lexicon of familiar exercise-related injuries with the rise in popularity of CrossFit, the challenging workout regimen that pushes one’s body to its limits. As far back as 2005, physiologists warned of the potential negative health impact of Crossfit and other extreme workouts on the body.


Holstege said he usually sees patients get into trouble when they are doing these and other similar workouts in competition with others.


“The majority of the cases I’ve seen really seem to occur when people are trying to outdo one another. Fortunately, the kidneys are really forgiving,” Holstege said.


Holstege recommends that all athletes eat a balanced diet, hydrate adequately and avoid dietary supplements, which he says often contain unknown ingredients or additives such as stimulants or substances that negatively impact how the body reacts to increases in temperature or exertion.


Oddly, rhabdo also can occur when a body is completely immobile, so Holstege also recommends against mixing sedatives and alcohol or consuming too much alcohol. A recent rhabdo patient at the University of Virginia Medical Center was a fraternity pledge who passed out for a prolonged period of time, he said.


Mainly, though, rhabdo cases peak during the hot summer months when people push themselves too hard, he said.


But exercise smart and you should be fine, he added.


“The vast majority recognize their limitations and drink plenty of fluids. It’s those people who have been sedentary all winter and, now that it’s spring, go out and push themselves to run six-and-a-half-minute miles who are at risk. Slowly increase the weight, slowly increase the length of your workout or your run, and you can avoid damage.”



Kennedy beats Bisping to stay perfect in UFC


Like many fighters before him, Tim Kennedy wanted to shut Michael Bisping up.


That didn’t happen Wednesday night. But the sergeant first class in the Texas Army National Guard can take some solace in a five-round unanimous decision over “The Count,” which he earned by smothering Bisping on the mat for almost half of their fight in Quebec City, Quebec — and by more than holding his own in stand-up exchanges for the other half.


But after the judges’ scorecards were read, Kennedy’s post-fight interview was interrupted by Bisping (25-6) before the special operator could manage much more than a sentence.


Bisping expressed respect for Kennedy’s in-ring talent and military service. Kennedy said he respected Bisping. They made a half-hearted attempt at a handshake — and so ended a months-long outpouring of bad blood that included trash-talking during photo ops and parody web videos.


“I hit Mike with my best shots,” Kennedy (18-4) said after he got the microphone back, adding, “I’m just going to keep getting better.”


The bout served as the main event for “The Ultimate Fighter Nations Finale.”


Kennedy took Bisping down about a minute into the first round and all but smothered him until the bell sounded, bloodying the Brit’s nose in the closing seconds. Bisping stayed off the mat in the second round and returned the favor, bloodying Kennedy’s nose as the middleweights traded punches.


The third round played out much like the first — the special operator in control on the ground, but Bisping able to ride out the barrage. The fourth saw Kennedy stagger Bisping with right hands, but Bisping ended the round with quick strikes that sent more blood running down Kennedy’s nose.


The pattern continued, with Kennedy taking down Bisping about a minute into the fifth and final round. With 2:20 left in the fight, referee Yves Lavigne stood up both fighters, likely because Kennedy wasn’t doing much more than pinning Bisping to the mat. The men traded punches and kicks for the rest of the fight, neither getting in serious trouble.


Both raised their hands in victory after the final bell. The judges agreed with Kennedy, making him 3-0 in the UFC and likely moving him up the middleweight rankings: Bisping entered the fight ranked fifth, Kennedy came in eighth.