Archives » Friday, May 09, 2008
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David Botti
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May 9, 2008 01:58 PM
Though he was killed in Afghanistan in 2004, Pat Tillman's death is
still a subject of controversy and tremendous reflection. Tillman, you
will recall, was the NFL player turned Army Ranger who was originally
said to have died under enemy fire (he was awarded the Silver Star),
but later reports found he was killed by friendly fire.
Now his
mother, Mary, has published a book in which she charges that former
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld knew about the cover-up over the
details of her son's death. As she writes [via MSNBC]:
“... I believe Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld knew Pat was killed
by fratricide and permitted the cover-up. It is not
believable that a man known for his propensity to micromanage would not
want to know what happened to his most high-profile soldier. I informed
the committee that Pat received a personal letter from Rumsfeld shortly
after he and his brother enlisted, commending him for his commitment to
serve. Pat was obviously in Rumsfeld's consciousness."
During a recent 60 Minutes interview,
Katie Couric questioned Army Secretary Pete Geren over the alterations
of eyewitness accounts of Tillman's death used for his Silver Star
citation. She asked if he knew who manipulated the statements, and he
replied:
"Well, that's one of the questions that we will never completely
answer. But it certainly is one of the areas that
that raises questions. There are so many mistakes. So many things that
happened. If you add them all together, it certainly calls into
question the credibility of those who handled this. And raises the kind
of questions that Ms. Tillman raises. I don't blame her for that. And I
don't expect her ever to believe us. But there was no effort to
deceive. There were mistakes and grievous errors by the legions. And as
a result, we fell short of our duty to her as a mother of one of our
heroes."
Over at the IAVA blog,
Perry Jefferies takes issue with Sec. Geren's uncertainty, saying that
the process for awarding medals should clearly indicate who writes a
citation:
Only a certain amount of people handle the citation
for the Silver Star, one of our highest military awards. Each commander
signs a block on the document and there is a document called a
transmittal letter that accompanies it from office to office. Only
organizational will prevents the Army from prosecuting the criminal
that a) faked an official document and b) tried to leave a lower grade
enlisted Soldier to take the blame.
If indeed the medal was awarded under dishonest conditions, should it still stand? A letter to the Arizona Republic newspaper took this stance:
The awarding of the decoration was illegal, as
the incident obviously
didn't represent "gallantry in action against an armed enemy," as
required by the Army's own regulations. This award does a disservice
to all of our veterans who have legitimately earned this august award.
The Tillman family should return the award to the Army, which should
then rescind the award as unjustified and issued illegally.
Another reader then responded:
Yes, it may be true that this star represents "gallantry in action
against an armed enemy." What could be more gallant than a young man
giving up not only his career but his life? Pat Tillman gave up his life to serve in an illegal war that has ruined
our economy with the billions of dollars being wasted but, more
important, the loss of the respect of the rest of the world.
In the New York Times' look at Mary Tillman's new book, there's an interesting historical note of other athletes who've been killed in action.
Eddie Grant, the Giants’
third baseman, died in France in 1918. Christy Mathewson, the great
Giants pitcher, had his life shortened from a mustard-gas accident in
training near the end of World War I. And Nile Kinnick, the star
running back from Iowa, died in a training flight in 1943. But Pat
Tillman’s death was different because of the way he was used,
posthumously, blatantly.
You can read a Newsweek Q&A with Mary Tillman here.
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