Sunday, December 01, 2013

The Air Force Just Can't Get It Right

I'm a fan of the Air Force Academy.  It was my first choice of colleges and the only one I applied to where I didn't get in.  I spent the first semester of my junior year as an exchange cadet there from West Point.  I've had one former student graduate from there and a second will this next May.

Yes, I'm a fan.

But there's always been something wrong there.  Even when I was there in 1985 there were problems with the way they enforced their Honor Code and there were problems with leadership.  Here we are, 28 years later, and the problems are so bad that we learn about this from the local Colorado Springs newspaper:
Facing pressure to combat drug use and sexual assault at the Air Force Academy, the Air Force has created a secret system of cadet informants to hunt for misconduct among students.

Cadets who attend the publicly-funded academy near Colorado Springs must pledge never to lie. But the program pushes some to do just that: Informants are told to deceive classmates, professors and commanders while snapping photos, wearing recording devices and filing secret reports.

For one former academy student, becoming a covert government operative meant not only betraying the values he vowed to uphold, it meant being thrown out of the academy as punishment for doing the things the Air Force secretly told him to do...

Through it all, he thought OSI (Office of Special Investigations) would have his back. But when an operation went wrong, he said, his handlers cut communication and disavowed knowledge of his actions, and watched as he was kicked out of the academy...

The records show OSI uses FBI-style tactics to create informants. Agents interrogate cadets for hours without offering access to a lawyer, threaten them with prosecution, then coerce them into helping OSI in exchange for promises of leniency they don’t always keep. OSI then uses informants to infiltrate insular cadet groups, sometimes encouraging them to break rules to do so. When finished with informants, OSI takes steps to hide their existence, directing cadets to delete emails and messages, misleading Air Force commanders and Congress, and withholding documents they are required to release under the Freedom of Information Act.

The program also appears to rely disproportionately on minority cadets like Thomas...

While the informant program has resulted in prosecutions, it also creates a fundamental rift between the culture of honesty and trust the academy drills into cadets and another one of duplicity and betrayal that the Air Force clandestinely deploys to root out misconduct...

In fall 2010, Thomas, a sophomore, went to a house party near Divide. It was a typical college bash, he said, with pounding music, beer and cadets on the back porch smoking pot and a synthetic marijuana called spice...

Thomas said he wasn’t nervous. He was a straight-laced athlete from a strict home who had never done drugs and drank very little. The agent told him he was there only as a witness. He wanted to know who did what at the party. At first, Thomas gave vague answers, but Munson pressed harder, Thomas said, grilling the cadet for more than three hours: OSI had witnesses. They had proof Thomas knew more than he was saying. It was the cadet’s duty to tell the truth. Under the honor code, not turning in spice smokers was the same as smoking spice.  (I'm not sure that's true about the honor code--Darren)

The academy teaches cadets not to question superiors, Thomas said. When OSI asked him to do things, he thought he had little choice.

“Eventually I told them everything I knew,” Thomas said.
 
Thomas agreed to help OSI.

Agents made him sign non-disclosure papers and told him he could be thrown in a military prison if he talked about his work. He could not even tell his commanders, they said. OSI would notify them instead. As Thomas left that life-changing meeting with OSI, he remembers the agent saying, “Wait to be contacted. And remember, don’t tell anybody"...

“The whole time I was like, ‘OK, I’m getting told how to roll a blunt by a federal agent; this is a different cadet experience that is not in the brochure’,” Thomas said....
The story is much longer and much more detailed than what I've sampled here.   This is some quality journalism here.  But the meat of the story is just sickening.

Of course I don't condone drug use in the military.  Even less, though, do I condone such tactics to root it out.  This kind of behavior is just foul.  How do you expect to build leaders this way, Air Force?

OSI.  The "S" probably stands for Stasi.  Their tactics are identical.

4 comments:

  1. M3andcm8:59 PM

    As parents of a current AF cadet, we are waiting to see more details. We hear the cadet wing will be getting a briefing on this, but find it disturbing that an outside agency is using cadets to turn in other cadets, when USAFA should be in charge of its own honor code enforcement. This can't possibly enhance morale at the institution when no one can be trusted. Aren't they trying to instill the notion that "you never abandon your wing man"? It will be interesting to see the spin that comes from the new Superintendent - our cadet seems to think the former cadet quoted in the article may have the more accurate story. If so, it's troubling to say the least.

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  2. Anonymous7:22 AM

    Also, "cadet informant" seems like a career limiting move. No?

    -Mark Roulo

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  3. allen (in Michigan)7:41 AM

    We are in the fifth year of the Obama administration and if it's one thing about lefties you can rely upon it's their love of secret police.

    It's understandable though. After all, people, that is people other then doctrinaire lefties, can be relied upon to be resistant to the bounties which will flow from lefty philosophies given enough time.

    Sure, there's always a rough patch towards the beginning, and the rough patch can sometimes seem to go on forever, but that's an illusion by which people mired in the present, and who don't have the political influence to escape that illusion, are beset. Those who keep their eyes on the horizon, and have the political influence to escape the consequences of lefty ideas, aren't so troubled.

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  4. Although OSI does not fall under the command of the Superintendent if I were the Supe I would have the local OSI commander in my office and tell him I could make his stay on the base a living hell if he doesn't disengage this program with the cadets. Have his Security Police follow the Agents everwhere they go. When asked, Gen Welsh, SECAF (class of 76), said he did not know of the program. I would have added "But I will in the next hour" and get the Commander of AFOSI in his office and order him to cut this crap out.

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