Lost war-zone records add to veterans' pain
By Peter Sleeth and Hal Bernton
Special to ProPublica; Seattle Times staff reporter
November 10, 2012
A joint investigation by ProPublica and The Seattle Times has
found a widespread lapse in record-keeping from the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars, leaving some disabled veterans hard-pressed to
document their combat injuries, and future military strategists
wondering what lessons might have been learned.
Shawn Poynter / For ProPublica--Christopher DeLara went through a
marital breakup and homelessness as he tried to prove he was an Iraq
combat veteran suffering from PTSD
A strange thing happened when Christopher DeLara filed for
disability benefits after his tour in Iraq: The U.S. Army said it had
no records showing he had ever been overseas.
DeLara had searing memories of his combat experiences. A friend
bled to death before his eyes. He saw an insurgent shoot his commander
in the head. And, most hauntingly, he recalled firing at an Iraqi boy
who had attacked his convoy.
The Army said it could find no field records documenting any of those incidents.
DeLara appealed, fighting for five years before a judge accepted
the testimony of an officer in his unit. By then he had divorced, was
briefly homeless and had sought solace in drugs and alcohol.
DeLara's case is part of a much larger problem that has plagued
the U.S. military since the 1990 Gulf War: a failure to create and
maintain the types of field records that have documented American
conflicts since the Revolutionary War.
A joint investigation by ProPublica and The Seattle Times has
found that the record-keeping breakdown was especially acute in the
early years of the Iraq war, when insurgents deployed improvised bombs
with devastating effects on U.S. soldiers. The military has also lost
or destroyed records from Afghanistan, according to officials and
previously undisclosed documents.
The missing records extend to Washington state, where the
National Guard's 81st Brigade Combat Team, in its largest deployments
since World War II, didn't keep day-to-day records from two tours in
Iraq.
Loss for history
The loss of field records — after-action write-ups,
intelligence reports and other day-to-day accounts from the war zones
— has far-reaching implications. It has complicated efforts by
soldiers like DeLara to claim benefits. And it makes it harder for
military strategists to learn the lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan,
two of the nation's most protracted wars.
"I can't even start to describe the dimensions of the problem,"
said Conrad C. Crane, director of the U.S. Army's Military History
Institute. "I fear we're never really going to know clearly what
happened in Iraq and Afghanistan, because we don't have the records."
The Army says it has taken steps to improve handling of records
— including better training and more emphasis from top commanders.
The Army, with its dominant presence in both theaters, has the
biggest deficiencies. But the U.S. Central Command in Iraq (Centcom),
which had overall authority, also lost records, according to reports
and other documents obtained by ProPublica under the Freedom of
Information Act.
In Baghdad, Centcom and the Army disagreed about which was
responsible for keeping records. There was confusion about whether
classified field records could be transported back to the units'
headquarters in the United States. As a result, some units erased
computer hard drives when they rotated home, wiping out the records
stored on them.
In summer 2009, for instance, the Washington National Guard's
81st Brigade was ordered "by higher-ups" outside the Guard to erase
hard drives before leaving them for replacement troops in Iraq, a Guard
spokesman, Capt. Keith Kosik, said.
"It was part of their 'to-do' list before leaving the country," he said.
Through 2008, dozens of Army units deployed in Iraq and
Afghanistan either had no field records or lacked sufficient reports
for a unit history, according to documents. Entire brigades deployed
from 2003 to 2008 could not produce any field records, documents from
the U.S. Army Center of Military History show.
The Pentagon was put on notice as early as 2005 that Army units
weren't turning in records for storage to a central computer system
created after a similar record-keeping debacle in the 1990-91 Gulf War.
In that war, a lack of field records forced the Army to spend
years and millions of dollars to reconstruct the locations of troops
who may have been exposed to toxic plumes that were among the suspected
causes of Gulf War Syndrome.
At the outset of the Iraq war, military commanders tried to
avoid repeating that mistake, ordering units to preserve all historical
records.
But the Army botched the job and has known about it for years.
"We were just on our knees begging for the Army to do something
about it," said Reina Pennington, a professor at Norwich University in
Vermont who chaired the Army's Historical Advisory Committee. "It's the
kind of thing that everyone nods about and agrees it's a problem, but
doesn't do anything about."
Critical reports from Pennington's committee went up to three
different secretaries of the Army, including John McHugh, the current
secretary. McHugh's office did not respond to interview requests. His
predecessor, Peter Geren, said he was never told about the extent of
the problem.
"I'm disappointed I didn't know about it," Geren said.
In an initial response to questions from ProPublica and The
Times, the Army did not acknowledge that any field reports had been
lost or destroyed. In a subsequent email, a spokesman said the Army was
"working to correct and improve" its record keeping.
After reviewing findings of the ProPublica/Times investigation,
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who chairs the Senate Committee on
Veterans' Affairs, asked Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to report on
efforts to find and collect field records.
"Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who are unable to document the
location and functions of their military units could face the same type
of problems experienced by Cold War veterans exposed to radiation,
Vietnam-era veterans exposed to herbicides and Gulf War veterans
exposed to various environmental hazards," Murray said in a statement.
Already, thousands of veterans have reported respiratory
problems and other health effects after exposure to toxic fumes from
huge burn pits that were commonly used to dispose of garbage in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
Missing field records aren't necessarily an obstacle to benefit
claims. The Department of Veterans Affairs also looks for medical and
personnel records, which can be enough. The VA also has recently
relaxed rules for proving post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), to
reduce the need for the detailed documentation of field reports.
Asked recently how often a search for unit records comes up
empty, officials at the VA said they didn't know — the agency
doesn't track that statistic. A VA spokesman said missing field records
are not a major factor delaying most claims, and some veterans
advocates agree.
"As long as an officer or a buddy who witnessed the event is
willing to sign a notarized statement, that's good," said John
Waterbrook, who represents vets on claims issues in Walla Walla.
But even the VA concedes that unit records are often helpful.
And assembling a disability case by gathering statements can take much
more time, said retired Gen. Peter Chiarelli, former vice chief of
staff of the Army.
"You would always love to have that operational record available
to document an explosion, but there are other ways," Chiarelli said.
"You can provide witness statements from others who were in that
explosion, but it's going to be more difficult."
Claim delayed 4 years
Take the case of Chief Warrant Officer 3 Lorenzo Campbell, a
53-year-old soldier with the Washington National Guard, who says his
benefits were delayed by a lack of records.
Campbell was in Iraq in 2004 when a rocket attack on his Humvee
forced him to spring for cover while carrying 60 pounds of gear. Diving
into a bunker, he slammed his knee on a concrete barrier. He said his
ballooned knee was looked at by a doctor the next day, but no record
was made.
After he returned home, his knee gradually deteriorated. He was
diagnosed with torn knee cartilage and a damaged kneecap. He is unable
to run.
At first, Campbell said, he tried to get records of the rocket
attack from the state Guard, but was told they were classified and left
on computers in Iraq. He said he offered a letter from another soldier
testifying to the incident and swore out a statement himself, but it
did not suffice.
"I tried to keep fighting it," he said. "They kept writing me
saying they need more information, they need more information."
Campbell said his disability claim took four years to be
approved, a delay that could have been shortened had records been
available. "If you have no records, you can be fighting for five or six
years and still not prevail."
Army investigation
The Army is required to produce records of its actions in war.
Field records include reports about fighting, casualties, intelligence
activities, prisoners, battle damage and more, complete with pictures
and maps. They do not include personnel or medical records, which are
kept separately, or "sigact" reports — short, daily dispatches on
significant activities, some of which were provided to news
organizations by WikiLeaks in 2010.
By mid-2007, amid alarm raised by official military historians'
reports that combat units weren't turning in records after their
deployments, the Army launched an effort to collect and inventory what
it could find.
Army historians were dispatched on a base-by-base search
worldwide. A summary of their findings shows that at least 15 brigades
serving in Iraq at various times from 2003 to 2008 had no records on
hand. The same was true for at least five brigades deployed to
Afghanistan.
Records were so scarce for 62 more units that served in Iraq and
10 in Afghanistan that they were written up as "some records, but not
enough to write an adequate Army history." This group included most of
the units deployed during the first four years of the Afghanistan war.
As word of missing records circulated, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
became worried enough to order a top-level delegation of records
managers from each service branch to Baghdad in April 2010 for an
inspection that included record keeping by U.S. Central Command.
After five days, the team concluded that the "volume, location,
size and format" of the combined-forces records "was unknown."
Lt. Col. Donald Walker, the Air Force manager who took over as
Centcom records manager in 2009, blamed computer problems and the
competing demands of wartime for the lost records.
"Something just had to fall off the plate, there was so much
going on," said Walker, who was among the Baghdad inspectors.
Rather than risk letting classified information fall into the
wrong hands, some commanders appeared to buck the orders to preserve
records. One Army presentation asserts that in 2005, V Corps, which
oversaw all Army units then in Iraq, ordered units to wipe hard drives
clean or physically destroy them before redeploying to the states.
"They did not maintain the electronic files. They just purged
the servers," according to the Military History Institute's Crane, who
said he heard similar accounts from more than a dozen veteran officers
in classes at the Army War College.
Invisible wounds
Chris DeLara, 38, grew up in Albany, N.Y., never dreaming he
might someday fight a war. Now his tour in 2004 and 2005 haunts him
every day.
In Iraq, DeLara was an administrative specialist, essentially a
clerk. But he was repeatedly pulled out of his scrivener's life for
missions as a roof gunner on convoys at a time of exploding factional
violence in Baghdad.
In an interview, DeLara said he did not want to detail his
combat experiences, but they were described in part by a judge in the
Board of Veterans' Appeals ruling that approved his PTSD claim.
In the years after his deployment, DeLara told psychiatrists and
others who treated him at various times that two of his friends were
killed in an insurgent attack on his convoy, and that he was unable to
stop one of them from bleeding to death from a ruptured artery.
He said that one of his commanders was shot in the head in front
of him by insurgents, and reported that he had killed an Iraqi youth
who tried to attack his convoy after it was stopped because of a
roadside bomb, according to the judge's summary.
After his return in 2005, DeLara was diagnosed several times
with PTSD or its symptoms, according to VA exam records cited by the
appeals judge. He drank and used drugs, even though he'd abstained in
the Army.
DeLara said he lived for a time in a shelter for troubled vets.
He and his wife eventually divorced, but he credits her for helping him
fight for his claim when he might have given up.
They first applied for a PTSD benefit in 2006, DeLara said. The
VA turned him down the next year, saying it had "no records, none
whatsoever" of his time in combat, DeLara said.
With his wife's help, DeLara dug out the movement order sending
his unit to Iraq, and the brigade roster with his name on it. He added
descriptions of his combat experiences, and sent in the documents.
But he was denied again. He said he again was told the VA couldn't find any combat records.
"We basically put the whole packet together from scratch again,"
DeLara said. This time, he tracked down his former company commander,
who was incensed about the VA denials and provided a letter confirming
an incident in which DeLara had come under enemy fire.
Still, two years went by before a judge found in
DeLara's favor, in March 2011, classifying him as fully disabled by
post-traumatic stress and unable to work.
DeLara gets a stipend of about $30,000 a year. He
has moved near Knoxville, Tenn., where he recently bought a modest
house.
Hal Bernton: 206-464-2581 or hbernton@seattletimes.com
That was the Readers Digest Version as posted in the Seattle Times
Following is the unabridged article
Lost to History:
Missing War Records Complicate Benefit Claims by Iraq, Afghanistan Veterans
Field records from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, needed to
document combat injuries, disability claims and the simple history of
both wars, were never kept, were destroyed or simply cannot be found, a
ProPublica-Seattle Times investigation has found. (Spencer Platt/Getty
Images)
by Peter Sleeth, Special to ProPublica, and Hal Bernton, The Seattle Times , Nov. 9, 2012
A strange thing happened when Christopher DeLara filed for
disability benefits after his tour in Iraq: The U.S. Army said it had
no records showing he had ever been overseas.
DeLara had searing memories of his combat experiences. A friend
bled to death before his eyes. He saw an insurgent shoot his commander
in the head. And, most hauntingly, he recalled firing at an Iraqi boy
who had attacked his convoy.
The Army said it could find no field records documenting any of these incidents.
Over the last decade, dozens of military units deployed in the
war on terror have destroyed or failed to keep field reports of their
activities, a loss of important historical records that can also make
it harder for veterans to prove they qualify for medals or disability
benefits. Our reporting found a few reasons behind the problem:
System failure: In a string of critical reports, historians said
Army units were losing their own history by failing to keep adequate
field records. The U.S. military began relying on computer records
during the Gulf War, introducing major gaps in recordkeeping as the
old-style paper system fell apart. The Army then introduced a
centralized system for collecting electronic field reports, but units
have failed to submit records there.
Security concerns: Some military commanders ordered units to
purge computer hard drives before redeploying to the United States,
destroying any classified field records they contained.
Leadership: Disagreements among military officials have also led
to lack of coordination in record-keeping. “The Army would say
it’s Centcom’s responsibility... Centcom would say
it’s an Army responsibility,” said one Archivist.
Recordkeeping took a backseat to wartime demands: “Something just
had to fall off the plate, there was so much going on,” a former
Centcom records manager said.
Are you a veteran who can't obtain your military field records? Tell us your story
Hal Bernton: 206-464-2581 or hbernton@seattletimes.com
DeLara appealed, fighting for five years before a judge accepted
the testimony of an officer in his unit. By then he had divorced, was
briefly homeless and had sought solace in drugs and alcohol.
DeLara's case is part of a much larger problem that has plagued
the U.S. military since the 1990 Gulf War: a failure to create and
maintain the types of field records that have documented American
conflicts since the Revolutionary War.
A joint investigation by ProPublica and The Seattle Times has
found that the recordkeeping breakdown was especially acute in the
early years of the Iraq war, when insurgents deployed improvised bombs
with devastating effects on U.S. soldiers. The military has also lost
or destroyed records from Afghanistan, according to officials and
previously undisclosed documents.
The loss of field records — after-action write-ups,
intelligence reports and other day-to-day accounts from the war zones
— has far-reaching implications. It has complicated efforts by
soldiers like DeLara to claim benefits. And it makes it harder for
military strategists to learn the lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan,
two of the nation's most protracted wars.
Military officers and historians say field records provide the
granular details that, when woven together, tell larger stories hidden
from participants in the day-to-day confusion of combat.
The Army says it has taken steps to improve handling of records
— including better training and more emphasis from top
commanders. But officials familiar with the problem said the missing
material may never be retrieved.
"I can't even start to describe the dimensions of the problem,"
said Conrad C. Crane, director of the U.S. Army's Military History
Institute [4]. "I fear we're never really going to know clearly what
happened in Iraq and Afghanistan because we don't have the records."
The Army, with its dominant presence in both theaters, has the
biggest deficiencies. But the U.S. Central Command in Iraq (Centcom),
which had overall authority, also lost records, according to reports
and other documents obtained by ProPublica under the Freedom of
Information Act.
In Baghdad, Centcom and the Army disagreed about which was
responsible for keeping records. There was confusion about whether
classified field records could be transported back to the units'
headquarters in the United States. As a result, some units were
instructed to erase computer hard drives when they rotated home,
destroying the records that had been stored on them.
Through 2008, dozens of Army units deployed in Iraq and
Afghanistan either had no field records or lacked sufficient reports
for a unit history, according to Army summaries obtained by ProPublica
[5]. DeLara's outfit, the 1st Cavalry Division, was among the units
lacking adequate records during his 2004 to 2005 deployment.
Recordkeeping was so poor in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2007 that
"very few Operation ENDURING FREEDOM records were saved anywhere,
either for historians' use, or for the services' documentary needs for
unit heritage, or for the increasing challenge with documenting Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)," according to an Army report from
2009 [6].
Entire brigades deployed from 2003 to 2008 could not produce any
field records, documents from the U.S. Army Center of Military History
show.
The Pentagon was put on notice [7] as early as 2005 that Army
units weren't turning in records for storage to a central computer
system created after a similar recordkeeping debacle in the 1990-91
Gulf War.
In that war, a lack of field records forced the Army to spend
years and millions of dollars to reconstruct the locations of troops
who may have been exposed to toxic plumes that were among the suspected
causes of Gulf War Syndrome.
At the outset of the Iraq war, military commanders tried to
avoid repeating that mistake, ordering units to preserve all historical
records.
But the Army botched the job. Despite new guidelines issued in
2008 [8] to safeguard records, some units still purged them. The next
summer, the Washington National Guard's 81st Brigade Combat Team in
Iraq was ordered to erase hard drives before leaving them for
replacement troops to use, said a Guard spokesman, Capt. Keith Kosik.
Historians had complained about lax recordkeeping for years with little result.
"We were just on our knees begging for the Army to do something
about it," said Dr. Reina Pennington, a Professor at Norwich University
in Vermont who chaired the Army's Historical Advisory Committee. "It's
the kind of thing that everyone nods about and agrees it's a problem
but doesn't do anything about."
Critical reports from Pennington's committee went up to three
different secretaries of the Army, including John McHugh, the current
secretary. McHugh's office did not respond to interview requests. His
predecessor, Peter Geren, said he was never told about the extent of
the problem.
"I'm disappointed I didn't know about it," Geren said.
In an initial response to questions from ProPublica and the
Times, the Army did not acknowledge that any field reports had been
lost or destroyed. In a subsequent email, Maj. Christopher Kasker, an
Army spokesman, said, "The matter of records management is of great
concern to the Army; it is an issue we have acknowledged and are
working to correct and improve."
Missing field records aren't necessarily an obstacle for benefit
claims. The Department of Veterans Affairs also looks for medical and
personnel records, which can be enough. The VA has also relaxed rules
for proving post-traumatic stress to reduce the need for the detailed
documentation of field reports.
But even the VA concedes that unit records are helpful. And
assembling a disability case from witness statements can take much more
time, said Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the retired Army vice chief of staff
who worked to combat suicides and improve treatment of soldiers with
PTSD and brain injuries.
"You would always love to have that operational record available
to document an explosion, but there are other ways," Chiarelli said.
"You can provide witness statements from others who were in that
explosion. But it's going to be more difficult."
After reviewing findings of the ProPublica-Times investigation,
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who chairs the Senate Committee on
Veterans' Affairs, asked Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to report on
efforts to find and collect field records.
"Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who are unable to document the
location and functions of their military units could face the same type
of problems experienced by Cold War veterans exposed to radiation,
Vietnam era veterans exposed to herbicides and Gulf War veterans
exposed to various environmental hazards," Murray said in a statement.

Former Secretary of the Army Peter Geren told ProPublica that he
was never told about the extent of the problem of missing war records.
(Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Already, thousands of veterans have reported respiratory
problems and other health effects after exposure to toxic fumes from
huge burn pits that were commonly used to dispose of garbage in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
DeLara remains embittered about the five years he spent waiting
for his disability claim. In an interview at his home in Tennessee, he
pointed to Army discharge papers showing he'd received the Global War
on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, awarded for service in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Next to that were blank spaces where his deployment dates should have been.
"If they'd had the records in the first place, and all the
after-action reports," DeLara said, "this never would have stretched on
as long as it did."
A Desperate Search for Records
The Army is required to produce records of its actions in war.
Today, most units keep them on computers, and a 4,000-soldier brigade
can churn out impressive volumes — roughly 500 gigabytes in a
yearlong tour, or the digital equivalent of 445 books, each 200 pages
long.
Field records include reports about fighting, casualties,
intelligence activities, prisoners, battle damage and more, complete
with pictures and maps. They do not include personnel or medical
records, which are kept separately, or "sigact" reports — short
daily dispatches on significant activities, some of which were provided
to news organizations by WikiLeaks in 2010.
By mid-2007, amid alarms from historians that combat units
weren't turning in records after their deployments, the Army launched
an effort to collect and inventory what it could find.
Army historians were dispatched on a base-by-base search
worldwide. A summary of their findings shows that at least 15 brigades
serving in the Iraq war at various times from 2003 to 2008 had no
records on hand. The same was true for at least five brigades deployed
to Afghanistan.
Records were so scarce for another 62 units that served in Iraq
and 10 in Afghanistan that they were written up as "some records, but
not enough to write an adequate Army history." This group included most
of the units deployed during the first four years of the Afghanistan
war.
The outreach effort by the Army was highly unusual. "We were
sending people to where they were being demobilized," said Robert J.
Dalessandro, executive director at the Army's Center of Military
History. "We even said ... 'Look we'll come to you' — that's how
desperate we got."
As word of missing records circulated, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
became worried enough to order a top-level delegation of records
managers from each service branch to Baghdad in April 2010 for an
inspection that included recordkeeping by U.S. Central Command.
Centcom coordinated action among service branches in the
theater. Among other things, Centcom's records included Pentagon
orders, joint-service actions, fratricide investigations and
intelligence reviews, with some records from Army units occasionally
captured in the mix.
After five days, the team concluded [9] that the "volume,
location, size and format of USF-1 records was unknown," referring to
the acronym for combined Iraq forces. The team's report to the chiefs
cited "large gaps in records collections ... the failure to capture
significant operational and historical" materials and a "poorly
managed" effort to preserve records that were on hand.
In a separate, more detailed memo [10], two of the team's
members from the National Archives and Records Administration went
further.
"With the exception of the Army Corps of Engineers, none of the
offices visited have responsibly managed their records," they wrote.
"Staff reported knowledge of only the recently created and filed
records and knew little of the records created prior to their
deployments, including email. ... It is unclear the extent to which
records exist prior to 2006."
Part of the problem was disagreement and lack of coordination
about who was responsible for certain records, including investigations
into casualties and accidents, according to Michael Carlson, one of the
two archivists.
"The Army would say it's Centcom's responsibility to capture
after-action reports because it's a Centcom-led operation. Centcom
would say it's an Army responsibility because they created their own
records," Carlson said in an interview. "So there's finger-pointing ...
and thus records are lost."
Nearly a year after the U.S. pullout from Iraq, Centcom said it
still is trying to index 47 terabytes of records for storage, or some
54 million pages of documents. It's not clear if those include anything
recovered after a 2008 computer crash the Baghdad team termed
"catastrophic."
Lt. Col. Donald Walker, an Air Force officer who took over as
Centcom records manager in 2009, acknowledged that there was confusion
about responsibility and confirmed that that some Centcom records may
have been lost. In part, he blamed computer problems and the competing
demands of wartime.
"Something just had to fall off the plate, there was so much
going on," said Walker, who worked out of Centcom's Tampa, Fla.,
headquarters but was among the Baghdad inspectors.
Rather than risk letting classified information fall into the
wrong hands, some commanders appeared to buck the orders to preserve
records. One Army presentation asserts that in 2005, V Corps, which
oversaw all Army units then in Iraq, ordered units to wipe hard drives
clean or physically destroy them before redeploying to the States.
"They did not maintain the electronic files. They just purged
the servers," according to the Military History Institute's Crane, who
said he heard similar accounts from more than a dozen veteran officers
in classes at the Army War College.
The orders directing Washington National Guard's 81st Brigade to
erase hard drives before leaving Iraq came "from on high," according to
unit spokesman Kosik, who said he confirmed the erasures with a senior
Guard officer with first-hand knowledge. He said the orders came from
outside the Washington Guard.
"There was a lot of confidential information, and they were not
allowed to take it out of theater," said Kosik. "All that was wiped
clean before they came home. ... It was part of their 'to-do' list
before leaving country."
Steven A. Raho III, the Army's top records manager, said in an
interview that he couldn't estimate what, if any, records might be
missing. But Raho said his agency wasn't responsible for collecting
records, only for storing them in the Army's central records system
when individual units handed them over.
Units are not required to do so, he emphasized. "All's I know is we have some and units have some," Raho said.
As a test, ProPublica filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
requests for a month's worth of field records from four units deployed
in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. The requests went to Raho's Records
Management and Declassification Agency, which forwarded them to each
unit.
One brigade — the 2nd Combat Brigade of the 82nd Airborne
Division — did not respond, but FOIA officers from the three
others said they searched and could find no responsive records.
"I don't know where any Iraq operational records are," said
Daniel C. Smith, a privacy act officer at Fort Carson, Colo., who
handled the request for the 2nd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division.
"I've never been able to find out where they went."
At Fort Riley, Kan., FOIA officer Tuanna Jeffery looked for
records from the 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment, 1st Armored
Division. "Prior to and upon the inactivation of the unit on March 15,
2008, that unit had turned in absolutely no records," she responded.
In a follow-up email, Jeffery said the entire 1st Armored Division did not turn in any field records through 2008.
'They Couldn't Find It'
Army veteran Christopher DeLara spent five years waiting for his
disability claim to be approved. The VA said it couldn’t find
Army records to corroborate his combat experiences. (Shawn Poynter for
ProPublica)
Chris DeLara is not the type of soldier to wear his heart on his
sleeve, but the 1st Cavalry Division's shoulder patch is tattooed on
his right forearm in a swirling piece of body art. Beneath it are the
words: "Baghdad, Iraq."
DeLara, 38, grew up in Albany, N.Y., never dreaming he might
someday fight a war. Now, his tour in 2004 and 2005 haunts his every
day. Since winning his appeal in March 2011, he is classified as fully
disabled by post-traumatic stress and cannot work. He was awarded a
stipend of about $30,000 a year and has moved near Knoxville, Tenn.,
where he recently bought a modest house.
Getting to a stable point wasn't easy.
DeLara was an administrative specialist, essentially a personnel
clerk. But he was repeatedly pulled out of his scrivener's life for
missions as a roof gunner on convoys. It was a time of insurgency and
exploding factional violence in Baghdad.
"They told us, 'This may be your job, but guess what? You're
going to be doing everything,'" he said. "We had many hats. You go to
combat, your job is secondary. Combat is first."
DeLara did not want to discuss his combat experiences, but they
are described in part by a judge in the Board of Veterans' Appeals
ruling that approved his PTSD claim.
In the years after his deployment, DeLara told psychiatrists and
others who treated him at various times that two of his friends were
killed in an insurgent attack on his convoy, and that he was unable to
stop one of them from bleeding to death from a ruptured artery.
He said that one his commanders was shot in the head in front of
him by insurgents, and reported that he had killed an Iraqi youth who
had tried to attack his convoy after it was stopped because of a
roadside bomb, according to the judge's summary.
After his return in 2005, DeLara was diagnosed several times
with PTSD or its symptoms, according to VA exam records cited by the
appeals judge. He drank and used drugs even though he'd abstained from
them in the Army. In 2006, he overdosed on prescription drugs.
DeLara said he lived for a time in a shelter for troubled
vets. He and his wife eventually divorced, but he credits her for
helping him fight for his claim when he might have given up.
They first applied for a PTSD benefit in 2006, DeLara said. A
denial came the next year because his separation document, called a
DD-214, did not list any dates of overseas deployment, he said.
"They couldn't find it. Well my ex-wife, she being as persistent
as she is, we started pulling all the stuff" to send to the VA, he
said. DeLara dug out the movement order sending his unit to Iraq and
the brigade roster with his name on it. He added descriptions of his
combat experiences. "Basically what it was, I needed to provide proof,"
he said.
But he was denied again, this time because the VA said his
symptoms were of bipolar disorder, not PTSD. DeLara said he appealed
but got a letter saying there was insufficient evidence that he'd
experienced combat stress. The VA told him that it had "no records,
none whatsoever" of his time in combat, DeLara said.
"We basically put the whole packet together from scratch again,"
DeLara said. This time, he tracked down his former company commander,
who was incensed about the VA denials and provided a letter confirming
an incident in which DeLara came under enemy fire. Still, two years
went by before DeLara received word that his appeal was set for a
hearing in January 2011.
Although the judge found in his favor, the ruling notes that, in
June 2008, the center responsible for locating his records "made a
formal finding of a lack of information to corroborate a stressor for
service connection for PTSD." The center even looked a second time but
still came up empty-handed.
DeLara said he still can't believe it. "I had dates and
everything" in the supporting material he and his ex-wife sent to the
VA, he said. "The simple fact is that nobody filled out after-action
reports," DeLara said. "There was no record of it."
Asked how often a search for unit records comes up empty,
officials at the VA said they didn't know — the agency doesn't
track that statistic. A VA spokesperson said missing field records are
not a major factor delaying veterans' claims, however. And some
veterans' advocates agree.
"As long as an officer or a buddy who witnessed the event is
willing to sign a notarized statement, that's good," said John
Waterbrook, who advises vets on disability issues in Walla Walla, Wash.
In 2009, as DeLara was refiling his case, veterans' groups
complained to Congress that soldiers serving as clerks or mechanics
unfairly faced a higher burden of proof for PTSD than those with an
obvious combat role, even though they faced the same dangers in wars
with no front lines.
The VA relaxed its rules the next year, so that a vet's account
of combat stress is proof enough if a VA medical examiner agrees. But
while the change helps, it hasn't sped up claims or made field records
less valuable, said Richard Dumancas, the American Legion's deputy
director of claims.
Field records can come into play for other injuries. Take the
case of Chief Warrant Officer 3 Lorenzo Campbell, a 53-year-old soldier
with the Washington Guard who filed a disability claim resulting from a
2004 injury in Iraq.
During a rocket attack, Campbell banged his knee on a concrete
bumper after jumping out of a Humvee to find cover. He saw a doctor,
but there was no record in his medical files. His knee gradually
deteriorated, and he now wears a brace and is unable to run.
Campbell said he tried to get records of the rocket attack from
the state Guard but was told they were classified and left on computers
in Iraq. He said he offered a letter from another soldier testifying to
the incident and swore out a statement himself, but it didn't suffice.
"I tried to keep fighting it," he said. "They kept writing me
saying they need more information, they need more information."
Campbell said his disability claim took four years to be
approved — a delay that could have been shortened had the records
been available. "If you have no records," he said, "you can be fighting
for five or six years and still not prevail."
Tradition Eroded, Warnings Brushed Aside
Military recordkeeping has been the cornerstone of the nation's
war history for centuries. From the founding of the republic through
the Vietnam War, recordkeeping was a disciplined part of military life,
one that ensured that detailed accounts of the fighting were available
to historians and veterans alike.
The records can hold untold stories that can surface decades after a conflict.
The massacre of civilians by U.S. forces at No Gun Ri, South
Korea, in July 1950 came to full national attention only in 1999,
nearly 50 years after the fact. Journalists at The Associated Press,
working in part with military field records, uncovered the extent of
the tragedy. Later, other reporters used the records to show that one
purported witness wasn't really present.
By the Gulf War, however, what had been a long tradition of
keeping accurate, comprehensive field records had begun to erode [11].
Old-style paper recordkeeping was giving way to computers. And Army
clerks had been reduced in number, leaving officers to take care of
records work.
According to the Army's "Commander's Guide to Operational
Records and Data Collection," published in 2009, the problem became
evident [12] months after the end of Desert Storm, when vets began
reporting fatigue, skin disease, weight loss and other unexplained
health conditions.
"When the Army began investigating this rash of symptoms, its
first thought was to try and establish a pattern of those affected:
What units were they in? Where were they located? What operations were
they engaged in?" the guide says. "The answers provided by
investigators were: 'We don't know. We didn't keep our records.'"

When Secretary of the Army John McHugh arrived in 2009, he
received a report saying that the recordkeeping system was broken and
pleading for resources to fix it. In an email, the Army said that it is
'working to correct and improve' records management. (Win McNamee/Getty
Images)
Afterward, the Army created Raho's records agency and a central
records system. As the war on terror began, however, inspections and
penalties for recordkeeping at the command level had largely fallen by
the wayside, according to Army documents [13] and interviews with
officers who helped search for Gulf War records.
Robert Wright, a retired Army historian, said training broke
down. "They fight as they train, and they never were trained," he said.
On March 28, 2003, then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz ordered retention of all records [14] in the Iraq war.
Military records, he wrote, "are of enduring significance for U.S. and
world history and have been indispensable for rendering complete,
accurate and objective accountings of the government's activities to
the American people."
But in the combat zones, there were other priorities.
Kelly Howard served as operations officer to Army Gen. George W.
Casey Jr., who was in charge of the Iraq war from 2004 to 2007. Her
primary job was archiving Casey's papers, a task that had been ignored
until her arrival in 2006. Casey stored them in a foot locker, among
other places.
"The reason so many things got lost ... is because so many
people at higher levels weren't requiring it," Howard said, referring
to systematic recordkeeping. "You do what your boss wants you to do.
It's not that anyone said, 'No, I don't care about that.' It's just so
many other things were important."
Alarms mounted at about the same time as DeLara finished his Baghdad tour.
In 2005, the Army's Historical Advisory Committee learned that
Raho's agency had not "received any records from units deployed in
Afghanistan & Iraq."
This came as a shock. Members of the group include a mix of
civilian historians and officials from the Army War College and Center
of Military History.
"So we go through the whole meeting," said Richard Davis, senior
historian at the National Museum of the U.S. Army. "So I ask the
records manager point blank. I said, 'How many records have been
retired from overseas by U.S. Army units?' And the answer was zero.
"By late October the records management people here in
Washington had received not a single document from Afghanistan or
Iraq," Davis said. "At that point all the historians looked at each
other and said 'Holy shit! '"
Minutes from the committee's 2006 meeting quote Raho [15] as
saying, "Our problems are that the training for Army personnel is
incomplete, the responses are uneven, and the records themselves are
either incomplete or nonexistent."
Another member suggested writing a book. "As an institutional
history, I think it's a great idea," responded historian Pennington,
then the committee's chairwoman. "'Losing History': It's a topic that
merits visibility and study."
The committee included regular warnings about a broken
recordkeeping system in its annual reports to the secretary of the Army.
The 2006 report to Secretary Francis J. Harvey said Raho had
described "major problems [13]" in records collection, including "the
lack of centralized control of data collection, the destruction of
records without evaluation, and inadequate communications between Army
units and records collection personnel."
Raho, the report said, "observed that 17 to 23 percent of all
Iraq/Afghanistan War veterans will suffer from various forms of PTSD.
... Without strong and immediate action to remedy present shortcomings,
the Army's ability to substantiate veteran disability claims will be
degraded seriously, with potentially highly troublesome and expensive
consequences."
In its 2008 report, the committee said: "Units are losing their
own history. This will create a snowball effect, resulting in problems
with awards and heritage activities in the future."
Pennington signed the report, adding a personal comment: "After
six years of service on DAHAC, and now as its chair, I am frankly
discouraged by the frequency with which DAHAC has expressed some of the
same concerns, and how little progress has been made on some issues."
Then-Secretary Geren's office responded with a thank-you letter
under his signature. But Geren said in an interview that he was not
personally informed about missing records, despite his March 31, 2009,
letter. "I'm confident it was not brought to my attention."
When McHugh, the current secretary, arrived in 2009, he received
a committee report reiterating that the system was broken and pleading
for resources to fix it. "This has been requested every year since
1997," the report said.
"It's probably the most serious problem historians have ever
had," Pennington said in an interview. "I honestly don't know how we're
going to be writing records-based history in 20 to 30 years."
Typically, field records remain classified for two to three decades
after a war, then are transferred to the National Archives.
Although committee members felt unheard, wheels had slowly begun
moving in the Army. In 2007, Raho's agency and the Center of Military
History launched the outreach project [16] that discovered the
historians were right: Scores of units did not have the records they
should.
Because Raho did not have enough staff, the Center of Military
History provided detachments for the search. For more than two years
they collected field reports, turning up about 5.5 terabytes' worth.
Some additional records have dribbled in since: Dalessandro, the
center's director, said one brigade of the 1st Armored Division handed
over field records from its 2007 Iraq deployment. It's possible that
more might be found from other units, but historians say the chances
fade with each year.
Burn Pits: The New Agent Orange?
The demand for the field records isn't likely to abate as
members of Congress ratchet up pressure to investigate exposure to burn
pits.
Veterans' groups say [17] the long-term health impacts could be
similar to those of herbicides in Vietnam. Rep. Michael Michaud of
Maine, ranking Democrat on the House Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on
Health, said missing field records "could have consequences for
veterans for years to come."
In September, the House passed the Open Burn Pit Registry Act to
track veterans with symptoms and find out where they were exposed and
for how long. A similar measure is pending in the Senate. The VA
currently runs registries for Agent Orange and Gulf War Syndrome [18],
and last year the Institute of Medicine said more research is needed
[19].
Some veterans' advocates say field records could provide critical.
"It's going to be very hard to connect individuals without the
field records," said Dan Sullivan, director of the Sgt. Thomas Sullivan
Center, a nonprofit named after his brother, an Iraq vet who died from
mysterious health complications.
"It would strike me that they are very important."
Are you a veteran who can't obtain your military field records? Tell us your story [3].
Versions of this story will be published by The Seattle Times [20] and Stars and Stripes [21].
Peter Sleeth is a veteran investigative reporter who covered the
Iraq war for The Oregonian and helped the paper win a Pulitzer Prize in
2007 [22] for breaking news. Now freelancing, his most recent piece for
the Oregon Historical Quarterly is a profile of progressive-era
activist Tom Burns [23].
Hal Bernton has been a staff reporter for The Seattle Times
since 2000. He has covered military and veterans affairs, reporting
from Iraq in 2003 and from Afghanistan in 2009 and this fall. Among
other things, Bernton has reported on veterans' health issues [24],
post-traumatic stress [25] and, recently, improvised explosive devices
[26].
ProPublica's Marshall Allen, Liz Day and Kirsten Berg contributed to this story.
.