Last night, I was surprised and happy to find a photograph of my friend Cheryl Harris at the top of the New York Times'
web site. She was hugging her young son, Ryan Maseth, an Army sergeant
who was dressed in his uniform and cap. The were both smiling broadly.
A few months later he was dead. The military told her this past January
that he had foolishly carried an electrical appliance into a shower in
Baghdad.
That was a lie.
It turned out the fault was an improperly grounded water pump. With
a little help from me, she found out that at least 10 other military
personnel have been electrocuted in Iraq in recent years. Now she is
suing the contractor KBR, though there is evidence that the military
and the Defense Contracting Management Agency are also to blame for
being lax in its own inspections. The Times article carries word of early alerts about this, which were ignored.
Cheryl Harris is quoted by the Times today, asking, "My
biggest question is really, why would KBR do a safety inspection, know
about the electrical problems and not alert the troops?" The article,
still on the paper's home page, is headlined, "GIs Electrocuted in Iraq
Despite '04 Alert on Wiring."
Just after I reported on the Maseth electrocution for Editor & Publisher
back in January -- no one else in the national media bothered to do so
-- Cheryl, who lives in western Pennsylvania, contacted me wondering
how she could find out how many others had met his fate. She was
especially concerned because -- unmentioned in the Times
story today -- she has another son in Iraq and yet another in the
military serving elsewhere. I directed her to some sources and we have
corresponded often ever since then, most recently today.
Of course, the Bush administration aptly catches plenty of blame in the Times article
for outsourcing so much work in Iraq (directing billions to the KBRs of
the world) and then not providing enough oversight.
Two months ago I wrote, "Rep. Henry Waxman and Pentagon chief Robert
Gates are looking into reports that the 12 deaths, and probably more,
were caused by shoddy wiring and construction where our troops are
housed. It is not known how many of these cases involved KBR. Cheryl
Harris's lawyer has obtained military documents indicated that KBR told
the Defense Contracting Management Agency there were wiring problems in
the building before Maseth's death, and nothing was done about them.
The question is: Who is to blame? And what about all those other cases.
"Also, Harris was originally told by the military that her son had
been electrocuted after he took a small electrical appliance into the
shower area. She couldn't get answers herself and contacted a local
member of Congress. Now documents show that Ryan was killed when an
electrical water pump shorted out after he had stepped into the shower
and turned on the water. An electrical current then passed through the
water pipes to a metal shower hose in the shower."
Cheryl informed me then, "I'd like to have questions answered about
who is accountable, and I'd like to know that this can't happen again
to our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan." Today she told me that she just
did a CNN interview: So the story widens, at last.
*
Greg Mitchell's book So Wrong for So Long: How the Press, the Pundits -- and the President -- Failed on Iraq
has been hailed by Bill Moyers, Glenn Greenwald, Paul Rieckhoff ,
Arianna H and others, and includes several chapters on "nonhostile"
deaths and suicides in Iraq. He can be reached at
gmitchell@editorandpublisher.com.