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Fort Hood Rampage: Shooter Acted Alone, Officials Say. But Why?

by: Patrik Jonsson   |  The Christian Science Monitor

Dozens of investigators at Fort Hood are building a psychological profile of the suspect, Nidal Malik Hasan, as they try to understand the motive. Belligerent fanaticism, deepening anger over the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and fear about deployment may have played a role.

Fort Hood, Texas - Army investigators have ruled out a terror plot in the gruesome rampage at Fort Hood, saying that Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, a veteran psychiatrist, acted alone in the shooting spree last Thursday.

If a larger plot wasn't being carried out, then what was the motive?

Military officials have not yet declared an intent or motivation. But even though the investigation is still in the early stages, a more focused portrait is emerging of Hasan, who is recovering in a San Antonio hospital. Security and criminal analysts are hinting that belligerent fanaticism, deepening anger over the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and fear about his own impending deployment to Afghanistan may have played a role in the rampage.

Dozens of investigators are building a psychological profile of Hasan as they try to understand the motive. This profile probably won't be completed until Hasan is able to, and agrees to, talk. (He is now in stable condition, according to a US Army spokesman, and is breathing on his own.)

On Sunday, the US Army's chief of staff cautioned against drawing hasty conclusions about Hasan's faith. Focusing on the Islamic roots of Hasan could "heighten the backlash" against all Muslims in the military, said Gen. George Casey, appearing on NBC's "Meet the Press."

Hasan grew up as a US-born son of Palestinian parents. He had sought deeper sanctuary in his Muslim faith since the death of his parents, his cousins have reported. His psychological work with traumatized US soldiers had disturbed him.

Without an immediate family and increasingly disenchanted with the Army, Hasan turned to religion, where he could direct his increasing fear and frustration, says Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

"The spark was his personal situation and his psychological distress, but what directed his anger and frustration was ... increasing self-radicalization," Mr. Levin says. "It's important to understand the extent to which the tangled interplay of personal disappointment and ideology can have on someone like Hasan."

After arriving earlier this year at the base city of Killeen, Texas, Hasan asked the local imam about the moral quandary he struggled with – as a Muslim going off to war in an army that is fighting Muslims.

Hasan had complained about being the target of religious and ethnic slurs, his family and colleagues said, but he never made an official complaint with the Army.

According to a Washington Post account, he once called the police on a neighbor for allegedly keying his car and removing a bumper sticker that said in Arabic, "Allah is love."

Colleagues reported that Hasan had become increasingly agitated, sometimes belligerent, about America's role in the Muslim world. A former colleague told Fox News that Hasan had praised the shooting of two Army recruiters by a "lone wolf jihadist" earlier this year in Little Rock, Ark. His online writings had gotten the attention of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which investigated but took no action against Hasan.

Last Thursday, Hasan reportedly yelled "Allahu Akbar" – "God is great" in Arabic – before allegedly opening fire on soldiers in various stages of deployment and return at Fort Hood's Soldier Readiness Processing Center.

That the Army had not picked up on clues from Hasan – in fact, it even promoted him to major last year despite some negative marks on his record – is likely to become a secondary line of inquiry in the Hasan case.

On Sunday, Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I) of Connecticut announced that he wants to lead a congressional investigation into the Fort Hood shootings. He wants to find out "whether the Army missed warning signs" about Hasan, he said on "Fox News Sunday."

One potential issue: Did political correctness around religious issues prevent Army officials from investigating Hasan's issues more deeply?

"His faith may have exposed him to verbal abuse, but did it also protect him from being identified as someone with troubling emotional problems?" asks the columnist Joan Smith in Britain's Independent newspaper.] "[I]t is reasonable to ask whether secular authorities have the confidence to tell the difference between religious fervour of a kind they're not familiar with and genuinely disturbed behaviour."

As of now, it appears to many that Hasan may have been unable to reconcile two identities – US soldier and a Muslim – and that the two identities clashed in violent opposition as he approached a major personal landmark – his own deployment to a war zone that he had seen create challenges for so many young people.

For many at Fort Hood, though, those are just psychobabble excuses. "To be honest, I don't care about that guy right now," says Third Corps Sgt. Christopher Gray.

  

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Comments

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Acting alone does not rule

Acting alone does not rule out terrorism. An individual can be a terrorist without conspiring with a group. The relevant question is whether he was motivated in a similar manner to al Qaeda, et al. There is much evidence that is consistent with a terrorist motivation.

The word 'terror' is

The word 'terror' is abstract. Whether 'he was motivated in a similar manner to al Qaeda, et al' is actually not as important with regards to the war as the establishment, which these findings verify, of the fact that he acted alone, because it undermines the rhetoric about national security by further proving that the wars increase internal terrorism and that the focus on training camps in pakistan etc etc is really missing the point.

Single shooter theory: great

Single shooter theory: great way to ramp up the anti-muslim sentiment and get more cannon-fodder to be sent (now justifiably) to Afghanistan…so has everyone forgotten that the first news coming out of Fort Hood spoke of "three shooters"? What happened to those two other guys? Hasan was armed,according to news, with two pistols. Lets see, 9mm, 15 to 17 rounds each, means he'd need a minimum of 10 clips to shoot over 100 rounds.And Walter Reed is in "lock down" mode, having been told "not to talk to the FBI." WTF is that all about and isn't it criminal NOT to talk when the FBI asks? There's way more here than meets the eye.

Nonsense, 18:47, the

Nonsense, 18:47, the existence of lone terrorists does not preclude the existence of terrorist networks. This shooting in no way indicates an increase in global terror from 9/11.

Now the USA can understand

Now the USA can understand graphically the effect of its bombs on civilian Arab populations. May it (the US of A) learn from this shooting rampage. May it learn to respect the sovereignty of foreign lands. May it cure its addiction to oil that drives the USA into Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq. The lesson here -- U.S.militarism provokes unrestrained, justifiable rage and hostility in those who empathize with -- that is, feel for -- the slaughtered innocents abroad.

I don't think you have to

I don't think you have to look for background reasons for Major Hassan's "losing it." I suspect that anybody, psychiatrist or not, who had been listening for a while to PSTD patients, hearing their descriptions of the horrors of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, working with them to recover from the horrors they had lived through, and then finding out that he was going to be deployed to the same hell hole would flip. The fact that he is a Muslim, and shouted "Allah Akbar" is not relevant, but just another talking point for the imaginative but not necessarily thinking media.

So, Jade, how much oil are

So, Jade, how much oil are we getting from Afghanistan exactly?

If a terrorist can act

If a terrorist can act alone, then I think that makes every criminal a terrorist....is that really how you think? Seems we can get confused in defining such a vague term. This is why the neocons use vague words like 'terrorism' to scare voters because the definition is always changing. For example, Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein are today called terrorists by the same neocons who previously armed, funded and supported them back when they were instead called 'freedom fighters'. Many forget the Taliban and Mujahadeen visited Presidents Reagan and Bush 43 in the Oval Office to discuss fuel pipelines as "allies". But I don't think Reagan and Bush are terrorists, just former associates of terrorists.

One question I'd like

One question I'd like answered: what medications is Major Nidal taking? Any SSRIs? Tamiflu? There are MANY meds he could reasonably be taking to help him manage the stresses of his job, or simple, current health concerns, that could push him off the straight-and-narrow path of "normal" behavior, and into extreme behaviors. This man has faced heavy and wearing stresses for some time. We do not know how he was coping with them, and until we do know more, we cannot understand what brought him to his actions.

Here's a hypothetical.

Here's a hypothetical. Suppose Hasan is gathering intel from the returning soldiers he is treating and sending it back to the enemy. To be told he going to be deployed to Afganistan means his intel gathering mission is at an end. So he shouts Allahu akbar and starts shooting, as a commited terrorist might do. Now do our authorities circulate this theory of Hasan's motivation to the general public? Furthermore, since he was not armed with weapons capeble of firing 100 rounds will a further investigation reveal that in the confusion some of the casualties were "blue on blue", that is caused by excited police shooting at anything that moved? Just wondering.

There are many who are

There are many who are convinced that most shrinks are psychologically disturbed. Maybe they are right in the case of Maj. Hasan?

Until Major Hasan speaks,

Until Major Hasan speaks, all of the writing, talking is mere speculation and speculation does not equal facts.

I was disgusted the other

I was disgusted the other day when I caught part of President's Obama's remarks on this subject on the radio. He used the word "cowardly" without respect for its dictionary definition, just as stupid, uneducated people used it that way about the 9/11 terrorists. He also said that Hasan will be punished "in this world and the next". Is this pandering to the right-wing Christian element or what? Does he really believe in hell and that a sick, confused, tormented soul like Hasan deserves to be tormented for eternity after death? Is this the Obama who was going to bring about change? He's spewing hatred just in case some right-wing nutbars think he might be "soft on terrror". Why have I heard no one comment on this?