Rick Baccus

Rick Baccus

Army Brigadier General Rick Baccus received a regular Army commission in 1974 as an Infantry Officer through the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) program and immediately entered active duty.

Education

Recent assignments

Military Decorations and Awards

[1]

Camp X-Ray

On March 28, 2002, General Baccus took command of Joint Task Force 160 where he was the head of the Military Police at Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He was removed from his post less than 7 months later. The US Army said General Baccus had been replaced on October 9, 2002, as part of a reorganization of Camp Delta - where prisoners were moved from Camp X-Ray.[2] Major-General Reginald Centracchio told the Washington Post that he stripped General Baccus of his duties as head of military police because he had lost trust and confidence in Baccus as a commander.[3] However, in a Frontline interview that aired on August 27, 2005, General Baccus responded to a question relating to his “being sacked” in this manner:

Baccus: “Well, first of all, any reports of my being sacked are absolutely untrue. I was awarded the Defense Superior Service Medal for my time frame at Guantanamo. I was given an outstanding officer evaluation report upon my leaving. And as you may be aware, Joint Task Force 160 was given the Joint Unit Meritorious Award for their time period in Guantanamo, of which I was the commander of that joint task force seven out of the nine months in the period of time of the award. So to say that I was sacked, I think, is a falsified impression placed in the press by the usual "unnamed sources" that refuse to come forward. ...”.
Baccus:” …Within several days after I left, that’s when they [the Military Intelligence team] floated the first memo about how they wanted to operate differently.”
Frontline: “And what was that? “
Baccus: “That is what I read in the [Gen. Randall M.] Schmidt report,[4] but that's the one where they suggested they have other means [by] which to interrogate the detainees. “
“…The question is whether or not if we do [things allowed by the Schmidt report] to a detainee, are we willing to have somebody else do that to an American? If that's acceptable in our country, then fine. If not, then we need to rethink about what we're doing.”[5]

After General Baccus’ departure from Guantanamo Bay, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld gave the Military Intelligence Team control over the Military Police and all aspects of Camp X-Ray and, later, Camp Delta. Major General Geoffrey Miller was appointed commander.[2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.