FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) — A military mental health doctor facing deployment overseas opened fire at the Fort Hood Army post on Thursday, setting off on a rampage that killed 13 people and left 31 wounded. The violence was believed to be the worst mass shooting in history at a U.S. military base.
The shooting began around 1:30 p.m., when shots were fired at the base's Soldier Readiness Center, where soldiers who are about to be deployed or who are returning undergo medical screening, said Lt. Gen. Bob Cone at Fort Hood.
President Barack Obama called the shooting "a horrific outburst of violence." He said it is a tragedy to lose a soldier overseas and even more horrifying when they come under fire at an Army base on American soil.
"We will make sure that we get answers to every single question about this horrible incident," the commander in chief said in Washington. "We are going to stay on this."
A law enforcement official identified the shooting suspect as Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case publicly.
It was unclear what the motive was, though it appeared he was upset about a scheduled deployment. U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison said the Army major was about to deploy overseas, though it was unclear if he was headed to Iraq or Afghanistan and when he was scheduled to leave. Hutchison said she was told about the upcoming deployment by generals based at Fort Hood.
Retired Army Col. Terry Lee told Fox News that he worked with Hasan, who had hoped Obama would pull troops out of Afghanistan and Iraq. Lee said Hasan got into frequent arguments with others in the military who supported the wars, and had tried hard to prevent his pending deployment.
Military officials say Hasan, 39, was a psychiatrist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center for six years before being transferred to the Texas base in July. The officials, who had access to Hasan's military record, said he received a poor performance evaluation while at Walter Reed. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because military records are confidential.
The Virginia-born soldier was single with no children. He graduated from Virginia Tech, where he was a member of the ROTC and earned a bachelor's degree in biochemistry in 1997. He received his medical degree from the military's Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md., in 2001. At Walter Reed, he did his internship, residency and a fellowship.
Officials were investigating whether Hasan was his birth name or if he may have changed his name, possibly as part of a conversion to Islam. However, they were not certain of his religion.
The Soldier Readiness Center holds hundreds of people and is one of the most populated parts of the base, said Steve Moore, a spokesman for III Corps at Fort Hood. Nearby there are barracks and a food center where there are fast food chains. The center is part of the largest active duty armored post in the United States. Covering 339 square miles, the post halfway between Austin and Waco was home to about 52,000 troops as of earlier this year.
A graduation ceremony for soldiers who finished college courses while deployed was going on nearby at the time of the shooting, said Sgt. Rebekah Lampman, a Fort Hood spokeswoman.
Greg Schanepp, Carter's regional director in Texas, was at Fort Hood, said John Stone, a spokesman for U.S. Rep. John Carter, whose district includes the Army post. Schanepp was at a graduation ceremony when a soldier who had been shot in the back came running toward him and alerted him of the shooting, Stone said. The soldier told Schanepp not to go in the direction of the shooter, he said.
Soldiers don't carry weapons with them unless they're doing training exercises, said Spc. Jerry Richard, 27, who works at the building where the shooting happened — though he was not on post at the time.
"Overseas you are ready for it. But here you can't even defend yourself," he said.
Two other soldiers taken into custody following the deadly rampage have been released, Fort Hood spokesman Christopher Haug said. "They're not believed to be involved in the incident," Haug said. He said a third person was in custody, however.
The wounded were dispersed among hospitals in central Texas, Cone said.
Lisa Pfund of Random Lake, Wis., says her daughter, 19-year-old Amber Bahr, was shot in the stomach but was in stable condition. "We know nothing, just that she was shot in the belly," Pfund told The Associated Press. She couldn't provide more details and only spoke with emergency personnel.
Pfund said Bahr joined the reserves when she was 17 to earn money for school and loved being in the military even though none of her friends were interested in joining the Army.
A Fort Hood spokesman said he could not immediately confirm any identities of the injured.
"I ask that all of you keep these families and these individuals in your prayers today," Texas Gov. Rick Perry said.
The shootings on the Texas military base stirred memories of other recent mass shootings in the United States, including 13 dead at a New York immigrant center in April, 10 killed during a gunman's rampage across Alabama in March and 32 killed in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history at Virginia Tech in 2007.
Around the country, some bases stepped up security precautions, but no others were locked down.
verified I agree with taxpayer on the gun issue. I hate violence, I don't like the idea of guns, but I believe there are more good people in this country than there are bad. If the good people are trained with gun safety and such I believe we would have a better chance of defending ourselves.
As the saying goes, "Gun's don't kill people, people kill people", I was never a gun activist when I was young, but times are changing..
My thoughts and pryers are with the people at Fort Hood, and their friends and families.
Military officials say Hasan, 39, was a psychiatrist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center for six years before being transferred to the Texas base in July. The officials, who had access to Hasan's military record, said he received a poor performance evaluation while at Walter Reed.
His cousin said that he has wanted to be in the military, against his parents wishes he joined after high school. According to the cousin he was fine, enjoying a six figure salary and his worst "fear" was gong to war.
Hmmm, I recall bloggers bashing cops in a story relating to stress recently and if they can't handle it, get out of the job. He;s surrounded by patients? In a air conditioned setting, in a hospital, in Texas. NOT in the sands or mountains of a war zone.
Guess it's different for a muslim.
Oh, speaking of Muslim, he was against the war and spoke out loud about the Muslim people standing up to the American aggressors. THis from a colonel that worked with the bum.
The irony, they could protect themselves overseas but not in the State of Texas!
Really? Too many guns? I think not. If every one of those soldiers would have been armed this idiot would have been dead after he fired his first round. If it wasn't a gun it would have been a car or a bus that he used as his tool. Don't blame guns, blame evil idiots.
Not enough guns.If others were armed he might have been stopped sooner.Criminals love un armed victims.

A horrible preventable tragedy. Apparently he was taunted for months for being Muslim and his superiors did nothing. He had his car sprayed with graffiti denigrating him for being Muslim. Hardly surprising that a doctor who is surrounded with psychiatric patients all day and subjected to this kind of abuse snapped. No excuse for killing 12 people however.
Any problem that can't be solved with taxcuts, republicans pretend doesn't exist.
You're right. The army should have canned him a long time ago.
Being taunted about ones faith does not give one a reason to slaughter anyone. Psychiatrists and psychologists are around troubled people every day. That's their job. Nobody forced him to become an army psychiatrist. When you sign on the dotted line, you go where they say to go whether you like it or not.
And I don't buy that the army didn't look into his accusations about being taunted.
John A. Chick
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be." -- Thomas Jefferson in a letter to Colonel Charles Yancey (January 6, 1816)
Yes this was preventable, I agree.
This article here does not show about him being harassed for being Muslim but MSNBC. com does:
But Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, the 39-year-old man accused of Thursday’s mass shooting at Fort Hood, Tex., started having second thoughts about his military career a few years ago after other soldiers harassed him for being a Muslim, he told relatives in Virginia.
What is this country coming to? Are we destroying the younger generations?
There has to be a better way...
Worried
. ...i second that emotion . Too many Wacos in TX . Too many guns , too . . . . ...) ;>*
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Hood
Too many guns ??? If there were too many guns , then they would have at least had the chance to fire back and alot less people would have been injured or killed in this tradegy . Too many guns isn't the problem - too many "Wacos" out there (not just in Texas) that have guns is the problem . Don't crucify the many responsible gun owners because of the handful of idiots out there who want to be stupid .
May God Bless all the families that are effected by this tragedy
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