I think everybody has a level of professionalism and ethics, and they want to do a good job. They want to do the things that they're asked to do. In the military it's perhaps even more pronounced, because everyone wears a rank, and you want to be seen to be carrying out orders efficiently and effectively, solving problems, and all the rest of it.
Quite apart from getting into any speculation about any nefarious motives, which I'm not convinced exist here, I think it's just—and somebody used the word earlier—an abundance of caution. I think people freeze up a bit when these things happen, and they may start acting in ways in which they wouldn't normally, and you can see that in the nature of the documents that are released. Documents on detainees that I received in June are much less redacted than detainee-related documents that I'm getting now. In fact, sometimes I get two versions of the same document—a version that was released in June, and a version that's released now, and one you almost can't read because it's been so redacted.
Part of my job as a researcher is to go through and compare, and to keep track of changes. That's why I said I'll be interested to see what's waiting in my mailbox at home, and, if they sent me a copy of the redacted report we're discussing today, whether or not the redactions are going to be the same as the ones that were given to the professor.