Played By: Alexander
Siddig
Rank: Lieutenant
Current assignment: Chief Medical Officer, Deep Space Nine
Full Name: Julian Subatoi Bashir
Year of birth: 2341
Education: Starfleet Academy and Medical School, 2359-2369
Marital status: Single
Office: Infirmary, DS9 Promenade
Starfleet Career Summary
2369 -- With brevet rank of lieutenant junior grade, assigned as CMO
to Deep Space Nine under Cmdr. Benjamin Sisko
2372 -- Promoted to lieutenant
Psychological Profile: Report of Starfleet Counselor Telnorri,
Bajoran Sector
Although medically brilliant, Bashir has come a long way in his
personal development and maturity since arriving among the first
Starfleet contingent at Deep Space Nine, his first post-Academy
assignment, at age 27 on SD 46390.1.
Bashir first recalls wanting to be a doctor at age 5, when he sewed
up his teddy bear Kukulaka as his first "patient." Five years
later, while living on Invernia II where his father, a Federation
diplomat, was stationed, a massive ionic storm caused the needless death
of a same-aged native girl; it was an incident which he credited as his
first real push to study medicine - though not before overcoming a
childhood fear of doctors. Their seeming power over life and death led
him to break the mystery by becoming one, when he realized he just
wanted to help people. Even so, he seriously considered a career in
tennis before realizing he was no pro. He was a star athlete in the
sister sport of racquetball, though, and later played on the Academy
team. Both Bashir's parents were still alive in 2370.
Bashir chose a medical career with Starfleet over his one true love
in life to date, the ballerina Palis Delon, and the chance to be a chief
of surgery in Paris within five years at the medical complex her father
headed. He still sometimes regrets it, but he's not spoken to her since
he left Earth. One of his forebears, a great-grandmother Whatley, was in
Starfleet.
At Starfleet Academy, where the required reading helped him recognize
the so-called mirror universe instantly, one friend was an Andorian,
Erib. He also studied meditation with Isam Helewa.
In medical school, Bashir kept diaries revealing his fear of failure,
his drive to graduate at the top and to have a career in Starfleet. He
had designed a candy bar in med school whose nutritional value was even
higher than that of Starfleet combat rations; interestingly, he was
first in his class in pediatric medicine. With natural energy and
stockiness, Bashir was a star player in racquetball, serving as captain
of the Starfleet Medical School team when it won the sector championship
his last year there in 2368-69; in the finals he defeated a Vulcan.
A trick question during orals at Starfleet Medical about ganglia
dropped him to class salutatorian - but it was good enough to net him
his prized DS9 assignment: heading for the "frontier" where
heroes are made. The slip-up allowed Elizabeth Lense to finish first,
later confiding she envied his long-term post. She had always confused
him with an Andorian when mis-introduced.
Among the DS9 personalities, Bashir was immediately drawn to the
Cardassian clothier Garak, hitting it off immediately with the former
spy and his air of mystery. In ongoing debates at their weekly Replimat
lunches, he discusses comparative literature, drama, philosophy and
politics. A year Bashir saved his life, confirming his former spy career
in ending Garak's toxic build-up caused by the shock of breaking
dependence on the pleasure endorphins released by an altered
pain-immunizing cranial implant. He braved meeting former Obsidian Order
chief Enabran Tain to get the Cardassian medical data needed to
synthesize new leukocytes in time.
His green cockiness and casualness at times has especially annoyed
the less patient veterans like Kira and O'Brien. Under the effects of
Lwaxana's Zanthi Fever he developed a crush on Kira - perhaps due to a
latent attraction. He and O'Brien did gradually form a bond, helped
along by his saving O'Brien's life; the chief even calls him Julian as
he'd once requested. They played 70 games of racquetball in the first
two months Molly and Keiko left for the Bajor survey in 2371; after 106
games their sport of choice becomes the simpler setup of darts. Still,
he's a poor lunch debate substitute for Garak. When he feels his old
Starfleet Medical rival Elizabeth Lense has snubbed him, he got drunk
with O'Brien and sang "Jerusalem." In 2372 he wrote a holo-program
for he and O'Brien, role-playing RAF pilots in the Battle of Britain
during Earth's World War II.
Bashir's earnestness was not mistaken with Dax, for whom he developed
a crush en route to DS9. He ignored her aloofness and even patient
amusement and for a while misjudges Sisko, feeling him a fellow suitor.
Though that crush lingered for some time - he loaned her the diaries he
kept in medical school so she might understand him better - he
eventually developed a strong fond friendship for her. The hardest act
he's faced was cutting Jadzia's link to Dax at gunpoint and forwarding
the symbiont to Verad, its hijacker, while frantically keeping Jadzia
alive afterward against all odds - including a dressing-down of his
Klingon guard. He later saved her again, taking the risk with Sisko to
uncover the Joran Belar scandal at the Symbiosis Commission on Trill.
Echoing other single career officers, he feels marriage only leaves
behind a family destined unfairly to worry about him on duty.
Significant romantic encounters, aside from his "true love" of
the ballerina Palis Delon, included a brief but warm affair with the
Elaysian Ens. Melora Pazlar in 2365 and an ongoing current relationship
with Leeta, a Bajoran Dabo girl at Quark's.
His was the body kidnapped by dying Kobliad criminal Vantika to house
his consciousness, and after a usually fatal telepathic assault from a
Lethean, he fought through a resulting coma back to consciousness with
an hallucination peopled with his friends to represent personality
aspects. He's watching his weight at the time of Dax's zhian'tara in
late 2370.
He considers himself a history buff but is not big on 21st-century
Earth, calling it too depressing. Though an aficionado of food such as
Klingon racht, even alive, and Vulcan plomeek soup; he doesn't like
beets. He once saw a "memorable" exhibit of Seyetik's huge
murals on Ligobis X and has learned about Bajoran music since arriving
on DS9. Urged on by Garak, he has tried Cardassian literature but finds
it boringly predictable - including Cardassian enigma tales, as opposed
to Terran mysteries. He also likes live theatre, but feels human plays
of the last century are in decline. Tennis is his favorite sport, even
though he played racquetball in college, and still does with O'Brien, as
well as darts. He also loves puzzles.
Professional Assessment: Report of Starfleet Medical:
Bashir's accomplishments as a young doctor, much less Starfleet
officer, are summed up by his Carrington Award nomination in 2371 - the
youngest in its history - for his "audacious and
groundbreaking" bio-molecular replication work. Bashir reportedly
tried valiantly not to expect to win despite the best well-wishes,
feeling himself far too young to win a career-recognition award. Despite
that, he had worked on an acceptance speech.
He is cool in a medical crisis and will firmly take charge; he keeps
a medical kit by his bed and won a commendation for his rescue of three
ambassadors touring the wormhole area during a fire. He was close to
discovering his own cure for the aphasia virus before succumbing,
forensically discovered the secret of Ibudan's cloning, and wasn't
fooled by a death-faking parasitic infection. Sometimes, though, his
medical skills may go to his head. Other medical accomplishments include
opening the hospital of Bajor's first but short-lived Gamma Quadrant
colony and bringing to life the once-discredited theory of neuromuscular
adaptation. His paper on immuno-therapy applied to a case study of
T-cell anomalies on Bajor was also impressive.
Bashir reported that his medical conscience was wrung out over
medical miracles, experimental drugs and the ethics of prolonging life
when he brought the critically injured Bareil literally back from the
dead long enough to finish the Bajor-Cardassia peace talks. The doctor
wisely drew the line at a full, radical positronic brain implant.
Personal Commendations: Report by Capt. Benjamin Sisko, DS9/U.S.S.
Defiant
Apart from his medical routine, Bashir trains to be a well-rounded
officer, having taken engineering extension courses at Starfleet medical
and worked to improve his tactical skills, phaser marksmanship and even
melee ability. He can handle standard Runabout scanners, long-range
sensors and the shield controls sight unseen on the Federation freighter
Norkova, and even repaired the computer power system on the downed
Yangtzee Kiang; he also eventually learned enough to discover the
original size of deleted files, and can write holo-programs.
During his second year at the station he could pilot a Runabout
alone, even in combat, and assumed the Defiant's sensors at Tactical in
O'Brien's absence and took over the sluggish helm to implement evasive
patterns. He was wounded by energy-weapons fire while rescuing the
beaten Kira from The Circle, then led a successful guerrilla band into
capturing the first six "POWs" of the would-be Bajoran coup on
DS9. He learned surveillance techniques from Garak and once tried them
out on Quark while Odo's away. During the initial Dominion invasion
scare, he lead a drill team sweeping the Promenade and saved Odo with a
well-hit phaser to his attacker during the Klingon boarding attempt.
Professional Assessment UPDATE:
Report of Starfleet Medical, SD 50500:
Dr. Bashir continues to rack up an impressive record in medicine,
both in the research lab and in the field. We are incredibly impressed
with his action to single-handedly cure the plague on Boranis III in
just three days, and cite him for the assistance offered at Ajilon Prime
early in 2373 during the Archanis Sector skirmishes with the Klingons.
His improvisation to save the life of the O'Brien baby with a fetal
transporter transplant in to the Bajoran major was also well done and
should be a standard for study in years to come in the field of both
transporter applications and cross-species reproduction.
However, we reserve judgment on his controversial paper proposing
that prion replenishment could be inhibited by quantum resonance
effects, and leave it to further study to shed more if any light on the
subject.
Even so, Dr. Bashir continues to prove himself an all-around model of
the Starfleet physician, and should be considered for future upgrades to
the EMH development program at Jupiter Station.
Personal note: Capt. B. Sisko
SD 50415
Though it did not win him any accolades, Dr. Bashir's victory late
last year in controlling the Quickening plague for a planet's next
generation after Dominion bio-tampering was an emotional milestone. I
cannot gauge the effect of this long sobering struggle, but this CO can
tell it took a toll. Julian has been a changed man since then, and while
we have always appreciated his camaraderie and talents I feel we all
have been the better for it.
Meanwhile, it seems I owe my life at least two times over during the
past year to our good doctor: once just for the sport of his
"secret agent" holo-program. And from his subsequent
confidences it seems I don't owe Mr. Garak anything for the help.
As for the second incident, I cannot fault him for preserving my
neural system over the promise of the "visions" I was
receiving a few weeks ago regarding Bajor's future, much less my son
Jake for authorizing it. I would likely have done the same thing for my
father, had I been in Jake's shoes. Still, the passion I felt, the
universe I sensed, has been taken from me, and I feel myself taking it
out not on Jake but on the doctor -- a action I know in my head is
wholly without cause or merit. Still, it is there, and I will have to
deal with it. In no way is it my intent to allow that event to affect
our future dealings, or his opportunities here on the station or in
Starfleet. I would be happy to share his Tarkalean tea anytime. |