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US Navy Secretary Richard Spencer fired over Seal case
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Navy Secretary Richard Spencer said he and Trump did not have the
same view of "discipline"
US Defence Secretary Mark Esper has
fired Navy chief Richard Spencer over his handling of the case of a Navy Seal
demoted for misconduct.
The case of Edward Gallagher, who was
convicted for posing with a corpse, had sparked tensions between President
Donald Trump and military officials.
The Navy officer had been due to face
a disciplinary review where he could have been stripped of his Seals
membership.
There have been differing accounts as
to why Mr. Spencer was asked to resign.
Mr
Esper said he had lost confidence in the
Navy secretary because of his private conversations with the White House
contradicted his public position.
However, Mr. Trump said he was not
happy with "cost overruns" and how Chief Petty Officer Gallagher's trial was run and suggested this was why Mr. Spencer was fired.
Meanwhile, in a strongly-worded the letter, Mr. Spencer said it was apparent that he and Mr. Trump did not have the
same view of "good order and discipline".
How
did we get here?
Chief Gallagher was accused of
stabbing an unarmed 17-year-old Islamic State group prisoner to death and
randomly shooting civilians while serving in Iraq in 2017.
He was acquitted of those charges and
convicted only of the lesser charge of posing with the IS prisoner's corpse.
§ A murder trial that tore a band of brothers apart
For that he was demoted, but
President Trump later reinstated his rank.
Chief Gallagher was formally notified
by Navy leaders last week that he would face a disciplinary review which could
result in his being stripped of his membership of the Seals.
Mr. Trump tweeted his disapproval of
this on Thursday, saying the Navy would "NOT be taking away Warfighter and
Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher's Trident Pin".
Mr. Trump has drawn criticism from
parts of the military after pardoning army officers convicted of war crimes.
Why
was Spencer fired?
On Sunday, the defense department
said Mr. Esper had asked Mr. Spencer to resign due to "his lack of
candor".
Mr. Spencer had made private proposals
to the White House, which he did not share with Mr. Esper, and had contradicted
his public position, Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffmann said in a statement.
According
to the Washington Post, Mr. Spencer
had privately suggested to White House officials that if they did not interfere
with proceedings against Chief Petty Officer Gallagher, he would ensure that
the officer retired as a Navy Seal.
However, the New York Times quoted
defense officials as saying that Mr. Trump had been angered by reports that Mr
Spencer had threatened to resign if the president intervened in the case.
US
Navy Seal accused of killing IS teen
§ US war crimes accused wins the pre-trial release
Mr. Trump tweeted on Sunday that he
was not happy with how the Navy had handled Chief Gallagher's trial, and high
costs in the Navy's contracting procedures.
"Therefore, Secretary of the
Navy Richard Spencer's services have been terminated," he said, adding:
"Eddie will retire peacefully with all of the honors that he has earned,
including his Trident pin."
In his resignation letter to
President Trump, Mr. Spencer wrote: "The rule of law is what sets us apart
from our adversaries. Good order and discipline are what has enabled our victory
against foreign tyranny time and again."
"Unfortunately it has become
apparent that in this respect, I no longer share the same understanding with
the Commander in Chief who appointed me, in regards to the key principle of
good order and discipline."
"I cannot in good conscience
obey an order that I believe violates the sacred oath I took."
Senior Democratic Senator Chuck
Schumer commended Richard Spencer for "standing up to President Trump when
he was wrong, something too many in this administration and the Republican
Party are scared to do".
What
does this mean for Gallagher?
Navy Seal Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher was accused of war crimes in Iraq
Mr. Esper has instructed that Chief
Gallagher be allowed to retire as a Navy Seal, retaining his Trident pin which
symbolizes membership of the elite unit.
While Mr Esper had wanted the disciplinary process to "play itself out objectively", he had decided
to let Chief Gallagher keep his pin "given the events of the last few
days", defense spokesman Jonathan Hoffman said in a statement.
He had concluded that Chief Gallagher
could not receive fair treatment in his case from the Navy, AP news reported.
"Secretary Esper will meet with
Navy Under Secretary (now Acting Secretary) Thomas Modley and the Chief of
Naval Operations Admiral Michael Gilday on Monday morning to discuss the way
ahead," the statement said.
Chief Gallagher told the conservative
Fox News channel on Sunday that he intends to retire next Saturday.



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