WASHINGTON – Who, or what, is behind the “purge”
of top-level U.S. military officers during the Obama administration, with
estimates of the number of senior officers fired during the last five years
edging toward 200?
According to Retired Army Maj. Gen. Paul E.
Vallely, formerly the deputy commanding general of the Pacific Command, who has
served as a Fox News senior military analyst , a good part of the blame belongs
to Obama’s close adviser, Valerie Jarrett. Rampant “political correctness” due
to her influence, Vallely tells WND, is now permeating the military and
negatively affecting everyone from top generals to the ranks of the enlisted.
WND has been reporting
on the surge of firings, suspensions and dismissals of key military commanders
under Obama, including just a day ago, when the commander of the U.S. Army
Garrison Japan was summarily relieved of his duties.
So far, at least nine generals and flag officers
have been relieved of duty under Obama just this calendar year – widely viewed
as an extraordinary number.
Jarrett, a Chicago lawyer with far-left roots,
is one of Obama’s closest advisers, and has been throughout his career, well
before his presidential campaign and Oval Office occupancy. She has shadowed
his career, largely staying out of the limelight, but is today widely
recognized as perhaps the single most influential person, aside from wife
Michelle, on Barack Obama.
Vallely suggested her influence is forcing
senior officers to watch everything military personnel say and do. Officially,
the White House calls her a senior adviser with responsibilities for the
offices of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs, but insiders agree
her influence on the president is unique and powerful.
Rep. Jason Chaffetz,
R-Utah, says in a story by The Blaze, that Jarrett influences nearly every policy issue at the White
House.
“She seems to have her tentacles into every
issue and every topic,” Chaffetz says. “Her name ultimately always comes up.”
The Washington Post has
written about Jarrett as the president’s “mysterious” adviser.
And author Ed Klein,
former editor-in-chief of the New York Times magazine, said in a Washington Times report that Jarrett was the secret “architect” of the Obama strategy to
shut down the government and blame it on congressional Republicans.
“She convinced the president that a government
shutdown and default offered a great opportunity to demonize the Republicans
and help the Democrats win back a majority in the House of Representatives in
2014,” said Klein.
London’s Daily Mail newspaper notes that Jarrett’s insider nickname is “Night Stalker” because of her
exclusive, late-night access to the presidential family’s private quarters.
According to Vallely, Obama is “intentionally
weakening and gutting our military, Pentagon and reducing us as a superpower,
and anyone in the ranks who disagrees or speaks out is being purged.”
Vallely served in the Vietnam War and retired in
1993 as deputy Commanding General, Pacific Command.
Today, he is chairman of the Military Committee
for the Center for Security Policy and is co-author of the book “Endgame: The
Blueprint for Victory in the War on Terror.”
Vallely equated the current treatment of U.S.
senior military officers watching over what is said and done among mid-level
officers and enlisted ranks to that of the “political commissars from the
Communist era.”
For example, said Vallely, “Col. Dooley, who was
relieved of duty … can’t even talk about radical Islam and other issues that
the Obama administration is putting out.”
He is referring to U.S. Army Lt. Col. Matthew
Dooley, a 1994 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, who was
relieved of duty as a military instructor after being publicly condemned by
Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Dooley was relieved because of what was referred
to as the negative way Islam was portrayed in an approved course titled
“Perspectives on Islam and Islamic Radicalism.”
Action was taken against him after 57 Muslim
organizations in an Oct. 19, 2011, letter to the Department of Defense demanded
that all training materials they judged to be offensive to Islam be “purged”
and the instructors be “effectively disciplined.”
The controversy generated a legal claim on
behalf of Dooley by the Thomas More Law Center, where Richard Thompson,
president, said, “The way they’re treating him now is not only a total
miscarriage of justice on a personal level, but it also is really removing an
effective combat leader from the Army, and it ultimately effects the national
security of the United States.”
In another case
considered by Obama critics to exemplify his demands for radical political
correctness in the U.S. military, Senior Master Sgt. Phillip Monk was relieved of his position
for refusing to agree with the homosexual agenda of his commanding officer, a
lesbian.
“It’s now reaching the point
it’s not acceptable to think something,” attorney Mike Berry of Liberty
Institute told WND about the
case.
The conflict began when Monk objected to the
plans of his commander at Lackland Air Force Base to severely punish a
supervised staff sergeant who had expressed his religious objections to
homosexuality to trainees.
During their conversation, the commander ordered
Monk to reveal his personal views on homosexuality. Monk claims he then was
relieved of his position because his views differed from the commander’s.
Berry explained, “We’re now at this juncture …
if you don’t believe, or think in a particular manner, that’s going to be held
against you.”
Of the current atmosphere, a sailor who recently
returned from sea duty told Vallely he gets more instruction on sexual
harassment than he does in how to handle weapons.
“The planned agenda is to squash any dialogue in
the ranks on any issue on which the administration disagrees,” Vallely said.
He said a similar move has now taken place
against officers in the Central Intelligence Agency in a congressional probe on
the Sept.11, 2012, terrorist attack on the special mission in Benghazi.
The general pointed out that at least two CIA
officers who were to testify recently were told a few weeks ago to keep quiet
or they could lose their jobs.
“It is easier to do this to military personnel,”
he said. “No one on the civilian side is purged.”
As a consequence of this White House-generated
initiative, Vallely said the effect has been a major loss of morale in which
soldiers believe they have lost their First Amendment rights.
The intimidation extends also to retired
generals and mid-level officers who want to get jobs with defense contractors,
according to Vallely, who said many even in retirement are intimidated, since
it can affect their ability to get a government contract.
Even defense contractors are discouraging any
talk within their corporations that disparage Obama’s agenda, he added.
“These are just some aspects on how our military
is being decimated by telling them either to shut your mouth or you won’t get a
job,” Vallely told WND.
In addition to Vallely,
a number of prominent retired generals – from Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin, a
founder of the Army’s elite Delta Force, to Medal of Honor recipient Maj. Gen.
Patrick Henry Brady – have also gone on the record with WND on this issue.
They’ve described Obama’s actions as nothing less
than an all-out attack on America’s armed forces.
Likewise, retired Navy Capt. Joseph John tells
WND that the “bigger picture” is that “the U.S. Armed Forces have been under
relentless attack by the occupant of the Oval Office for five years.”
A Naval Academy
graduate, John had three tours of duty in Vietnam, served as an al-Qaida expert
for the FBI, and was a commanding officer with SEALs embedded on special
operations. As chairman of Combat
Veterans For Congress PAC
(Political Action Committee), he has helped elect 20 combat veterans to
Congress.
“I believe there are
more than 137 officers who have been forced out or given bad evaluation reports
so they will never make Flag (officer), because of their failure to comply to
certain views,” John told WND.
“The truly sad story is that many of the
brightest graduates of the three major service academies witnessing what the
social experiment on diversity … is doing to the U.S. military, are leaving the
service after five years,” he said. “We are being left with an officer corps
that can be made to be more compliant, that is, exactly what Obama needs to
effect his long range goals for the U.S. military.”
In an email to WND, John outlined what he termed
“a very few of the most egregious” aspects of Obama’s “attack” on the military
over the past five years.
He referred specifically to the Rules of
Engagement in combat that were put in place after Obama took office, asserting
that the changes resulted in very high casualty rates in Afghanistan, including
the loss of 17 members of SEAL Team 6 in one incident.
“The Rules of Engagement precluded the use of
suppression fire at a landing zone,” John said.
Echoing what other high-ranking officers have
told WND, he said the Pentagon policy of repealing “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell”
resulted in the first openly “gay” “major military force in the world.” The
development has brought about “massive” sexual assaults on “thousands of
straight military male personnel that have been covered up,” he said.
If John’s comments about Obama sound dire, they
are no more so than those expressed to WND in recent days by top generals.
Brady, recipient of the U.S. military’s highest
decoration, the Medal of Honor, said Obama’s agenda is decimating the morale of
the U.S. ranks to the point members no longer feel prepared to fight or have
the desire to win.
“There is no doubt he [Obama] is intent on
emasculating the military and will fire anyone who disagrees with him” over
such issues as “homosexuals, women in foxholes, the Obama sequester,” Brady
told WND.
“They are purging everyone, and if you want to
keep your job, just keep your mouth shut,” another military source told WND.
Not only are military service members being
demoralized and the ranks’ overall readiness being reduced by the Obama
administration’s purge of key leaders, colonels – those lined up in rank to
replace outgoing generals – are quietly taking their careers in other
directions.
Boykin, who was a founding member of Delta Force
and later deputy undersecretary of defense for intelligence under President
George W. Bush, says it is worrying that four-star generals are being retired
at the rate that has occurred under Obama.
“Over the past three years, it is unprecedented
for the number of four-star generals to be relieved of duty, and not
necessarily relieved for cause,” Boykin said.
“I believe there is a purging of the military,”
he said. “The problem is worse than we have ever seen.”
The future of the military is becoming more and
more of concern, added Boykin, since colonels who would become generals are
also being relieved of duty if they show that they’re not going to support
Obama’s agenda, which critics have described as socialist.
“I talk to a lot of folks who don’t support
where Obama is taking the military, but in the military they can’t say
anything,” Boykin said.
As a consequence, he said, the lower grades have
decided to leave, having been given the signal that there is no future in the
military for them.
Brady, who was a
legendary “Dust Off” air ambulance pilot in Vietnam and detailed his
experiences in his book, “Dead Men Flying: Victory in Viet Nam,” told WND, “The problem is military people will
seldom, while on duty, go on the record over such issues, and many will not
ever, no matter how true. I hear from many off the record who are upset with
the current military leadership and some are leaving and have left in the
past.”
Brady referred to additional problems in today’s
military including “girly-men leadership [and] medals for not shooting and
operating a computer. This president will never fight if there is any reason to
avoid it and with a helpless military he can just point to our weakness and
shrug his shoulders.”
WND reported that three of the nine firings by
Obama this year alone were linked to the controversy surrounding the Sep. 11,
2012, terrorist attack on the CIA special mission in Benghazi, Libya.
In one case, U.S. Army Gen. Carter Ham, who
commanded U.S. African Command when the consulate was attacked and four
Americans were killed, was highly critical of the decision by the State Department
not to send in reinforcements.
Obama has insisted there were no reinforcements
available that night.
But Ham contends reinforcements could have been
sent in time, and he said he never was given a stand-down order. However,
others contend that he was given the order but defied it. He ultimately was
relieved of his command and retired.
Now, new information in the Washington Times
reveals there were Delta Force personnel in Tripoli at the time of the attack
and two members volunteered to be dispatched to Benghazi to assist in
protecting the Benghazi compound, contrary to stand-down orders from the State
Department.
Another flag officer involved in the Benghazi
matter – which remains under congressional investigation – was Rear Adm.
Charles Gaouette. He commanded the Carrier Strike Group.
He contends aircraft could have been sent to
Libya in time to help the Americans under fire. He later was removed from his
post for alleged profanity and making “racially insensitive comments.”
Army Major Gen. Ralph Baker was the commander of
the Combined Joint Task Force Horn of Africa at Camp Lemonier in Djibouti,
Africa. Baker contended that attack helicopters could have reached the
consulate in time on the night of the attack.
Source: http://www.wnd.com/2013/11/general-blames-night-stalker-for-military-purge/ Published: 11/05/2013 at 9:35 PM
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/11/general-blames-night-stalker-for-military-purge/#AmrFUzD9BUAqSqlW.99
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2013/11/general-blames-night-stalker-for-military-purge/#AmrFUzD9BUAqSqlW.99
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