Policy
FAIL: Navy brings charges against officer who fired back at Chattanooga
terrorist, By J.E. Dyer on
August 1, 2015 at 1:31 pm
There’s
“good order and discipline,” and then there’s “poor leadership and judgment.”
Unfortunately,
I agree with Allen West
that it’s more of the latter we’re seeing, with the news that the Navy is
bringing charges against Lieutenant Commander (LCDR) Timothy White, who returned fire against terrorist Muhammad Abdulazeez in Chattanooga on 16 July. (A
second uniformed man present, an unnamed Marine, is also reported to have
returned fire. It hasn’t been publicly reported whether either defender
hit Abdulazeez in the exchange.)
Says West
(emphasis original):
Ladies and gents, resulting from the text message I received yesterday, I
can confirm that the United States Navy is bringing charges against Lt. Cmdr
Timothy White for illegally discharging a firearm on federal property.
I’m all for
good order and discipline myself, and LCDR White was apparently carrying a
personal firearm on a federal compound, in violation of military regulations,
at the time of the attack. He discharged it too, and that’s a separate
violation.
You don’t just
overlook the infractions here. But this is a much bigger issue than the
violation of a peacetime regulation, and guys like the secretary of the Navy
are paid to recognize that. It may be “by the book” to charge Timothy
White and make an example of him, but as national defense policy, it sucks ostrich eggs.
America’s sailors and Marines are due better, as are the citizens of the United
States who commission them under arms.
The question is what the state of
security now is for military compounds in the United States, and what our men
and women in uniform should be empowered to do about it. That question is
the only one that matters. The Chattanooga incident must first of all
provoke a debate and decision about that.
Current policy
cannot stand. To bring charges against White is to simply enforce current
policy by rote, as if nothing about the threat environment has changed.
Acting in that manner is a far greater breach of honor, courage, and commitment
– the Navy’s core values – than bringing your own gun to work at a time when
the military has been repeatedly warned about terror threats to its stateside
facilities.
Jihad-inspired
attackers have killed
13 people on military compounds
and wounded 33 since 2009. And that doesn’t count the planned
attacks that have been intercepted and
thwarted beforehand. According to CNN, a third of the 119 Americans
accused of plotting attacks inside the U.S. have intended to target military
installations.
The threat
level (or “threat condition”) at all U.S. military bases was raised in May 2015
due to credible threats made by Islamic State – which, as reported
in April 2015, has a camp in Mexico, on the
border of New Mexico, and is linked to terror facilitators who’ve actually been
found inside the United States.
Since last
fall, ISIS has also issued threats
to military personnel directly, and to their families.
What matters
here is that the military leadership – starting with the secretary of defense
and the president – has not acted sufficiently to improve the security posture
of the military as a whole.
Certainly,
recruiting offices are especially vulnerable: usually located in strip malls
and other buildings under private ownership, policed by the local law
enforcement authorities. There are jurisdictional issues.
But what do you
do about jurisdictional issues when the threat situation changes? You
[expletive] WORK THEM OUT.
Job one is ensuring that servicemen under threat – servicemen under your
command – can defend themselves.
At least half
the population of this country has a better understanding of the
responsibilities of leadership than Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, Defense Secretary
Ashton Carter, and President Obama. Allen West suggests you flood Mabus’s
office with complaints. That’s a start. But this is bigger than one
service secretary. Posture and policy need a fundamental change.
LCDR White’s
case can wait. Attend to the urgent policy need first, empower the troops
as they should be empowered, and it’ll turn out just fine for good order and
discipline that White “anticipated” an overdue policy change.
Tags: Allen West, Barack obama, Chattanooga terror attack, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, featured, ISIS, ISIS threats to military families, Islamic State, LCDR Timothy White, Mohammad Youssef Abdulazeez, Navy charging officer who fired at Chattanooga
terrorist, Navy officer fired at Chattanooga terrorist, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, terrorist threats to military members, threat condition on military bases, threats to military bases
http://libertyunyielding.com/2015/08/01/policy-fail-navy-brings-charges-against-officer-who-fired-back-at-chattanooga-terrorist/
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