We can’t expect the Obama administration and its liberal media
brownnosers to care if our military remains institutionally strong. But
we should expect more from our military leaders.
Bergdahlgate is only the latest manifestation of a disastrous trend, and
this failure to act on these serious allegations has the potential to
further damage an already wounded American military. Let's be clear –
the fact that no general has pulled the stars off his epaulets and
thrown them down on the table to protest the Bergdahl cover-up is a
disgrace.
The American people love their military and – for
the moment – respect it more than any other American institution. The
effect of a senior general resigning rather than going along with
bypassing the Uniform Code of Military Justice for political gain would
send shockwaves through Washington. By failing to do the one thing they
can do in a system where elected civilian politicians control the
military, the generals have become part of the politicians’ lies.
The actions of one likely deserter don't make a trend. It's the
complicity in the politically-driven refusal to hold Bergdahl
accountable that, if left to fester, will eat out the moral core of the
Army. The failure of the Army to act is clearly the result of White
House pressure. But the Army’s institutional viability is more
important than the political priorities of a bunch of hack politicians
whose only time in uniform was when they portrayed Santa’s non-gender
specific elves in their Montessori schools’ winter solstice pageants.
Bergdahl’s case demands action. If Bergdahl is a deserter, he must be
held to account. The Army must ensure discipline or going forward
there will be none. Cowardice, deceit and betrayal will replace personal courage, integrity and selfless service. The military would become the Democrat Party in camo – except military personnel earn their government checks.
And what if Bergdahl is innocent? He now sits, largely thought a
traitor by most Americans (frankly, including me), but he has never had
his day in court. If he is actually innocent, this is an unspeakable
miscarriage of justice. The Army owes Bergdahl a decision too.
Don't buy the nonsense about the investigation not being completed.
I've done Army investigations, and with just a fraction of the resources
that have no doubt gone into this one. It does not take a half year to
interview witnesses, gather evidence and decide whether to move to
formal proceedings – especially when there was a full investigation
completed while Bergdahl was a captive. The facts are in; this is being
stalled because of politics, and that's where the Army generals need to
draw the line.
This is another disaster for an American
military that's already reeling from a series of self-inflicted wounds.
The only way to begin the process of recovery is to do the right thing
and either charge Bergdahl or explain why the evidence does not support a
court martial.
Civilian control is paramount in the
American system, but there is no requirement that the generals
participate in this scam. They need to put the interests of the country
ahead of their own careers and make it clear that their honor refuses
to allow them to participate in this debacle. If you’ve attended
military schools – and I did from basic training through the Army War
College – you often hear about the dereliction of duty
by the senior generals during the Vietnam War. None of them resigned
in the face of a disastrous policy, and it took years to wipe away that
institutional stain. Now it’s happening again as no senior officer will
choose to risk his career rather than be complicit in this farce. The
military’s leaders can't off-load their responsibility onto the
President; they have their own obligation to the country to act.
Beyond Bergdahl, the military needs to clean house. It is
strategically bankrupt, with no clear understanding of what its role
will be in the next decade despite generating mountains of position
papers and studies. It is tactically confused, unsure of how to train
for future threats. Its acquisition system is a corrupt disaster, with
institutional priorities taking precedence over tactical needs. How
else can one explain the Air Force wanting to ditch the deadly, cheap
A-10s so it can buy over-priced, under-performing F-35s that can't even
manage to get the software to fire its weapons? And now we have Air
Force generals labelling as “traitors”
officers who tell people in Congress the truth about how the F-35 is
utterly ineffective in the ground attack role that the A-10 excels at.
Don’t even get me started on the many senior officers recently
court-martialed or relieved for sexual misconduct, corruption, and/or
utterly bizarre behavior, like the Navy destroyer captain who hid out in his quarters for three months.
We need some Army generals to resign rather than allow this outrage to go on. We will soon see whether the Army’s senior leaders’ priority is their own careers, or the Army they profess to love and the nation they swore to protect.
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