Medicine Hat News

Trump sets off storm by criticizin­g retired Navy admiral

- ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump has ignited a firestorm of criticism and charges that he is politicizi­ng the military by faulting a war hero for not capturing al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden sooner.

Trump took shots at retired Adm. William McRaven in a Fox News interview Sunday in which he also asserted that the former Navy SEAL and former commander of U.S. Special Operations Command was a “backer” of Trump’s 2016 rival, Hillary Clinton, and supporter of President Barack Obama.

“Disgusting,” the George W. Bush administra­tion’s White House counterter­rorism adviser, Fran Townsend, wrote Monday on Twitter.

Leon Panetta, who was CIA director during the bin Laden raid and later served as secretary of defence, said Trump owed an apology to McRaven and to all of those in the military and intelligen­ce agencies who played a role in tracking down bin Laden and carrying out the risky raid into Pakistan. He called Trump’s remark “patently ridiculous.”

“It demonstrat­es a profound lack of understand­ing of how our military and intelligen­ce agencies operate and undermines the president’s own standing as commander-in-chief,” Panetta said in a statement.

The controvers­y follows a pattern of concerns raised by former senior military officers about Trump’s grasp of the military’s role, including those who assert that his decision to send thousands of active-duty troops to the U.S.Mexico border shortly before the Nov. 6 midterm elections was a political stunt.

Trump also drew criticism for his decision not to visit Arlington National Cemetery on Veterans Day last week, following his trip to Europe. He said later he “should have” visited the cemetery but was too busy with official business.

McRaven told CNN he is a fan both of George W. Bush and Barack Obama, having served under them. “I admire all presidents, regardless of their political party, who uphold the dignity of the office and who use that office to bring the nation together in challengin­g times,” he said pointedly.

McRaven previously had drawn widespread attention for lambasting Trump for repeatedly calling the news media the “enemy of the people.” McRaven had said the president’s words were “the greatest threat to democracy” in his lifetime.

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