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Anguished SEALs recall chief as ‘evil’

Trump-hero Gallagher was on the outer with his shocked colleagues.

- By Dave Philipps YORK TIMES

The Navy SEALs showed up one by one, wearing hoodies and T-shirts instead of uniforms, to tell investigat­ors what they had seen. Visibly nervous, they shifted in their chairs, rubbed their palms and pressed their fists against their foreheads. At times they stopped in mid-sentence and broke into tears.

“Sorry about this,” Special Operator 1st Class Craig Miller, one of the most experience­d SEALs in the group, said as he looked sideways toward a blank wall, trying to hide that he was weeping. “It’s the first time — I’m really broken up about this.”

Video recordings of the interviews obtained by The New York Times, which have not been shown publicly before, were part of a trove of Navy investigat­ive materials about the prosecutio­n of Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher on war crimes charges, including murder.

They offer the first opportunit­y outside the courtroom to hear directly from the men of Alpha platoon, SEAL Team 7, whose blistering testimony about their platoon chief was dismissed by President Donald Trump when he upended the military code of justice to protect Gallagher from punishment.

“The guy is freaking evil,” Special Operator 1st Class Miller told investigat­ors.

“The guy was toxic,” Special Operator 1st Class Joshua Vriens, a sniper, said in a separate interview.

Special Operator 1st Class Corey Scott, a medic in the platoon, told the investigat­ors: “You could tell he was perfectly OK with killing anybody that was moving.”

Such dire descriptio­ns of Gallagher, who had eight combat deployment­s and sometimes went by the nickname Blade, are in marked contrast to Mr Trump’s portrayal of him at a recent political rally in Florida as one of “our great fighters”.

Although combat in Iraq barely fazed the SEALs, sitting down to tell Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service agents about what they had seen their platoon chief do during a 2017 deployment in Iraq was excruciati­ng for them. Not only did they have to relive wrenching events and describe grisly scenes, they had to break a powerful unwritten code of silence in the SEALs, one of the nation’s most elite commando forces.

The trove of material also includes thousands of text messages the SEALs sent one another about the events and the prosecutio­n of Gallagher. Together with the dozens of hours of recorded interviews, they provide revealing insights into the men of the platoon, who have never spoken publicly about the case and the leader they turned in.

Platoon members said they saw Gallagher shoot civilians and fatally stab a wounded captive with a hunting knife. Gallagher was acquitted by a military jury in July of all but a single relatively minor charge and was cleared of all punishment in November by Mr Trump.

Video from a SEAL’s helmet camera, included in the trove of materials, shows the barely conscious captive — a teenage Islamic State fighter so thin that his watch slid easily up and down his arm — being brought in to the platoon one day in May 2017. Then the helmet camera is shut off.

In the video interviews with investigat­ors, three SEALs said they saw Gallagher go on to stab the sedated captive for no reason and then hold an impromptu re-enlistment ceremony over the body, as if it were a trophy.

“I was listening to it, and I was just thinking, like, this is the most disgracefu­l thing I’ve ever seen in my life,” Special Operator 1st Class Miller, who has since been promoted to chief, told investigat­ors.

Special Operator 1st Class Miller said that when the platoon commander, Lt Jacob Portier, told the SEALs to gather over the corpse for photos, he did not feel he could refuse. The photos, included in the evidence obtained by The Times, show Gallagher, surrounded by other SEALs, clutching the dead captive’s hair; in one photo, he holds a custom-made hunting knife.

“I think Eddie was proud of it, and that was, like, part of it for him,” Special Operator 1st Class Miller told investigat­ors.

Gallagher’s lawyer, Timothy Parlatore, said the video interviews were rife with inconsiste­ncies and falsehoods that created “a clear road map to the acquittal”.

Since his arrest nearly a year ago, Gallagher has insisted that the charges against him were concocted by six disgruntle­d SEALs in his platoon who could not meet his high standards and wanted to force him out.

“My first reaction to seeing the videos was surprise and disgust that they would make up blatant lies about me, but I quickly realised that they were scared that the truth would come out of how cowardly they acted on deployment,” Gallagher said through his lawyer.

In cramped interview rooms in San Diego, SEALs who spoke to Navy investigat­ors painted a picture of a platoon driven to despair by a chief who seemed to care primarily about racking up kills. They described how their chief targeted women and children and boasted that “burqas were flying”.

Asked whether the chief had a bias against Middle Eastern people, Special Operator 1st Class Scott replied, “I think he just wants to kill anybody he can.”

Some of the SEALs said they came to believe that the chief was purposeful­ly exposing them to enemy fire to bait Islamic State fighters into revealing their positions. They said the chief thought casualties in the platoon would increase his chances for a Silver Star.

Seven members of the 22-person platoon testified at the trial that they saw the chief commit war crimes. Two men from the platoon testified they did not see any evidence of crimes. Others refused to cooperate with prosecutor­s. Crucially, one SEAL who had accused the chief during the investigat­ion — Special Operator 1st Class Scott — changed his story on the witness stand, testifying that he and not Gallagher had caused the captive’s death.

Three of the men who testified at the trial left the navy and have been trying to keep a low profile while they build civilian lives. Others are still in the SEAL teams, in some cases working on classified assignment­s.

Since the trial, Gallagher has repeatedly insulted them on social media and on Fox News, especially Special Operator 1st Class Miller, whom the chief singled out for weeping while talking to investigat­ors.

Gallagher retired from the Navy with full honours at the end of November and announced that he was starting a SEAL-themed clothing line. A few days after he retired, an Instagram account belonging to him and his wife posted a photo of a custom-made hatchet, forged by the same SEAL veteran who made the hunting knife he was accused of using to kill the captive. Before the deployment, Gallagher had told the knifemaker he hoped to “dig that knife or hatchet on someone’s skull!”

“Eddie finally got his stuff back from NCIS,” the post, listing the hatchet among a “few of our favourite things now returned”.

 ??  ?? HE MEANS BUSINESS: In this file photo taken in June, Navy Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher walks into military court in San Diego, California.
HE MEANS BUSINESS: In this file photo taken in June, Navy Special Operations Chief Edward Gallagher walks into military court in San Diego, California.

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