Daily Mail

Married general quits in ‘affair’ shame

Army’s recruitmen­t chief is accused of lying about emotional relationsh­ip with junior female officer

- By Larisa Brown Defence and Security Editor

THE Army’s head of recruitmen­t has resigned after being accused of lying about an ‘emotional affair’ with one of his junior officers.

Major General Chris Bell, 48, who is married with two children, was ordered to quit by the Army Board last month because it lost trust in him, sources said.

He was accused of lying about his relationsh­ip with the female officer during an investigat­ion when he was commander of a top- secret unit called 77th Brigade.

It is understood he later admitted having an ‘emotional’ relationsh­ip with the woman, although denied they had sex. He is believed to still be with his wife, Alexandra, and the woman has since left the Army.

An Army source told the Mail: ‘He has clearly had a relationsh­ip with her which he has lied about in the course of an investigat­ion into something else.

‘He’s been asked to resign because he lied about it. The Army Board has lost trust in him.’

Major General Sharon Nesmith, 50, has taken over his position as head of Army recruitmen­t and initial training – becoming the first woman to command as a major general. It is understood the ‘emotional affair’ took place between late 2018 and the summer of 2019.

It is not clear how long Major General Bell and the officer were in a relationsh­ip. 77th Brigade works alongside MI5, MI6 and the SAS in electronic and psychologi­cal warfare. An investigat­ion was carried out into another matter within the brigade and it was during that process that Major General Bell was thought to have lied.

The board – which includes the head of the Army, General Sir Mark Carleton-Smith, other senior officers and ministers – asked him to resign his commission.

An Army source claimed: ‘ He wasn’t truthful about the nature of his relationsh­ip to her. He obfuscated what his relationsh­ip to her was. That informatio­n subsequent­ly came out.

‘They [the board] decided on the balance of probabilit­ies he had lied during course of that investigat­ion. He admitted to having lied about the exact nature of his relationsh­ip to her.’ The board ruled he had broken the ‘service test’, which meant it lost trust in him.

Major General Bell was commission­ed into the 1st Battalion Scots Guards in 1994 after studying geography at Oxford. He served in Iraq and in Afghanista­n, and was given an OBE. He commanded 77th Brigade from 2017 onwards and was made a CBE in the recent New Year honours. He became head of the Army Recruiting and Initial Training Command last summer.

An Army spokesman said: ‘Major General Chris Bell has retired from the Army. We are not prepared to release any personal informatio­n about this individual. We have a duty under both common law and statute to protect the personal informatio­n of all those who serve or have served in the Army.’

Major General Nesmith, a mother-of-two from Northumber­land, became the first woman to command an Army brigade in 2014. Her father was an officer in the Royal Naval Reserve, and her brother served in the Army for 16 years. She studied biological sciences at Edinburgh University.

The scandal comes months after another top Army officer was revealed to have had an affair.

Last year Major General Rupert Jones, who was previously Britain’s highest-ranking soldier in

‘Bosses lost trust in him’

Iraq, was accused of breaking lockdown rules to visit his married lover. He was later cleared of breaking social distancing restrictio­ns. An investigat­ion into his commitment to the Army’s standards found ‘no case to answer’. In July last year it emerged he had left his wife Lucinda, 47, and moved out of their £1.5million home in the West Country. The couple have three children, aged between 16 and 20.

His lover was understood to work outside the military and had left her husband. His father Lieutenant Colonel Herbert ‘H’ Jones was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for his heroism in the Falklands War.

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