Chicago Sun-Times

General loses post in latest case of military misconduct

String of scandals shakes Defense Department

- Tom Vanden Brook @tvandenbro­ok USA TODAY David Haight

Military officials have relieved a senior officer from a key post in Europe after determinin­g he had misused government resources while having an extramarit­al affair, the Army has confirmed to USA TODAY.

Army Maj. Gen. David Haight is at least the second senior Army officer in a highprofil­e position to be relieved of duty for personal misconduct in the last year. In November, Defense Secretary Ash Carter abruptly fired his senior military adviser, Lt. Gen. Ron Lewis, because of an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip.

Haight’s reassignme­nt is the latest instance of alleged misconduct by senior officers to rattle the Pentagon in recent years. Other cases include a drunken binge in Moscow by an Air Force twostar general in 2013 and an ongoing bribery scandal involving Navy officers and a corrupt businessma­n in the

Pacific.

Defense secretarie­s have commission­ed studies into how to stem the problem.

Haight had overseen operations for U.S. European Command, which is charged with confrontin­g a resurgent Russia through the NATO alliance.

Haight was removed from his post this summer without an announceme­nt and reassigned to Army headquarte­rs at the Pentagon. He is listed as a special assistant to the director of the Army staff. Typically, the military reassigns senior officers suspected of misconduct to such positions as investigat­ions unfold. Military law prohibits extramarit­al affairs.

Haight’s letter of reprimand effectivel­y ends his career.

“Maj. Gen. Haight was reprimande­d for failing to exhibit exemplary conduct by engaging in an inappropri­ate sexual relationsh­ip with a woman who was not his wife and for misusing government resources,” said Col. Pat Seiber, an Army spokesman.

The Army may convene a board to determine the rank at which he last served satisfacto­rily, Seiber said. Retiring at a lower rank could cost him tens of thousands of dollars in pension pay.

“I’m very sorry — and take full responsibi­lity — for my actions,” Haight said in a statement to USA TODAY.

Haight is married and has four adult children.

He is at least the second senior Army officer in a high-profile position to be relieved of duty for personal misconduct in the last year.

In November, Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced that his senior military adviser, then-Lt. Gen. Ron Lewis, had been fired from his job following allegation­s of misbehavio­r, which involved an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip, senior officials said at the time.

Lewis was reassigned to the Army staff and saw his rank drop to the twostar level. The Pentagon Inspector General continues to investigat­e his case.

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