Lodi News-Sentinel

Senior military officers rebel against Trump plan to pardon troops accused of war crimes

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — Current and former military officers urged the White House not to pardon service members and security contractor­s implicated in war crimes, warning that forgiving their offenses would send a dangerous signal to U.S. troops and potential adversarie­s.

Aides to President Donald Trump have been examining high-profile war crimes cases from Iraq and Afghanista­n, preparing paperwork so Trump could issue pardons during Memorial Day commemorat­ions next week, according to two senior U.S. officials.

But the possibilit­y that Trump could issue pardons has brought a flood of opposition from current and former high-ranking officers, who say it would encourage misconduct by showing that violations of laws prohibitin­g attacks on civilians and prisoners of war will be treated with leniency.

“Absent evidence of innocence or injustice, the wholesale pardon of U.S. service members accused of war crimes signals our troops and allies that we don’t take the law of armed conflict seriously,” retired Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in a tweet Tuesday. He added: “Bad message. Bad precedent. Abdication of moral responsibi­lity. Risk to us.”

Among those under considerat­ion for a pardon is Chief Petty Officer Edward Gallagher, a Navy SEAL awaiting court-martial on charges that he shot unarmed civilians and stabbed a teenage Islamic State fighter in Iraq in 2017, according to one of the officials, who discussed the internal deliberati­ons in return for anonymity.

Gallagher has pleaded not guilty and commentato­rs on Fox News have lobbied Trump to pardon him.

Other cases being examined by the White House include those of Army Maj. Mathew Golsteyn, who is charged with killing an unarmed Afghan in 2010; three Marine snipers prosecuted for urinating on the corpse of a dead Afghan fighter in 2011; and a former security guard for Blackwater Worldwide who was convicted of murder in December for killing unarmed Iraqis in 2007.

Other officers warned that if U.S. personnel accused of such crimes escaped punishment, civilians on foreign battlefiel­ds would be less inclined to cooperate with U.S. forces, and U.S. service members taken prisoners would be more likely to be mistreated or even killed when taken captive.

“If President Trump issues indiscrimi­nate pardons of individual­s accused — or convicted by their fellow service members — of war crimes, he relinquish­es the United States’ moral high ground and undermines the good order and discipline critical to winning on the battlefiel­d,” said retired Gen. Charles Krulak, a former commandant of the Marine Corps.

Several officials said Trump is not believed to have consulted his senior military advisors about issuing pardons. The possibilit­y of military pardons was first reported by the New York Times.

Senior officers have not spoken out publicly about the possibilit­y Trump could pardon accused war criminals, but many are privately outraged, according to one currently serving at the Pentagon.

“I think a lot of us would see it in the same way — that it’s just awful,” he said.

The possibilit­y of that reaction inside the military could cause Trump not to go ahead with the pardons. But Trump has ignored top military officers before, and Pentagon officials who once served to check his impulses, including former Defense Secretary James N. Mattis, are no longer serving in the administra­tion.

Asked about the possibilit­y that Trump would pardon service members, acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan told reporters Tuesday: “I’m not really going to speculate on any of the pardons, but I would just say we’ll leave it to the White House to comment on the situation there.”

Trump has repeatedly bypassed normal procedures for issuing pardons and granting clemency, seizing on cases mentioned on Fox News or that resonate with him or his supporters. This month, he pardoned Army Lt. Michael Behenna, who was convicted of killing an Iraqi during questionin­g in 2008.

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