New York Post

Sneak-a-tax on GIs

US terror fighters lose $$ break in Kenya

- By CARL CAMPANILE ccampanile@nypost.com

Combat soldiers from New York’s famous “Fighting 69th” Infantry are getting taxed while deployed in Kenya, The Post has learned, because the terror-ravaged African nation is not considered a combat zone by the Biden administra­tion.

Military personnel are exempt from paying federal income taxes — and any New York state or local income taxes — during time served in designated combat zones.

Members of the Army’s 69th Regiment were recently deployed to Somalia, Djibouti and Kenya.

Somalia — which borders Kenya — and Djibouti are designated combat zones, and soldiers are exempt from taxation while serving there. But Kenya is not considered a combat zone, despite the al-Qaeda-allied al-Shabab terror group waging attacks against Americans there, government records show.

Battle vs. al-Shabab

Al-Shabab militants launched a predawn attack Jan. 5, 2020, on an airstrip used by the US and Kenyan militaries, located on Kenya’s coast near its border with Somalia, killing one US service member and two American private contractor­s.

Tax-return software firm Intuit TurboTax said the tax break “translates to a significan­t tax saving for the active service member in combat and his family back home.”

Former Staten Island Rep. Max Rose, a combat veteran who served in the 69th Infantry, called it outrageous that the soldiers get taxed while risking their lives in Kenya.

“As a former member of this unit, I sincerely hope that every one of the 69th soldiers serving in harm’s way receives the tax benefits they deserve and are entitled to,” Rose said.

“We can’t let policy jargon get in the way of doing the right thing.”

A Pentagon spokesman declined to comment and referred The Post’s query to its Army division, which had no immediate comment.

The Army National Guard put out a release in September announcing the deployment of 1,000 soldiers to the Horn of Africa for 10 months.

The release confirmed that some soldiers would be stationed in Kenya.

“Most Soldiers will be stationed in Djibouti, with smaller company detachment­s deployed to Somalia and Kenya,” it said.

The operation is called Task Force Wolfhound, with the core of soldiers coming from the 1st Battalion, 69th Infantry, headquarte­red in Manhattan.

Since the Civil War, the unit has been famous as “The Fighting 69th” and served in World Wars I and II and Iraq.

Irish-American immigrants formed the majority of the infantry in its early days and were called the “Fighting Irish.”

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