USA TODAY US Edition

Army denies medals to pardoned soldier

Trump gave reprieve in alleged war crime case

- Tom Vanden Brook

WASHINGTON – The Army has rejected an appeal to return medals for valor to retired Maj. Mathew Golsteyn, a Special Forces soldier former President Donald Trump pardoned for alleged murder in Afghanista­n. It was one of three highprofil­e cases in which Trump interceded on behalf of troops accused of war crimes.

The decision regarding Golsteyn, reached last June, was not announced by the Army in Trump’s final months as president but is revealed in documents released to USA TODAY. The Army also denied Golsteyn’s request to restore his Special Forces tab, marking his service in the elite unit, and the letter of reprimand placed in his personnel file.

A Green Beret, Golsteyn was charged with killing a suspected bomb maker who had been ordered released after questionin­g in Afghanista­n in 2010. Golsteyn admitted during an interview to join the CIA that he had killed the man. That launched an Army investigat­ion that culminated in the murder charge, but Trump’s pardon canceled his court martial.

Golsteyn had appealed to the board in December 2019 to restore his Distinguis­hed Service Cross, second only to the Medal of Honor for valor in combat. Initially, Golsteyn had been awarded a Silver Star for heroism, but it had been upgraded after a review.

Trump took up Golsteyn’s cause and that of two other service members accused of war crimes after their stories were championed in conservati­ve news media. Trump-pardoned Golsteyn and Army 1st Lt. Clint Lorance, and reversed the demotion for Navy SEAL Edward Gallagher. Trump’s extraordin­ary interventi­on in military justice cases created turmoil in Pentagon leadership, leading to the firing of Navy Secretary Richard Spencer for intercedin­g in Gallagher’s case.

The Army review board’s decision on Golsteyn, obtained by a researcher and shared with USA TODAY, shows that the panel denied all of his claims. The board cited a letter in his case from the Justice Department that Trump’s pardon did not wipe clean Golsteyn’s record.

The “Presidenti­al pardon is a sign of forgivenes­s and ‘does not indicate innocence,’” the board wrote.

Army released report after Trump left office

Golsteyn, in a statement provided by his lawyer, blasted the Army for failing to follow Trump’s pledge to expunge his record and clear him of wrongdoing. Trump stated that repeatedly in a November 2019 phone call in which thenVice President Pence and others took part, Golsteyn said.

“Clearly, we have seen military department­s obey the direction of the Commander in Chief in other cases and, inexplicab­ly, the Army defied the President,” Golsteyn said. “It shouldn’t be a surprise the findings of the Army Board were released in November 2020 and not mailed to me for 2 more months, after President Trump left office, so my case could languish in the quagmire of Presidenti­al transition.”

Golsteyn’s lawyer, Phillip Stackhouse, called the board’s decision “silly.”

Trump’s pledge to leave Golsteyn with an unblemishe­d record entitles him to receive his medals and Special Forces tab, Stackhouse said.

Golsteyn has not decided whether he wants to appeal the decision to federal court, Stackhouse said.

The report cites a letter from the CIA to the Pentagon in 2011, acknowledg­ing that Golsteyn admitted killing the unarmed Afghan man. Golsteyn was a captain in the 3rd Special Forces Group Airborne in February 2010 when he reported shooting an unarmed Afghan man, the board’s report states. The man had been questioned after the explosion of an improvised explosive device. Golsteyn shot the man, he said, over concern for lives of a local tribal leader’s family and U.S. troops.

“Subject advised he elected to terminate the life of the unarmed combatant because he knew that obtaining evidence in order to convict this individual of the detonation would be ‘hard to get,’” according to the report. Golsteyn admitted that he and another member of the unit disposed of the man’s body.

The commander of Special Forces Command - Airborne reprimande­d Golsteyn, citing his admission of violating the laws of war.

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