The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Trump pardons send wrong message to military

- SCOTT TAYLOR staylor@herald.ca @EDC_Mag Scott Taylor is editor of Esprit de Corps magazine.

In recent days, U.S. President Donald Trump has embarked upon a bizarre rash of pardoning and protecting U.S. service members who were convicted or accused of war crimes.

In doing so, I’m not exactly sure to which demographi­c Trump is trying to appeal.

These soldiers were not tried and convicted by some malign foreign actors trying to smear the good reputation of the U.S. military, but rather they were accused, investigat­ed, charged and convicted of these crimes by that very same U.S. military institutio­n in which they serve.

Soldiers in western democracie­s know that there are rules in war, such as the Geneva Convention, and by abiding by those rules we set ourselves apart from the evildoers who do not.

One of the most prominent beneficiar­ies of this presidenti­al protection has been U.S. navy SEAL Chief Eddie Gallagher. This decorated veteran was court martialled last June on a number of charges, including the stabbing death of a young wounded Daesh fighter in U.S. captivity in Iraq.

Those accusation­s were levelled at Gallagher by other decorated U.S. Navy SEALs in his unit. While the murder charge was dropped when a prosecutio­n witness testifying with immunity confessed to the crime, Gallagher was convicted of having posed for photos with the corpse.

The ink was barely dry on that verdict when Trump weighed in with a pardon and orders to restore Gallagher to his previous rank and pay grade.

The navy subsequent­ly undertook a review seeking to revoke

Gallagher’s status as a member of the elite special forces community.

In response to this, Trump tweeted “The Navy will NOT be taking away warfighter and Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher’s Trident Pin. This case was handled very badly from the beginning. Get back to business.”

U.S. Navy Secretary Richard Spencer was forced to resign over how the Gallagher case was handled and the controvers­y continues to dominate headlines.

Obviously Trump as commander-in-chief can pull rank in this instance, but such actions do a disservice to the reputation of the U.S. military.

In singling out Gallagher for not only protection but praise, Trump frequently criticized those fellow SEALs who testified against him. Trump went so far as to describe the top SEAL commanders as ‘morons.’

While Trump was exempted from military service in the Vietnam war due to bone spurs on his feet, he does profess to have great sympathy for the brave men and women in uniform who do put themselves in harm’s way. The crazy thing is that Trump thinks the way to show sincere support for the military is to pardon and protect the very individual­s the military has convicted and removed from its ranks for violating their institutio­n’s own code of conduct.

On Nov. 15, Trump made good on a Memorial Day promise by issuing two more pardons; one to a convicted U.S. military war criminal; the second to a soldier awaiting court martial on murder charges.

The case of Lt. Clint Lorance, like Gallagher, originated with allegation­s from his own comrades.

Lorance’s men had been ordered to fire on unarmed Afghan civilians, which left two civilians dead. Following an investigat­ion Lorance was charged, court martialled and convicted of the crime. In his defence, Lorance claimed the Afghans had been revving their motorcycle engines in a threatenin­g manner. Eyewitness­es stated the unarmed Afghans were in fact hundreds of metres away. In 2013 the military judge sentenced Lorance to serve a 19-year sentence. Trump just set him free.

The case against Maj. Mathew Golsteyn will never get to trial, despite the fact he is accused of murdering an Afghan, burying him and then reburying the corpse in an attempt to hide evidence.

In justifying these pardons, Trump tweeted “Our great warfighter­s must be allowed to fight.” And he described Maj. Golsteyn as a “U.S. military hero.”

Trump is sending the wrong message to his own military; that they are beyond reproach even from their own chain of command.

Soldiers know the difference between heroic acts and criminal acts. Trump apparently has the two confused.

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