Los Angeles Times

Green Berets’ killer sentenced

A Jordanian military guard gets life in prison with hard labor for shooting three American trainers.

- By Nabih Bulos Bulos is a special correspond­ent. Twitter: @nabihbulos

MOSUL, Iraq — A Jordanian soldier was convicted Monday in the slayings of three U.S. military trainers last year and sentenced to life imprisonme­nt with hard labor, Jordan’s official news agency said.

A military court in Amman handed a guilty verdict to Maarek Abu Tayeh, a guard who in November shot and killed the three Army Green Berets when their convoy approached the gate of the King Faisal air base in the Jafr area.

The U.S. soldiers killed were Staff Sgts. James Moriarty, 27, of Kerrville, Texas; Kevin McEnroe, 30, of Tucson; and Matthew Lewellen, 27, of Kirksville, Mo.

Abu Tayeh opened fire with his M-16 rifle at the convoy’s lead vehicle after it had cleared the first security gate, instantly killing McEnroe and mortally wounding Lewellen, according to a redacted report issued by U.S. Special Operations Command in March.

A six-minute hunt followed with Abu Tayeh stalking Moriarty and another Green Beret, according to the Special Operations Command’s report.

Moriarty got off one shot at Abu Tayeh before the Jordanian approached him and shot him twice, but his actions, the report said, “enabled the remaining soldier to maneuver and engage” Abu Tayeh, wounding him in the neck. Moriarty later succumbed to his wounds.

Jordan is a major U.S. ally in the region. The Green Berets had been training Syrian rebels at the air base as part of a U.S.-led effort to create an anti-Islamic State force in Syria.

Abu Tayeh insisted he was not guilty, saying in court hearings that he had heard gunshots, which had spurred him to open fire. It was unclear why other Jordanian guards did not stop Abu Tayeh.

Moriarty’s father, Jim, said in a phone interview Monday that he considered Abu Tayeh’s conduct deliberate in killing his son and the other two soldiers, though no definitive link to terrorist groups was found.

The life sentence “was the best result that we were going to get under the circumstan­ces,” Jim Moriarty said. “I will tell you that I would have been perfectly happy to watch him hang.”

The incident has been a source of tension in Jordan. Abu Tayeh, who is a member of the influentia­l Howeitat tribe, was seen by many as a hero who was “defending his homeland, himself and military honor,” according to a statement issued by the tribe Monday.

Tribal members blocked some of the major highways in the kingdom with burning tires in protest.

 ?? Khalil Mazraawi AFP/Getty Images ?? MAAREK ABU TAYEH killed Staff Sgts. James Moriarty, Kevin McEnroe and Matthew Lewellen near the gate of a Jordanian base.
Khalil Mazraawi AFP/Getty Images MAAREK ABU TAYEH killed Staff Sgts. James Moriarty, Kevin McEnroe and Matthew Lewellen near the gate of a Jordanian base.

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