This is an article written by Travis J. Tritten and published on Stars and Stripes with the header "Retired Green Beret says Mattis left 'my men to die' in Afghanistan".
WASHINGTON – A retired Green Beret officer alleged Friday that Gen. James Mattis, who has been nominated to be the next defense secretary, hesitated to send medical evacuation flights and left soldiers to die during a 2001 friendly fire incident in Afghanistan.
Retired Lt. Col. Jason Amerine, in a Facebook post, said a delay by Mattis in sending rescue aircraft from a nearby base might have led to the deaths of Staff Sgt. Brian Cody Prosser and at least two Afghans after they were hit by a U.S. bomb outside of Kandahar. “He was indecisive and betrayed his duty to us, leaving my men to die during the golden hour when he could have reached us,” wrote Amerine, who is a future of war fellow at the New America think tank in Washington, D.C.
President-elect Donald Trump announced Thursday that he picked Mattis for defense secretary, a move that raised cheers from a military community where the retired general is widely respected and popular.
Mattis, whose nickname is Mad Dog, has 44 years of Marine Corps infantry experience that included leading troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and a reputation for colorful comments about warfare.
The Senate must still confirm Mattis and issue a waiver because of a rule requiring any defense secretary to be at least seven years out of military service. Mattis retired in 2013 after leading U.S. Central Command and the allegations by Amerine could come up again as his nomination works through Congress.
So far, the general has support from many lawmakers, including Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the chairman of the Armed Services Committee who promised a quick hearing on the nomination next year.
The 2001 friendly fire incident, which was chronicled in the book The Only Thing Worth Dying For, occurred while Mattis was in command of Camp Rhino in southern Afghanistan where aircraft were stationed. Amerine was leading a group of 10 Special Forces soldiers.
The Green Berets were with future Afghan President Hamid Karzai and were helping to bring about an initial Taliban surrender when the bomb struck.
“Every element in Afghanistan tried to help us except the closest friendly unit, commanded by Mattis,” wrote Amerine, who was awarded a Bronze Star with V device and a Purple Heart for his service during the mission. “Men were ready to drive to get us or send horses from the other side of the country if that was what it took.”
At the time, Mattis was reluctant to send aircraft without knowing the situation on the ground, according to an account in The Only Thing Worth Dying For. “Well, if they’ve taken fire and you can’t tell me definitively how they got all scuffed up, I’m not going to send anything until you can assure me that the situation on the ground is secure,” Mattis is quoted as saying.
The Air Force Special Operations Command dispatched helicopters from Pakistan that took hours to arrive and fly the soldiers and others wounded in the blast to Camp Rhino, which was 45 minutes away, according to Amerine, a whistleblower who was recently investigated by the Army for questioning the FBI’s hostage negotiating tactics with Congress. He was later cleared of wrongdoing. (see follow on article below)
Mattis set helicopters under his command to help with the evacuation after the Air Force medevacs arrived at Rhino, “covering our first load of wounded in dust from their rotor wash as they launched,” Amerine wrote. “Cody died around the time we reached Rhino and I was told at least two Afghans died because of the delay but nobody knows for certain,” he wrote.
Showing posts with label LTC Amerine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LTC Amerine. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Controversial Green Beret Retires Quietly With High Award
Legendary Green Beret officer Jason Amerine, who was subjected to a nine-month criminal investigation after he criticized the FBI’s hostage rescue efforts, was awarded one of the military’s highest decorations, the Legion of Merit, in a quiet retirement ceremony Friday at the Pentagon.
“Intentionally or not, it was an admission of guilt” for subjecting the war hero to a criminal probe last year because he had discussed the FBI’s poor hostage-rescue record with a member of Congress, said an Army officer who attended the ceremony. The officer spoke on a not-for-attribution basis because of the issue’s continuing sensitivity.
At the time he spoke with the member of Congress, Lieutenant Colonel Amerine was in charge of the Army’s effort to find and rescue Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl.
Amerine was one of the Army’s most celebrated soldiers for his heroic actions in combat in Afghanistan soon after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
Vastly outnumbered by the Taliban, his team (see picture at left) earned three Silver Stars, seven Bronze Stars and 11 Purple Hearts for routing the insurgents. His story was immortalized in The Only Thing Worth Dying For, a New York Times best-seller.
In January 2002, President George W. Bush made him a guest of honor at his State of the Union address (see picture at top). But Amerine ran afoul of the FBI when he told Representative Duncan Hunter, a Marine veteran and Republican member of the House Armed Services Committee, how bureaucratic politics had scuttled a deal he had worked out with the Taliban for Bergdahl’s release.
When the FBI learned of Amerine’s criticism, it complained to the Army’s chief of staff for intelligence, General Mary Legere, who prompted the Criminal Investigation Command to open an investigation. Amerine’s pay was halted, he was booked and fingerprinted, and his retirement was put on hold. Bergdahl, meanwhile, was released on far worse terms than Amerine worked out, according to a Newsweek investigation in September.
Friday’s ceremony “was beautiful, just an amazing moment,” Amerine said in an interview with Newsweek. In a statement he was preparing for his Facebook page, he called the retaliation against him “inevitable, because our First Amendment right to speak to Congress is so often disregarded by our own government.”
But he also refused to blame the Army as a whole for the “runaway” investigation of him. “It was Greek tragedy that a senior Army officer dragged the Army ignominiously into this by initiating the illegal investigation,” he said. “The hostage issues I raised had nothing to do with the Army and everything to do with broken institutions at the agency level that refused to admit their faults. At least the fratricide was not lethal this time. But it soiled all of us.”
Upwards of 60 supporters attended Friday’s ceremony, held in a small amphitheater in the Pentagon basement. One of them was Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), a private Washington, D.C.-based group that champions whistleblowers who expose government waste, fraud and abuse. “For nearly a year, LTC Jason Amerine, a true American hero, has been under criminal investigation for speaking to Congress about the US's totally dysfunctional hostage recovery process,” Brian said in a statement for Newsweek. ”When anyone brings concerns of wrongdoing to Congress they are supposed to be protected under the law. But in fact, it took Jason assembling his ‘last guerrilla army’ of Congressional supporters, POGO, and a few courageous military officers acting behind the scenes to prevent a court martial.”
Brian praised Hunter’s support for Amerine and blasted the Pentagon’s inspector general for “spectacularly” failing to protect Amerine’s whistleblower rights. “It is time to get his mugshot, fingerprints and DNA removed from the criminal database and tackle the organizations and laws that failed him,” she said.
An Army spokeswoman said the Army would have no comment until Monday. The Legion of Merit is “one of the U.S. military's most prestigious awards, ranking just below the Silver Star, and ahead of the Distinguished Flying Cross,” according to the Army Times newspaper. “It is one of only two decorations to be issued as neck wear, the other being the Medal of Honor.”
Amerine wrote that he could not thank his friends and supporters “enough for standing by me all these months. Instead of highlighting anyone, I will simply thank everyone. I don’t write this to declare victory; the issue was the hostages and I was a distraction from my own cause.” “The U.S. ability to free them is finally being repaired,” he added, “but has a long, long way to go before it is more than an ad hoc solution to a crisis we took too long to identify.”
Article from Newsweek
“Intentionally or not, it was an admission of guilt” for subjecting the war hero to a criminal probe last year because he had discussed the FBI’s poor hostage-rescue record with a member of Congress, said an Army officer who attended the ceremony. The officer spoke on a not-for-attribution basis because of the issue’s continuing sensitivity.
At the time he spoke with the member of Congress, Lieutenant Colonel Amerine was in charge of the Army’s effort to find and rescue Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl.
Amerine was one of the Army’s most celebrated soldiers for his heroic actions in combat in Afghanistan soon after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
Vastly outnumbered by the Taliban, his team (see picture at left) earned three Silver Stars, seven Bronze Stars and 11 Purple Hearts for routing the insurgents. His story was immortalized in The Only Thing Worth Dying For, a New York Times best-seller.
In January 2002, President George W. Bush made him a guest of honor at his State of the Union address (see picture at top). But Amerine ran afoul of the FBI when he told Representative Duncan Hunter, a Marine veteran and Republican member of the House Armed Services Committee, how bureaucratic politics had scuttled a deal he had worked out with the Taliban for Bergdahl’s release.
When the FBI learned of Amerine’s criticism, it complained to the Army’s chief of staff for intelligence, General Mary Legere, who prompted the Criminal Investigation Command to open an investigation. Amerine’s pay was halted, he was booked and fingerprinted, and his retirement was put on hold. Bergdahl, meanwhile, was released on far worse terms than Amerine worked out, according to a Newsweek investigation in September.
Friday’s ceremony “was beautiful, just an amazing moment,” Amerine said in an interview with Newsweek. In a statement he was preparing for his Facebook page, he called the retaliation against him “inevitable, because our First Amendment right to speak to Congress is so often disregarded by our own government.”
But he also refused to blame the Army as a whole for the “runaway” investigation of him. “It was Greek tragedy that a senior Army officer dragged the Army ignominiously into this by initiating the illegal investigation,” he said. “The hostage issues I raised had nothing to do with the Army and everything to do with broken institutions at the agency level that refused to admit their faults. At least the fratricide was not lethal this time. But it soiled all of us.”
Upwards of 60 supporters attended Friday’s ceremony, held in a small amphitheater in the Pentagon basement. One of them was Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), a private Washington, D.C.-based group that champions whistleblowers who expose government waste, fraud and abuse. “For nearly a year, LTC Jason Amerine, a true American hero, has been under criminal investigation for speaking to Congress about the US's totally dysfunctional hostage recovery process,” Brian said in a statement for Newsweek. ”When anyone brings concerns of wrongdoing to Congress they are supposed to be protected under the law. But in fact, it took Jason assembling his ‘last guerrilla army’ of Congressional supporters, POGO, and a few courageous military officers acting behind the scenes to prevent a court martial.”
Brian praised Hunter’s support for Amerine and blasted the Pentagon’s inspector general for “spectacularly” failing to protect Amerine’s whistleblower rights. “It is time to get his mugshot, fingerprints and DNA removed from the criminal database and tackle the organizations and laws that failed him,” she said.
An Army spokeswoman said the Army would have no comment until Monday. The Legion of Merit is “one of the U.S. military's most prestigious awards, ranking just below the Silver Star, and ahead of the Distinguished Flying Cross,” according to the Army Times newspaper. “It is one of only two decorations to be issued as neck wear, the other being the Medal of Honor.”
Amerine wrote that he could not thank his friends and supporters “enough for standing by me all these months. Instead of highlighting anyone, I will simply thank everyone. I don’t write this to declare victory; the issue was the hostages and I was a distraction from my own cause.” “The U.S. ability to free them is finally being repaired,” he added, “but has a long, long way to go before it is more than an ad hoc solution to a crisis we took too long to identify.”
Article from Newsweek
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