Posted on 03/27/2016 12:13:33 PM PDT by Pining_4_TX
Hes retired Marine General James Mattis. Hes an extraordinary American. Yes, its a longshot. But he is exactly what we need.
(Excerpt) Read more at thedailybeast.com ...
That’s disgusting, but it seems to be the way too many generals make it to the top. Shut up and don’t make waves.
No way I’d push Mathis as a person for the republicans to run in place of Trump. Nor would I vote for him as a 3rd party candidate.
True, xzins. Mattis was and is a huge disappointment. He sold out the Haditha Marines and the Corps. He threw away an honorable career for a piece of brass. Disgusting.
Looks like I’m continuing my bad habit of misspelling his name. Sorry. :>)
LOL, serves him right. 8^)
Defend Our Marines main page Sins of the Generals series:
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HADITHA: SINS OF THE GENERALS Undue Influence from the Start |
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see post #87
Undue influence cited in Chessani case
Ruling by military judge could have major impact in prosecution of Haditha Marine lieutenant colonel
By Mark Walker
North County Times
May 21, 2008
Camp Pendleton - A military judge has found that top Marine Corps officers were unlawfully influenced by a general’s legal adviser when they decided to file criminal charges against a colonel whose troops killed two dozen civilians in the Iraqi city of Haditha in 2005
The impact of this week’s ruling by Col. Steven Folsom in the case against Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani was not immediately clear, but his attorneys described it as a “major speed bump.”
A legal expert with no ties to the case said it may mean the case will have to start anew.
The ruling forces prosecutors to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that no unlawful command influence led to charging Chessani, according to his attorneys. The Colorado native faces charges of dereliction of duty and violating a lawful order for failing to conduct a full-scale investigation into the civilian deaths.
Eight Marines from Camp Pendleton’s 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment were originally charged with wrongdoing at Haditha. Four enlisted men were charged with murdering the Iraqi civilians and four officers were charged with offenses related to failing to investigate the incident. The dead included several women and children.
Chessani is the highest-ranking officer charged in connection with the incident, which came after a roadside bomb destroyed a Humvee, killing a lance corporal and injuring another Marine.
The ruling in part found that Marine generals overseeing the case were influenced by the legal adviser during closed-door discussions about Chessani’s role.
Brian Rooney, one of Chessani’s attorneys, said Wednesday that the ruling creates a steep hurdle for prosecutors.
“They have to be able to show conclusively that there was no unlawful command influence, which which the judge found that there was,” Rooney said during a telephone interview.
Lt. Col. Sean Gibson, a Marine Corps spokesman for the Haditha trials, said the service would have no comment on the ruling. Prosecutors are barred by policy from commenting on any aspect of an ongoing case.
Chessani is being represented by the Thomas More Law Center in Ann Arbor, Mich. Richard Thompson, the firm’s president and chief counsel, praised Folsom’s ruling.
“Considering the politically charged nature of this case and particularly this motion, Col. Folsom made a courageous decision,” he said in a written statement.
Thompson also said that “the taint of unlawful command influence started from the inception of the investigation when high-ranking Pentagon officials decided to make Chessani a political scapegoat to appease a liberal, anti-war press and politicians.”
Gary Solis, a military law expert who teaches at Washington’s Georgetown University and is a former Marine Corps attorney, prosecutor and judge, said the ruling could have a major impact on the prosecution.
“It most likely means the Marine Corps will have to re-initiate the charging process because you cannot proceed with a case in which there is a finding of unlawful command influence,” Solis said Wednesday during a telephone interview. “In a sense, the Marine Corps is fortunate that the ruling comes now. If it came after the case was decided and there was a conviction, that conviction would have to be set aside.”
Solis also said the ruling could mean that a new convening authority overseeing the case may have to be appointed. Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the convening authority decides what charges should be brought, relying on the advice of a military prosecutor. The convening authority over the Chessani case is Camp Pendleton’s Lt. Gen. Samuel Helland.
In the months since the men were charged, five of the defendants have seen their cases dismissed. The only remaining defendants in addition to Chessani are 1st Lt. Andrew Grayson and Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich.
Wuterich faces several counts of manslaughter and related offenses. His trial is pending as is Grayson’s. Chessani, who was the battalion commander when the killings occurred Nov. 19, 2005, is scheduled to go on trial before a military jury at Camp Pendleton next month.
What was it that Wutterich finally agreed to....that he’d untruthfully misspelled his name on the affidavit?
Defend Our Marines main page
DEFEND OUR MARINES
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General Mattis testimony: History repeats itself
by Nathaniel R. Helms | June 4, 2008
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The not surprising testimony of General James N. Mattis on Monday in response to alleged undue command influence charges during the Haditha investigation was a serious setback for the highest ranking officer to be criminally charged in the cover-up case.
Lt. Col Jeffrey Chessani is charged with dereliction of duty and orders violations for failing to investigate and report an incident on November 19, 2005 when one Marine and 24 Iraqis died during an Al Qaeda inspired complex ambush in a squad of Marines.
Mattis, the Marine Corps general known as the Warrior Monk, said Monday he wasnt influenced by his personal attorney and long-time confidant Col. John Ewers during 25 meetings in which Chessani and his role at Haditha were discussed. At the time, Mattis was deciding whether or not to prosecute Chessani.
Before joining Mattis at Camp Pendleton as his personal lawyer and 1st Marine Expeditionary Force Staff Judge Advocate, Ewers investigated the Haditha incident for Army Maj. General Eldon Bargewell. The Army generals scathing indictment of Chessani and his superiors led to charges against Chessani and three other officers in 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines. Two of those officers have been exonerated and a third is in trial at this time.
Mattis long anticipated testimony regarding Ewers revealed that the dynamic lawyer known in the Corps as Golden Ass for his ability to always come up shining sat mute while Mattis discussed with another attorney the case Ewers had investigated. Mattis told the military judge hearing the defenses undue influence motion that he never asked Ewers for advice or information.
The Mattis Ewers relationship is a long and involved one, the evidence revealed. When Mattis was a Major General commanding the 1st Marine Division in 2003, Ewers was the divisions top lawyer. He is also the architect and implementer of the Reportable Incident Assessment Team (RIAT) adopted Marine Corps wide to afford the Commanding General with a means to counteract media backlash, Ewers had projected.
A failed exercise by a RIAT public relations officer two years later created the climate of suspicion that triggered the initial inquiry by a Time magazine reporter challenging the veracity of the Marines account of the Haditha incident, evidence has already revealed.
Ironically, Ewers envisioned RIAT would provide Mattis with “ground truth” regarding serious incidents, ranging from friendly fire shootings to war crimes perpetrated by one side or the other, according to the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force Lessons: Learned post-deployment report.
His intention was to put together a small, internally sourced team that could help the Commanding General decide whether additional investigation and reporting to higher headquarters were required. The RIAT core team consisted of the SJA as team leader; the Division Public Affairs Officer; combat cameraman; and the Division Surgeon.
When the RIAT effort fell on its face in February 2006 somebody had to take the blame and Chessani was the battalion commander on the ground where the incident happened. He isnt the first fall guy in Marine Corps history. Two hundred and thirty-two years of unpredictable politics have left more than a few good Marines to satisfy the gods.
The past lives
One legendary scapegoat was Marine Major Littleton Waller Tazewell Tony Waller, in 1901 the commander of 315 hardcore Marines serving under US Army command in the Philippines. His story will seem vaguely familiar.
His boss was Brigadier General Jacob H. Hell-Roaring Jake Smith, the commanding officer of an ad hoc joint service unit called the 6th Separate Brigade. American military officers of quality had snappy nicknames in the age before orders were roared over fax machines and e-mails.
Waller, like most of his Army counterparts, based his operations on the fact that the majority of the natives were hostile to U. S. actions and could not be trusted, despite pretenses by the villagers to be pro-American. It was well known that many of those supposedly pro-American villagers were actually members of the unpredictable insurrection.
President William McKinley, a humane man and progressive politician, demanded new thinking. Reports of extreme cruelties by American troops were surfacing in the press and he insisted it stop. Toward that end, there arrived the U.S. Armys Company C, 9th Infantry, commanded by Captain Thomas W. Connell, a strong advocate of McKinley’s theory of “benevolent assimilation.” Connell attempted to assert his unwelcome benevolence upon Balangiga, Samar, one of the Philippines hundreds of islands.
Samar in 1901 was populated by an extremely violent, primitive society. One 9th Infantry officer later testified that he considered the natives “. . . savages; they were low in intelligence, treacherous, cruel; seemed to have no feeling for their families or anyone else.” Obviously the dehumanization of opponents is not a 21st Century phenomena.
On 28 September, 1901, 46 days after arriving in Samar, the insurgents mounted a surprise attack on Company C. Led by town officials, the locals slaughtered the American soldiers. Only 26 of the 74 troopers in C Company survived the massacre. Most were tortured to death and their bodies mutilated. The massacre pretty much ended the practice of benevolence on Samar.
On October 24, Wallers Marines were sent to punish the rebels. Unlike Connell, he held a less munificent view of the situation on Samar. Waller issued explicit orders to his officers concerning relations with the natives and the rules of engagement:
“Place no confidence in the natives, and punish treachery immediately with death. No trust, no confidence, can be placed in them. . . . The men must be informed of the courage, skill, size and strength of the enemy. We must do our part of the work, and with the sure knowledge that we are not to expect quarter.
Waller’s orders were within the limitations of General Order No.100 of 1863 dealing with the rules of engagement with irregular warfare. The order stated that if enemy units gave no quarter and became treacherous upon capture, it was lawful to shoot anyone belonging to that captured unit.
Hell Roaring Jake told Maj. Waller to kill everybody he encountered over the age of ten including the woman. Waller didnt want to do it, and told his Marines not to. His Marines had fought in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and most recently in China knocking down wild-eyed Boxers with deadly accurate rifle and new-fangled machine gun fire. For the most part they complied.
After a short, glorious campaign that wiped out the insurgents mountain headquarters Waller inexplicably marched his men 35 miles through the jungle to the other coast. It took them 29 days. It was rough going. His men were reduced to eating roots.
Along the way ten Marines in one column actually starved to death before they were rescued. After the Marines were led to safety they accused eleven of the Filipino porters who accompanied them of hoarding food. A delirious lieutenant told Waller three of the porters tried to kill him with a machete. None of it was true.
Waller, himself bewildered by jungle fever, ordered them summarily executed. He telegraphed Hell-Roaring Jake that, It became necessary to expend the prisoners.
Waller explained he had 45 effectives to guard 93 prisoners and defend against 3,000 restive natives. He simply couldnt afford the trouble the allegedly mutinous porters were causing.
Word of the atrocity got back to Washington in the dark days after President McKinleys assassination. It was all the wars legion of opponents needed to bash the unpopular campaign. Despite incoming President Theodore Roosevelts best effort to shield Waller, whom he admired from their campaign together in Cuba in 1898, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge initiated hearings to find out why Waller had executed 11 Filipinos in cold blood.
The story was all over the indignant New York and Washington press. Big newspapers had entered an impassioned era of advocacy journalism in the wake of Americas new imperialism. Before long tales of water torture, beatings, and senseless murder emerged. Most of the atrocities were true, in this war perpetrated however by soldiers, not Marines. But then as now, the press often got them confused.
Mark Twain, the eras most trusted populist, got into the act, suggesting the American flag should be redesigned with white stripes painted black and the stars replaced with the skull and crossbones.
Not to be outdone, publisher William Randolph Hearsts New York Evening Journal covered its entire front page with a banner headline, KILL, KILL: MAJOR WALLER ORDERED TO MASSACRE THE FILLIPINOS.
At his court-martial Waller accepted full responsibility for ordering the executions. He naively believed Hell-Roaring Jake would do the honorable thing and admit he had ordered his favorite Marine to kill everybody over ten years of age who even seemed belligerent. After all, Waller reasoned, Hell Roaring Jake was an Army general and generals of any stripe were honorable men.
Waller was wrong. Hell-Roaring Jake blamed his subordinate for everything. He testified he had ordered the Marine officer to treat everyone humanely. Enraged at his erstwhile superiors lack of honor, Waller remounted the witness stand and recounted Brig. Gen. Smiths specific order.
I want no prisoners. I wish you to kill and burn, and the more you kill and the more you burn the better you will please me, he testified Smith had ordered. I want all people killed who are capable of bearing arms.
Waller: I would like to know the age limit.
Smith: Ten years.
Then Waller produced enough corroborating witnesses to convince the panel he was innocent. Waller was exonerated and restored to duty, eventually rising to the rank of major general.
But Waller was never appointed Commandant of the Marine Corps as Roosevelt and other powers of the day wanted it, despite having aces like two-time Medal of Honor recipient Maj. Gen. Smedley Old Gimlet Eye Butler in his corner.
The entire affair was a terrible black mark on the Marine Corps that historian Max Boot says put a pall over the entire U.S. war effort in the Philippines.
Wait around long enough and history always repeats itself.
__________________________________________
Nathaniel R. Helms
Defend Our Marines
4 June 2008
Note: Nat Helms is a Contributing Editor to Defend Our Marines. He is a Vietnam veteran, former police officer, war correspondent, and, most recently, author of My Men Are My Heroes: The Brad Kasal Story (Meredith Books, 2007).
© Nathaniel R. Helms 2008
Go to the Defend Our Marines main page
Contact us at WarChronicle@verizon.net
I agree with the three of you.
Gen. Mattis did not handle the Haditha Marines case well at all, especially Lt. Col. Chessani in my view.
Defend Our Marines main page |
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DEFEND OUR MARINES ____________________________________________________________________________ THE TRIAL IS OVER: SSGT WUTERICH PLEADS GUILTY TO ONE COUNT OF NEGLIGENT DERELICTION OF DUTY |
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So, he agreed that he might have not been clear enough when he told those guys to think about their own safety first.
That’s some charge on a freaking battlefield.
(I’m gonna get mad all over again. LOL!)
I remember at the time we were hoping Frank would fight it out. I understand why he didn’t. He had to get the threat of prison off his back. So he took the plea. He protected his daughter and made sure she would have a father to come home to.
Can you imagine a Marine in a firefight getting in trouble for telling his men to take care of their ownselves first.
It is horrendous. I hope he appeals it under President Trump.
I really like that idea!
Kasich for Treasury. Christie for Attorney General.
10-4 on that.
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