Clearly the military has little else to do and a surplus of experienced,
qualified general officers.
 
Bruce
 



Affair gets general sacked and divorced on same day
>From Tom Baldwin

London Times

August 11, 2005
Distinguished military career is ruined after senior officers take moral
high ground













The US Army is keen to instil a sense of morality in its recruits after two
years of bad publicity, notably over the treatment of Iraqi prisoners in the
Middle East. The sacking of General Kevin Byrnes is thought to be designed
to set an example.



A FOUR-STAR US Army general accused of sexual misconduct has been dismissed
in an apparent attempt to reaffirm the American military's high moral
standards. 

The decision to relieve General Kevin P. Byrnes of his duties in charge of
the Army's recruitment and training for such a reason is thought to be
without recent precedent for such a senior officer. 

General Byrnes, 55, had previously had an unblemished military record. It
included service in Vietnam and commanding international forces in Bosnia.
He had been due to retire in November after a 36-year army career. 


 


 

An army spokeswoman said yesterday: "He was relieved of his command for a
matter of personal conduct. The Army has not released the nature of that
conduct, but it was not a criminal issue." 

However, reporters have been told by anonymous sources that the action was
taken because General Byrnes had been conducting an extramarital affair. He
has been separated from his wife since May last year and their divorce was
finalised this week, on the same day that he was relieved of his command. 

Lieutenant-Colonel David Robertson, who was acting as the general's lawyer,
said that the allegation was about one relationship only, that it involved a
private citizen and that the relationship was not with a member of the US
armed forces or with an employee of the Government. 

Although having an affair is sometimes judged as breaching the US military
code's ban on adultery, such cases rarely result in more than a letter of
reprimand, especially when the officer in question is about to retire. 

However, under a Republican Administration that prides itself on high moral
standards, the Army is said to be concerned about its reputation after two
years of deeply damaging allegations about the treatment of prisoners in
Iraq. 

There has also been considerable embarrassment over the cases of two
prominent Air Force generals accused of sexually harassing subordinates at a
time when the Defence Department is restructuring its policy on such
behaviour. 

Michael O'Hanlon, a military expert at the Brookings Institution, told The
Washington Post: "It must have been the sort of thing where they felt they
had no choice, given the recent history of personnel scandals in the Army.
They are trying to make it clear that four stars don't get special
treatment. They must feel they have a need to send that message." 

The army spokeswoman said last night: "I'm aware of all this speculation,
but we would stress that the Army already has very high moral standards and
that it is a professional self-policing organisation." 

She added that a final decision about whether General Byrnes would face
further action, such as reducing his rank, had yet to be taken. 

Donald Rumsfeld, the Defence Secretary, told a news conference at the
Pentagon: "It's something that is being handled in the proper channels, and
it's not something that it would be appropriate for me to get involved
with." 

General Byrnes is ranked third in seniority among the Army's 11 four-star
generals. The Pentagon confirmed yesterday that it could find no cases in
recent history in which an officer of such high standing had been relieved
of duty for disciplinary reasons. 

However, others have been dismissed for speaking out of turn. Admiral
Richard Macke was removed as Pacific Naval Commander in 1995 for remarks
that he made about the case of US Marines accused of raping a 12-year-old
Japanese girl. And General Michael Dugan was fired as Airforce Chief of
Staff in 1990 for comments he made to reporters about planning for the 1991
Gulf War.

MILITARY CONQUESTS 

.  Mark Antony, the Roman commander, displeased Octavian, the future emperor
to whose sister he was married, and had his powers revoked by the Senate in
32BC as a result of his affair with Cleopatra, sparking a civil war 

.  Admiral Nelson fell in love with the young wife of the elderly British
Ambassador to Naples in 1798. They lived together in London and Lady
Hamilton gave birth to Nelson's daughter in 1801 

.  Colonel Bob Stewart, the commander of the British United Nations troops
in Bosnia, left his wife in 1993 for Claire Podbielski, a Red Cross worker
who was a colleague in the war-torn country 


 


 

.  Sir Peter Harding, Marshal of the Royal Air Force, was forced to resign
as Chief of the Defence Staff in 1994 after his affair with Lady Bienvenida
Buck was revealed 

.  Lieutenant Kelly Flinn, the first woman to fly a B-52 bomber, was accused
of an affair with the husband of another enlisted woman in 1997. She was
eventually allowed to resign to avoid a court martial



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