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Afghanistan
Army Weighs If Ex-Green Beret Hero Should Be Dismissed
2015-05-17
[Ayepee] An Army officer stripped of a medal for heroism under fire and his right to call himself a Green Beret is fighting for his military career after accusations he tracked down and killed a suspected bomb-maker in Afghanistan.

Though a criminal investigation failed to find remains of his alleged victim and didn't result in charges against Maj. Mathew Golsteyn, he's been targeted for possible dismissal from the Army and the consequent loss of veteran's benefits with a less-than-honorable discharge.

A Fort Bragg hearing before three, higher-ranked Special Forces officers could meet later this month to weigh arguments from Golsteyn's attorney why he should remain on active duty.

"My hope is that Golsteyn will receive a fair and impartial hearing. Based on the Army's actions and decisions thus far, I regret to say this won't be the case," one of the soldier's defenders, U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., wrote Wednesday to Army Secretary John McHugh. Army brass have kept Hunter updated on the case.

Others believe the Army is obligated to act because the Geneva Conventions governing warfare forbid arbitrary killings by troops, said Jeffrey K. Walker, a St. John's University criminal law professor.
We have a Klingon drone program and WH directives for this type of activity. Please stay in your lane MAJ Goldsteyn.
"That's a minimum protection anybody gets at any time, no matter how you categorize them or how you categorize the conflict. That is the basic floor below which nobody can drop as far as protections go," said Walker, a retired Air Force officer and former military lawyer. "Arbitrary deprivation of life is at the top of the list of things you cannot do."
St. John's University and a bearded old former USAF lawyer? Besides personal opinion, what connection with the process does this statement represent ?
Golsteyn's roller-coaster military career from battlefield hero to whispers of a war crime is rooted in the deadly month of February 2010, when American-led allied forces seized the Taliban stronghold of Marjah in Afghanistan's Helmand province.

Insurgent snipers unleashed fire on Forward Operating Base McQueary. A patrol of about 80 troops headed out across muddy poppy fields to find the gunmen. Over a four-hour firefight, Golsteyn repeatedly exposed himself to enemy fire as he helped evacuate a wounded Afghan soldier and directed repeated airstrikes onto the enemy, according to the Army's narrative of why he was awarded a Silver Star medal.

Then, about two months before being promoted from captain to major in November 2011, he had an poly interview with the CIA. He talked about something he'd done during the 2010 deployment before the battle near Marjah.
A Klingon interview? Yet another very telling lapse in judgement.
Golsteyn "claimed to have captured and shot and buried a suspected IED bomb maker. He further went to comment that he went back out with two others to cremate the body and dispose of the remains," according to a memo summarizing the Golsteyn case. "Capt. Golsteyn stated that he knew it was illegal but was not remorseful as he had solid intelligence and his actions protected the safety of his fellow teammates."
Patrol report? Contact report? EKIA? SALUTE? GRID? Graves registration? Memory loss? Selective PTSD, Fit of rage? Accidental Discharge? No interest in interrogation? Book deal? WTF Major? Did you consult a shrink ?
The Army's Criminal Investigative Division, acting on the CIA's tip, could find no one who corroborated Golsteyn's claim to have hunted the bomb-maker after an attack that killed two Marines. Nor could they find any cremated remains of the Afghan. Despite that, investigators said "Golsteyn committed the offenses of murder and conspiracy based on the interview provided by the CIA," according to the Sept. 29 memo first published by the web site The Intercept. Lt. Col. Christopher Kasker, a spokesman for McHugh, confirmed the memo is authentic.
The Klingon's said it, so it must be true. No solid legal evidence required as they are the ultimate source of the knowledge of good and of evil.
Posted by:Besoeker

#8  Didn't realize he's not fighting a war, but rather participating in humanitarian kinetic action?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2015-05-17 13:02  

#7  Ditto Mike. Returning to the scene and burning the body, a very bad indicator.
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-05-17 12:34  

#6  Some of the Men, his peers have said he has gotten a bad rap and it's too political.

I tend to agree. This guy has done too many things right for this snub.
Check his record out.
Posted by: newc   2015-05-17 12:32  

#5  ...I never saw combat, and the closest I ever got to a combat zone was Korea and Saudi Arabia. Having said that, it's still my take here that MAJ Golsteyn - with motives and feelings anyone can understand - went free-lancing and tried to cover it up. There are lines you don't cross, and this appears to be one of them.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2015-05-17 09:48  

#4  Brian Williams? WTF then, it must be true.
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-05-17 08:29  

#3  The last thing the Obama administration needs is a bunch of Marines running around Afghanistan killing bad guys.
Posted by: Airandee   2015-05-17 08:15  

#2  and Brian Williams corroborated his story
Posted by: Frank G   2015-05-17 08:12  

#1  Wars are not going to be won with ROEs that don't permit taking out an enemy bomb maker who killed two Marines. We would have never won WWII with what's going on today. We'd all be speaking German or Japanese if we weren't dead.
Posted by: JohnQC   2015-05-17 08:07  

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