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Socom General Criticized

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Published: October 9, 2007

WASHINGTON - The No. 2 commander of U.S. Special Operations troops has stepped into the cross hairs of a North Carolina congressman, who wants an investigation of the general.

Rep. Walter B. Jones, R-N.C., requested last week that Defense Secretary Robert Gates order an investigation into Lt. Gen. Frank Kearney, deputy commander of Special Operations Command at Tampa's MacDill Air Force Base.

The congressman is mad about Kearney's decision to punish troops involved in two incidents involving Army and Marine Corps Special Operations forces in Afghanistan.

In a telephone interview, Jones criticized public statements by Kearney about the Green Berets and Marines.

'This whole issue of what happened in Afghanistan has become a public display by the Army and Lt. Gen. Kearney,' the congressman said.

'I think the benefit of the doubt should go to these service members,' he added.

In one incident, Kearney ordered an Article 32 hearing, akin to a civilian grand jury, for two Army Special Forces soldiers - a captain and a master sergeant from Fort Bragg, N.C. - who were accused of murder in a sniper incident.

Before Kearney's order, two investigations were conducted. The first report suggested a crime had been committed, while the second cleared the soldiers.

Last week, after the Article 32 hearing, another general declined to charge the soldiers. Afterward, Kearney released a statement saying the Article 32 investigation resolved the conflicting findings.

In the other case, Kearney expelled a 120-man Marine Corps special operations unit from Afghanistan in March after a firefight that followed a car bomb attack. Afghan officials think the Marine unit killed 19 civilians during the counterattack.

Kearney said there was no evidence the Marines were under enemy fire when they killed the civilians. He said the Afghan reaction to the incident made it impossible for the Marine unit, based at Camp Lejeune, N.C., to continue operating in Afghanistan. The Marines were transferred to Iraq.

Jones suggested Kearney's actions caused improper influence of investigations into the incidents, which is prohibited by military law.

Acknowledging he has no direct evidence that Kearney improperly influenced the investigations, Jones said: 'The process raises questions in my mind.' He added, 'My gut is telling me something is wrong.'

The congressman also complained about apologies from an Army colonel and so-called condolence payments made to families of civilians killed in the second incident.

Jones said the general and colonel should have waited until the Naval Criminal Investigative Service completed a full investigation. That report has not been approved by top Marine commanders yet.

Efforts to reach the Marines' attorneys were unsuccessful.

The Special Operations Command had no comment.

Reporter James W. Crawley can be reached at jcrawley@

mediageneral.com.

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