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General McChrystal to retire

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The following story, found on Nationalnewswatch.com, originated on Fox News Channel. It is posted under the provisons of the Fair Comment section of the Copyright Act.

Gen. McChrystal Tells Army He Will Retire

Published June 28, 2010
| FOXNews.com

In this Jan. 20, 2010 file photo [not included], Gen. Stanley McChrystal, then Commander of the International Security Assistance Forces (ISAF) and Commander of United States Forces in Afghanistan, arrives to attend at the 13th Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board (JCMB) Meeting in Kabul, Afghanistan.


Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who was fired last week as the top U.S. general in the stalemated Afghanistan war, told the Army on Monday that he will retire.

Army spokesman Col. Tom Collins tells Fox News that McChrystal has informed the office that handles retirements for the Army, which is the General Officer Management Office, that he intends to retire.

The Army has not received McChrystal's official paperwork. In that, he will include a date by which he would like to retire. Then he will go through a formal process leading to retirement.

In announcing McChrystal's ouster on Wednesday, President Barack Obama praised his long Army career but said his intemperate remarks in a magazine article that appeared last week could not be abided.

McChrystal apologized for the remarks in Rolling Stone magazine and flew to Washington last week to resign as commanding general of the war.

The Army has been McChrystal's only career.

McChrystal was promoted to the selective and coveted rank of four-star general last year. It is not clear whether McChrystal will be able to retain that rank in retirement. Under Army rules, generals need to serve three years as a four-star officer to retain that rank, with its prestige and retirement benefits.

The secretary of the Army can allow officers with as little as two years of service to keep their retirement rank, Collins said.

Three military and defense officials in Washington said Obama may use his power as commander in chief to allow McChrystal to keep all four stars. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because McChrystal has not yet submitted his paperwork.

McChrystal was the Pentagon's choice to run the war following a year of Taliban advances in 2008 and early 2009. He replaced Gen. David McKiernan, also a four-star Army general, after McKiernan was fired for failing to apply the counterinsurgency strategy McChrystal represented. McKiernan retired from the Army almost immediately.

The Senate Armed Service Committee will hold a confirmation hearing Tuesday for Gen. David Petraeus, nominated to succeed McChrystal as the top U.S. and NATO general in Kabul.
 
No surprise. I will be watching to see if he keeps his 4th star or he reverts to three. The Administration could offer him retirement in grade if he didnt write a book or give interviews.McChrystal is a lib that voted for Obama and might make an interesting candidate for some future office. He has been a General only a year so I think he will revert to the rank of LTG,but you never know with this bunch.
 
tomahawk6 said:
No surprise. I will be watching to see if he keeps his 4th star or he reverts to three. The Administration could offer him retirement in grade if he didnt write a book or give interviews.McChrystal is a lib that voted for Obama and might make an interesting candidate for some future office. He has been a General only a year so I think he will revert to the rank of LTG,but you never know with this bunch.

As you mentioned about him being a lib and a potention political figure, for that reason alone I would not be so surprised to see Obama intervene to provent him from returning to LTG.
 
An update: McChrystal takes a job at Yale.

Politico link


Stanley McChrystal to Yale
Gordon Lubold Gordon Lubold – Mon Aug 16, 9:22 am ET
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who was forced to retire in July after an embarrassing Rolling Stone article quoted him and his staff making disparaging remarks about top White House officials, is taking a job at Yale, POLITICO has learned.

McChrystal will teach grad students a course in leadership at the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs in New Haven, which is opening this fall. He’ll be in good company: McChrystal will join John Negroponte, the former U.S. ambassador and former deputy secretary of state, as well as former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo at the institute.

McChrystal had been considering a number of opportunities from a wide range of places, from large corporations to nongovernmental organizations and even some wounded warrior groups seeking his leadership, sources said. And he will undoubtedly have a future on the speaker’s circuit.

But he's taking a different tack, at least for now, in agreeing to be a lecturer at an Ivy League school such as Yale, which seems as far away from the world McChrystal has known as a terrorist-killing Special Forces operator. (See: Petraeus downplays July 2011)

Many retired four-stars become consultants to the defense industry, mentors to the military or members of a variety of defense-related corporate boards. And McChrystal’s high profile most likely prompted curiosity if not fear within the White House that he would align himself with a Republican running in the midterms who would denigrate the White House’s execution of the war or its judgment in national security. (See: Petraeus: Iraq needs new gov't soon)

But that doesn’t appear to be McChrystal’s plan. The Institute for Global Affairs was just created last year after a $50 million gift from John and Susan Jackson. According to the Yale website, the institute will offer courses for students at Yale who are interested in global affairs and provide career counseling and placement services for students interested in careers in diplomatic service or with international agencies. McChrystal appears to be one of four senior fellows appointed to teach there; four more tenured faculty members are assigned there as well. (See: Morning Defense: McChrystal's new gig)

Yale University’s public affairs department was not available early Monday morning to comment on the hire.

McChrystal was forced to retire in July after the Rolling Stone profile portrayed comments he and his staff made about their civilian overseers.

Despite the controversy, McChrystal was given a hero’s send-off at a retirement ceremony at Fort McNair that was attended by a number of senior officers and officials, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Gates said McChrystal had one of the “sharpest and most inquisitive minds” in the Army, known for his intellectual appetite and disciplined constitution. (See: Gates staying through 2011)

But his career in the Army was clearly also defined by his operational acumen. “No single American had inflicted more fear, more loss of freedom and more loss of life” on American enemies, Gates said of the retiring general.

 
 
Its good that he got a job, but I dont see the Yale thing working out well for McChrystal. Could be wrong. :)
 
who was forced to retire in July after an embarrassing Rolling Stone article quoted him and his staff making disparaging remarks about top White House officials

AND

McChrystal will teach grad students a course in leadership

I guess loyalty has nothing to do with leadership or is it a course on what not to do as a leader.
 
Loyalty..... you mean the kind where you disparage your boss ?
 
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