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US Navy moves to kick SEAL Trump pardoned out of unit
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 21, 2019

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The US Navy on Wednesday began a procedure that could remove from its elite SEALs unit an officer accused of war crimes whom President Donald Trump pardoned last week.

Along with three other unidentified members of his unit, Edward Gallagher, 40, was "notified today that a process will start to evaluate and look at their continued service as SEALs," spokeswoman for US special forces Tamara Lawrence told AFP.

A panel of Navy SEAL officers will convene in December to decide whether Gallagher can remain in the unit, Lawrence said.

The panel will give its opinion to the commander of the US Navy special forces, Rear Admiral Collin Green, who will make recommendations to US Navy command, which will make a final decision, she added.

In July, Gallagher was acquitted of charges related to the stabbing death of a wounded Islamic State prisoner in Iraq, and of other killings of civilians.

But he was convicted of posing with the slain fighter's body in a group picture with other SEALs.

Gallagher's case was championed by Fox News, which is closely followed by Trump, and last week the president reversed the military court's decision to reduce Gallagher's demotion following his conviction

He also pardoned a former US soldier convicted of murder and a Green Beret charged with killing a suspected Taliban bomb-maker.

Lawrence declined to say whether the proceedings started on Wednesday had been opened in response to Trump's moves.

"Discussions have been ongoing since before the president's action," she said, but the sailors concerned "were notified today."

The procedure is administrative and not legal, and even if they are excluded from the SEALs, they will be able to continue serving in the Navy.


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Russian strikes kill nine civilians in Syria: monitor
Beirut (AFP) Nov 17, 2019
Air strikes by Syrian regime ally Russia on Sunday killed nine civilians in the jihadist-run enclave of Idlib in the northwest of the country, a war monitor said. Five of the victims died in the village of Al-Malaja in southern Idlib province while the other four were killed in raids on the town of Saraqeb in the east, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. A number of people were wounded, some seriously, the monitor's head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP, though he was unable to say h ... read more

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