The scenario sounds unbelievable: a decorated green beret U.S. Army member is being kicked out of the Army after 11 years. His crime? He shoved an Afghan police officer that was accused of raping a young boy then beating his mother when she reported it. Do you think this is fair? FOX News explains:
The case of Sgt. 1st Class Charles Martland now has the attention of Congress, with Rep. Duncan Hunter writing to Defense Secretary Ash Carter challenging the decision.
I am once again dismayed by the Armys actions in this case, Hunter, R-Calif., wrote in a letter to Carter.
Martland is described by many of his teammates as the finest soldier they have ever served alongside.
But his Army career changed course during his second deployment to Afghanistan in 2011. After learning an Afghan boy was raped and his mother beaten, Martland and his team leader confronted a local police commander they had trained, armed and paid with U.S. taxpayer dollars. When the man laughed off the incident, they physically confronted him.
They were punished by the Army at the time but why exactly Martland is now being discharged is a matter of dispute. Army sources cited his accolades, including being named runner-up for 2014 Special Warfare Training Group Instructor of the Year from a pool of 400 senior leaders in Special Forces, in questioning the decision.
As for the incident in 2011, Hunter told Carter: To intervene was a moral decision, and SFC Martland and his Special Forces team felt they had no choice but to respond.