Wynne Refused To Fire Moseley Last Week
ANN
REALTIME UPDATE: 06.05.08 1715 EDT: The
following is a statement from General T. Michael Moseley,
announcing his immediate resignation from the post of Chief of
Staff of the US Air Force:
Recent events have highlighted a loss of focus on certain
critical matters within the Air Force. As the Air Force’s
senior uniformed leader, I take full responsibility for events
which have hurt the Air Force’s reputation or raised a
question of every Airman’s commitment to our core values.
For the past 36 years I have been privileged to serve my country
as an Airman in the United States Air Force in peacetime and
combat. I was honored and humbled to be appointed the Air
Force’s 18th Chief of Staff and have been proud to serve our
Airmen and their families. Upon taking office, I worked hard with
Secretary Wynne to ensure the Air Force provided the right forces
at the right time to help our Nation and allies win the Global War
on Terror.
I think the honorable thing to do is to step aside. After
consulting with my family, I intend to submit my request for
retirement to Secretary Gates. The Air Force is bigger than one
Airman, and I have full confidence that the Air Force will continue
working with the Joint team to win today’s fight, take care
of its Airmen, and meet tomorrow’s challenges. I love the Air
Force and remain proud of America’s Airmen.
This is the statement from Michael W. Wynne, who also
tendered his resignation Thursday as Secretary of the US Air
Force:
Since November 3, 2005, it has been my privilege to
serve this country as the 21st Secretary of the Air Force. I have
relished the opportunity President Bush gave me to lead the
strongest Air Force in the world during a time of war, and I have
marveled at the tremendous accomplishments of our Airmen and
civilians in their valiant defense of this country and its
interests.
It has been an honor and pleasure to serve as their
Secretary while working side-by-side with General Moseley and the
magnificent patriots serving in the Department of Defense and the
United States Government to win today’s fight, take care of
our people, and prepare for tomorrow’s challenges.
Recent events convince me that it is now time for a
new leader to take the stick and for me to move on. Therefore I
plan to tender my resignation to Secretary Gates. Even as I do, my
heart, my thoughts, and prayers remain with America’s Airmen
who will continue to do magnificent things for this great
country.
ORIGINAL REPORT
1530 EDT: According to reports by the Air Force
Times and InsideDefense.com, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has
called for the immediate resignations of Air Force Chief of Staff
Gen. Michael Moseley, and Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne.
Moseley is the top uniformed officer with the USAF, while Wynne
is the top civilian official.
Citing the Air Force Times report, MSNBC states Wynne was
ordered by Gates to fire Moseley last week, due to a number of
disagreements in recent months... but Wynne refused. Gates then
called for the resignations of both men.
"Top-level Pentagon officials gave Moseley the option to resign
or be fired during a meeting this morning," states a report by
InsideDefense.com, which quoted an unidentified military
official.
White House Press Secretary Dana Perino told reporters President
Bush knew about the resignations, but hastened to add the President
"has not played any role" in the decision. General Moseley became
Air Force chief in September 2005, while Wynne took office in two
months later.
Both Moseley and Wynne have publicly disagreed with lawmakers --
and Gates -- on a number of recent issues. As ANN reported, the USAF
officials clashed with Gates in March over sending more Predator
UAVs to battle zones in Iraq and Afghanistan. Moseley favored the
so-called "all-in" approach bandied by Gates, though both Moseley
(shown below) and Wynne expressed concerns that current
deployments were stretching its UAV crews thin as it was.

That struggle also brought into question which branch of the US
armed forces should control UAVs. Gates wants the Army and Navy to
play a greater role in unmanned aerial vehicle operations.
The Air Force has also suffered a series of public
embarrassments in recent months, including the inadvertant flight
of a nuclear-armed B-52 bomber over the US last August. And Gates
has called for answers on how fuses for USAF ballistic missiles
were sent to Taiwan in 2006.
In another development closer to home, a $50 million contract
awarded in 2005 to promote the USAF Thunderbirds aerial
demonstration team was called into question in April by Pentagon
officials, who determined it had been tainted by outside influence
-- specifically, by a series of emails between Moseley, and an
executive for the company that won the bid.
There were no criminal charges... but the determination further
cast a pall on Air Force procurement procedures. "There has been a
lack of accountability that raised concerns," one source told
Reuters.
A public announcement of the resignations is expected this
afternoon. It is not yet known who will replace Wynne and
Moseley.
Wynne (shown below, foreground) is the second civilian military
chief to be forced out by Gates. Army secretary Francis Harvey was
forced out of his position in March 2007, due to fallout from
revelations of shoddy treatment of troops recovering from war
injuries at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

White House Press Secretary Dana Perino told reporters President
Bush knew about the resignations, but hastened to add the President
"has not played any role" in the decision.