Google – AFP, 20 December 2013
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This
undated US Air Force handout photo shows Major General Michael
Carey (US Air
Force/AFP/File)
|
Washington
— A US general recently lost his job in charge of nuclear missiles after he
went on a drunken bender in Russia, where he insulted his hosts and cavorted
with "suspect" women, officials said Friday.
Air Force
Major General Michael Carey was sacked in October as commander of the
military's land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, over what officials
at the time called "personal misbehavior."
Now the
details of that misbehavior have been revealed in embarrassing detail by the
Air Force inspector general, which released the results of its investigation
into Carey's conduct in a July trip to Russia.
The
two-star general was drunk through much of his official four-day visit to Russia,
and his "inappropriate behavior" prompted a female Pentagon employee
to file a complaint, the report said.
Carey
"acted in a manner that exceeded the limits of accepted standards of good
conduct" during the trip that included a nuclear security exercise and
meetings with Russian officials, according to the investigation.
The general
began drinking during a stop in Zurich and kept drinking over three days in
Moscow, showing up late for motorcades to meet Russian representatives,
interrupting tour guides, slurring his speech and returning to his hotel room
in the early morning hours, the report said.
During the
stopover in Zurich, Carey -- apparently intoxicated -- spoke loudly in a public
area about his importance as commander of a nuclear force and "that he
saves the world from war every day," investigators said.
Once in
Moscow at a Marriott hotel, the general said over drinks that his unit
"had the worst morale and that the leadership wasn't supporting him,"
it said.
He and
other delegation members had drinks with two foreign women two nights in a row,
with Carey dancing with one of them.
The general
later told investigators that the two women were "suspect" as
"it seemed odd" that they were always showing up at the same location
as the American delegation.
Apart from
being sacked from his job as commander of the 20th Air Force, Carey received a
"letter of counseling" for his actions, an Air Force official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP on Friday.
The episode
marks the latest setback for the US military's nuclear forces, which has faced
reports of persistent morale problems and mixed results from inspections.
In his
former job as commander of the 20th Air Force, Carey was responsible for 450
Minuteman missiles across five states and 9,600 troops that maintain the
weapons.
Carey is
now assigned as a special assistant to the commander of Air Force Space Command
and is no longer overseeing nuclear missiles.
General
William Shelton, the chief of the Air Force's Space Command, said in a
statement that it was "an unfortunate incident" and that Carey
"has otherwise served the nation extremely well."
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