Marine fired after slamming superiors over Afghanistan exit warns the military needs a ‘revolution’
‘I demand accountability, if we don’t get it, I’m bringing it!’ Marine battalion commander fired after slamming his superiors over botched Afghanistan exit strategy warns the military needs a ‘revolution’
Lt. Col. Stuart Scheller has spoken out for the first time since he was removed from his post in new commentsScheller had released a video to Facebook in which he called out Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley He had accused senior military leaders of not ‘raising their hands and accepting accountability or saying, ‘We messed this up” Scheller has now said he will bring ‘accountability’ and that the military ‘needs a revolution’ His family and Marines he has served with, who praised his ‘courage’ for speaking out
The Marine battalion commander who was relieved of his duty for warning superiors over the Afghanistan exit strategy says he will bring ‘accountability’ and that the military ‘needs a revolution.’
Lt. Col. Stuart Scheller has spoken out for the first time since he was removed from his post in new comments to the New York Post.
Scheller had released a video to Facebook in which he called out Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley and others for not ‘raising their hands and accepting accountability or saying, ‘We messed this up.”
‘The baby boomer’s turn is over,’ Scheller told the New York Post on Saturday. ‘I demand accountability, at all levels. If we don’t get it, I’m bringing it.’
The Marine also evoked former President Thomas Jefferson’s saying: ‘Every generation needs a revolution.’
Marine Corp Lt. Col. Stuart Steller said in a widely shared video that military leaders need to take accountability for botched, fatal evacuation out of Afghanistan
Follow up post to the video where Scheller said he was relived of his duty
He claimed in another Facebook post that some of his fellow officers have urged him to take down the video despite agreeing with him.
The New York Post also spoke with Scheller’s family and Marines he has served with, who praised his ‘courage’ for speaking out.
Juan Chavez, 33, served under Scheller from 2011 to 2014 and called him a ‘magnificent leader’ and ‘a breath of fresh air’ in comments to the New York Post.
‘It takes real courage to do what he did and that was Stu all the way,’ Chavez said.
Stuart Scheller Sr., his father, called him ‘the real deal’ and ‘a Marine’s Marine’ who idolized his grandfather, a World War II vet who landed on the beach at Normandy.
‘He has put his life on the line for fellow Marines so putting his career on the line like this does not surprise us,’ the proud father said.
He added: ‘He’s still on the battlefield protecting his men and women. It’s interesting that no one (in the military) has answered his call for accountability. Their answer was to fire him I guess. It’s a sad day for America.’
Scheller was relieved of his duties as a battalion commander after a stellar 17-year career. ‘I have been fighting for 17 years. I am willing to throw it all away to say to my senior leaders, “I demand accountability,”‘ he said
Scheller has previously said that he won’t talk to reporters until leaves the Marines. It was not immediately clear if and when Scheller will leave the military.
He claimed in another Facebook post that some of his fellow officers have urged him to take down the video despite agreeing with him.
‘Obviously I didn’t take it down,’ Scheller wrote.
‘I’ll offer this: we can’t ALL be wrong. If you all agree … then step up. They only have the power because we allow it. What if we all demanded accountability?’
Scheller had posted the controversial five-minute video on Facebook and LinkedIn.
‘The reason people are so upset on social media right now is not because the Marine on the battlefield let someone down,’ Scheller said in the vide.
‘People are upset because their senior leaders let them down. And none of them are raising their hands and accepting accountability or saying, ‘We messed this up.”
The video has been shared on Facebook over 23,000 times by Friday evening and has over 3,100 comments, most of which are supporting Scheller’s bravery for speaking out.
It’s unheard of for an active duty Marine commander to publicly rip ranking military leaders and political officials.
In the video, he said he knew he was risking his stellar 17-year career that included tours in Iraq and Afghanistan by posting the video, but he still ran head-on into metaphorical gunfire.
‘I have been fighting for 17 years. I am willing to throw it all away to say to my senior leaders, ‘I demand accountability.”
‘I think what you believe in can only be defined by what you’re willing to risk,’ he said. So, I think it gives me some moral high ground to demand the same honesty, integrity, accountability from my senior leaders.’
Lt. Col. Scheller said he had a personal relationship with one of the Marines who died in Thursday’s ISIS-K bombing and ‘potentially, all those people did die in vain’ if the leaders don’t take ownership of the debacle.
He said a major strategic error was not securing Bagram air base before evacuating people.
Instead, the US relied on the Kabul airport as the only way to fly out of the country.
On Friday, military experts have pinpointed the sudden, overnight withdrawal of US troops from Bagram on July 2 as the moment the US gave Afghanistan away.
In a follow up post later in the day Friday, he said was relieved of his duties.
Maj. Jim Stenger, Marine Corps spokesperson, told DailyMail.com in a statement that Lt. Col. Stuart Scheller was relieved of command by Col. David Emmel, Commanding Officer of School of Infantry-East, ‘due to a loss of trust and confidence in his ability to command.’
‘This is obviously an emotional time for a lot of Marines, and we encourage anyone struggling right now to seek counseling or talk to a fellow Marine. There is a forum in which Marine leaders can address their disagreements with the chain of command, but it’s not social media,’ Maj. Stenger said.
In a Facebook post, Steller said, ‘My chain of command is doing exactly what I would do if I were in their shoes,’ the Marine commander said in his Facebook post.
‘America has many issues, but it’s my home. It’s where my three sons will become men.
‘America is still the light shining in a fog of chaos. When my Marine Corps career comes to an end, I look forward to a new beginning.
‘My life’s purpose is to make America the most lethal and effective foreign diplomacy instrument. While my days of hand to hand violence may be ending, I see a new light on the horizon.’
Pentagon officials said on Friday that there was only one suicide bomber at Kabul airport on Thursday and not two, as was previously claimed, adding to confusion over the attack and fears for the ongoing operation on the ground.
Speaking at a briefing on Friday, Army General Hank Taylor said: ‘I can confirm that we do not believe there was a second explosion at or near the Baron hotel. It was one suicide bomber. In the confusion of very dynamic events can cause information to get confused,’ he said.
He did not say whether the bomb that went off was car bomb or bomber in a vest. Both were described on Thursday on the ground and by Washington officials. The Pentagon’s Press Secretary, John Kirby, was among those who confirmed both of the blasts.
At the same briefing on Friday, Kirby revealed that thousands of terrorists from ISIS-K, the group responsible for the attack at the airport, escaped from Bagram prison earlier this summer after Biden’s troops cleared out from the base in July, leaving it to outnumbered Afghan forces to supervise them.
The prisoners were filmed being freed by the Taliban on August 15.
Thirteen US troops were killed along with 170 Afghans at the airport on Thursday when a single suicide bomber detonated his vest. The first four have been named; Navy medic Max Soviak and Marines Rylee McCollum, David Lee Espinoza and Kareem Nikoui.