McChrystal Called Back to Washington Over Comments Made to Rolling Stone

June 22nd, 2010

Via: Washington Post:

The top U.S. general in Afghanistan was headed to Washington early Tuesday for an impromptu White House meeting, after apologizing for an upcoming magazine article that portrays him and his staff as flippant and dismissive of top Obama administration officials involved in Afghanistan policy.

The profile in Rolling Stone magazine, titled the “Runaway General,” is certain to increase tension between the White House and Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal.

It also raises fresh questions about the judgment and leadership style of the commander Obama appointed last year in an effort to turn around a worsening conflict.

McChrystal and some of his senior advisors are quoted criticizing top administration officials, at times in starkly derisive terms. An anonymous McChrystal aide is quoted calling national security adviser James Jones a “clown,” who remains “stuck in 1985.”

Referring to Richard Holbrooke, Obama’s senior envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, one McChrystal aide is quoted saying: “The Boss says he’s like a wounded animal. Holbrooke keeps hearing rumors that he’s going to get fired, so that makes him dangerous.”

On one occasion, McChrystal appears to react with exasperation when he receives an e-mail from Holbrooke, saying, “Oh, not another e-mail from Holbrooke. I don’t even want to read it.”

U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry, a retired three-star general, isn’t spared. Referring to a leaked cable from Eikenberry that expressed concerns about the trustworthiness of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, McChrystal is quoted as having said: “Here’s one that covers his flank for the history books. Now if we fail, they can say, ‘I told you so.'”

A U.S. embassy spokeswoman said she had no immediate comment on the piece.

One Response to “McChrystal Called Back to Washington Over Comments Made to Rolling Stone”

  1. Larry Glick says:

    Thinking out loud “outside of the box,” I wonder if McChrystal may actually have had a method in his madness. Putting bits and pieces together, one can see that things in Afghanistan are not going as smoothly as planned. Perhaps this seeming fiasco was actually a way of McChrystal exiting from a bad situation so that history’s blame for failure rests upon Petraeus and not McChrystal.

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