Officer Brigadier Ian Langford to keep Afghan medal
BEN PACKHAM - MARCH 6, 2021
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Defence has prevented one of its senior officers from handing back a distinguished leadership medal earned as a commander in Afghanistan during a period when Australian troops allegedly committed up to 16 war crimes.
Brigadier Ian Langford told superiors soon after the Brereton war crimes report was released that he wanted to hand back his Distinguished Service Cross, but was stopped from doing so because there was no formal process to deal with the request.
More than three months later, Defence’s response to the inquiry has stalled, shielding senior leaders — even those who want to speak out — from accountability for alleged war crimes on their watch.
An analysis by The Weekend Australian reveals 83 per cent of the war crimes allegations identified as “credible” by judge Paul Brereton occurred under the command of two senior officers — Brigadier Langford and Lieutenant Colonel Jon “Irish” Hawkins.
Brigadier Langford, one of the army’s most decorated senior officers and a potential future chief of army, was task group commander in Afghanistan from July 2012 to February 2013.
That rotation, which included the Special Air Service’s now-disbanded 2 Squadron and Victoria Cross recipient Ben Roberts-Smith, was marred by 16 credible allegations of war crimes — the highest of any of Australia’s 20 troop rotations in the Afghanistan war. There were nine credible allegations of war crimes during the January-July 2012 rotation, commanded by the now-retired Lieutenant Colonel Hawkins. Both men are highly respected in Defence circles and received the nation’s top medal for military leadership, the Distinguished Service Cross, for their 2012 commands.
Multiple sources close to Brigadier Langford said he was “deeply shocked” as he watched the Chief of the Defence Force Angus Campbell’s press conference releasing the Brereton report, which found 39 Afghan civilians and prisoners were allegedly murdered by up to 25 Australian soldiers.
He has told friends he was unaware of the alleged crimes by those under his command, and he approached Defence leaders about a week later saying he wanted to return the DSC.
He was told “a mechanism did not exist for him to do that”, and he would have to wait until one was put in place. The direction followed General Campbell’s order, which was later overturned by Scott Morrison, for meritorious unit citations to be stripped from about 2000 soldiers.
Brigadier Langford declined to comment when approached by The Weekend Australian.
Defence told The Weekend Australian it was aware of two ADF personnel “who have indicated their intention to voluntarily return their awards”.
But a process is yet to be established for awards to be handed back, or stripped against the recipient’s will.
Lieutenant Colonel Hawkins now runs a specialist security company, Omni Executive Pty Ltd, which won nearly $80m in Defence contracts in just five years, including more than $8m in work that didn’t go to competitive tender. The company is a major employer of special forces veterans, and conducts highly classified work for Special Operations Command and intelligence agencies including the Australian Signals Directorate.
Lieutenant Colonel Hawkins told The Weekend Australian: “I did not witness any wrongdoings by those in my command.
“Where complaints or allegations were raised directly with me, they were acted on and investigated in line with established protocol, as the Brereton inquiry report identified.”
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