TRANSLATION
Rear Admiral John Ring was an Obama holdover
More sauce on Gitmo commander:
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/28/us/politics/guantanamo-bay-prison-commander.html
GUANTÁNAMO BAY, Cuba — The commander of the prison at Guantánamo Bay has been fired seven weeks before he was to leave the job.
Adm. Craig S. Faller relieved Rear Adm. John C. Ring for a “loss of confidence in his ability” to lead, the United States Southern Command said on Sunday in a brief statement. Admiral Ring’s deputy, Brig. Gen. John F. Hussey, is now the acting commander.
Col. Amanda Azubuike, a spokeswoman for the Southern Command, which oversees the prison, said the decision to remove Admiral Ring had nothing to do with a recent news media visit he hosted there. She said only that he was let go after a monthlong investigation that was opened in March.
Admiral Faller, the leader of the Southern Command, and Admiral Ring met on Saturday at the command’s headquarters in Doral, Fla., where Admiral Faller “personally informed” Admiral Ring that he was being fired. Admiral Ring “will be temporarily assigned duties elsewhere” in the Southern Command, Colonel Azubuike said.
Admiral Ring, a former commander of the aircraft carrier Nimitz, was the 18th leader of the prison operations that started in January 2002. He began that assignment in April 2018 and was due to be replaced in a routine rotation the week of June 11.
“The vast majority of commanders complete their assigned tours with distinction,” Colonel Azubuike said. “When they fall short, we hold our leaders accountable, which reflects the importance we place on the public’s trust and confidence in our military leaders.”
At Guantánamo, Admiral Ring was responsible for 40 detainees and a staff of 1,800 troops and civilian employees. Soon after taking charge, he became an outspoken advocate of the need to build a new prison for 15 men who had been held by the C.I.A. before their 2006 transfer to American military custody.
In 2013 and 2014, Gen. John F. Kelly, a former Southern Command leader who would become President Trump’s first homeland security secretary and second chief of staff, had unsuccessfully lobbied Congress for money to replace the prison.
Admiral Ring renewed that effort last June, telling reporters that the current top-secret prison where the military segregates high-value detainees, called Camp 7, would become inadequate as the prisoners aged. Camp 7 houses Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, and other men the C.I.A. previously held as leaders, deputies or foot soldiers of Al Qaeda or other extremist groups.
Interesting discussion of the meaning of "loss of confidence" for non-military anons curious:
https://www.quora.com/When-a-military-officer-is-relieved-from-command-due-to-a-lack-of-confidence-from-a-superior-officer-does-that-mean-his-or-her-career-is-basically-over
Sample:
"The phase “a lack of confidence in his/her ability to command” is a euphemism and a polite way of saying that the officer is guilty of a heinous offense that might or might not be a violation of one or more articles of the UCMJ but is is no way up the standards expected of a commissioned officer placed in command of a military unit.
Being relieved of command —other than due to the normal course of assignments when your term of command has ended and you have a new assignment — is a serious affair. The officer has done something seriously wrong; perhaps several somethings. Senior commanders don’t relieve a subordinate commander without cause.
So, yes, it is almost certainly a career ender and depending upon where in your career this happened, you may be allowed to remain for a couple of years in order to retire (sanctuary), or you may have a few weeks and up to six months to separate from service and no retirement."
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Brilliant mind, spiced up with a touch of crazy-like-a-fox.