Defense Minister Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg has been strongly criticized for sacking General Henning Hars. The general was put into "temporary retirement" after he questioned the dismissal of a fellow officer.
zu Guttenberg did not give a reason for the dismissal
German Defense Minister Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg has been sharply criticized for sacking a general who wrote him a letter asking for the reason why Military Inspector General Wolfgang Schneiderhan was sacked in last year.
"It looks like the heads of disagreeable oddballs are rolling just because they have a different opinion than the minister," Green party speaker Omid Nouripour told the daily Mitteldeutsche Zeitung.
Unanswered questions
Following Schneiderhan's dismissal in November 2009, Brigadier General Henning Hars, a former military attache to Washington, wrote a letter to the defense minister asking why the high-ranking officer had been dismissed. Hars also asked Guttenberg for his assessment of the controversial Kunduz air raid, which killed a large number of civilians in northern Afghanistan last September. Hars did not receive a response to his letter.
Hars questioned Guttenberg's dismissal of Wolfgang Schneiderhan
Defense Minister Guttenberg then used his right to move General Hars into involuntary retirement, according to a report in the Tagesspiegel newspaper. A few days ago, Hars received his discharge papers from German president Horst Koehler.
According to the ministry, Hars was called to a meeting with state secretary Ruediger Wolf and another senior official to discuss the letter. "As a result of these talks, both officials recommended to the minister that the brigadier general be put into temporary retirement," a ministry spokesman said. Hars has not commented on the decision, citing his military duty to remain silent on official matters.
Angry reactions
Rainer Arnold, a spokesman for the opposition Social Democratic Party, criticized Guttenberg's decision.
"Of course a minister can send a general into retirement if he has no confidence in him," Arnold told the newspaper Koelner Stadt-Anzeiger. "But I have the impression that it's the military leaders who do not have any more confidence in the Minister," Arnold added.
smh/dpa/AFP
Editor: Ben Knight