Monday, December 5, 2011 - 11:13 AM
Apparently, he was carrying on with an aide who, like him, is married to someone else.In an interesting footnote, Maj. Gen. Glenn Reith had been appointed to his post by the New Jersey governor who stepped down over a homosexual sex scandal with an aide. No word yet on whether General Reith will seek the Republican presidential nomination.
Meanwhile, an Australian navy officer is being court-martialed for allegedly spanking a female officer nine times last year. The case took a weirder turn when the female officer testified that an Australian mining tycoon offered her a million bucks to prostitute herself to him for a year. Human beings are endlessly surprising.
Dept. of Military and Veterans Affairs
Tuesday, March 16, 2010 - 11:44 AM

The crew of the Australian ship HMAS Success played all sorts of sex games, including in public on a pool table.
eschipul/flickr
Friday, September 4, 2009 - 5:44 PM

Remember yesterday I mentioned David Wood as a good defense reporter? He has a terrific column today about what is going wrong in Afghanistan. I'll summarize it here, but only if you promise to click on this link and read the whole thing.
Wood begins with a good strong "lede" that manages to combine action and policy:
When a warning crackled over the radio of a suspected ambush ahead, Lt. Col. Rob Campbell swore softly and ordered his three armored trucks to a halt. What happened next illustrates why the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan is failing, why commanders here are asking for more manpower -- and why they are pleading for more time.
Then his main character strides into the picture, along with a succinct statement of the problem:
Leaping out with his M-4 carbine, Campbell, a tall cavalry officer with sandy hair and freckles, strode through the empty, sun-baked fields flanking the road while his men fanned out, checking the ground for IEDs, sweeping the fields for snipers. The Afghan police assigned to patrol this stretch of road? Nowhere in sight.
Campbell comes off as a good, thoughtful officer doing well, but conscious that time is running out. Anyway, read the whole thing -- one of the best things I've read on Afghanistan in awhile.
Meanwhile, NATO aircraft hit some hijacked fuel tankers in northern Afghanistan, killing a bunch of people. Some of them were insurgents, some of them children and other civilians trying to get the fuel the Taliban was distributing from the trucks for free. The total is somewhere between 50 and 90, it appears. My question: Does this air strike pass the Petraeus test, which I saw him apply in Mosul back in 2003-2004: Before taking any action, consider whether it will create more opponents than it stops. Anyway, this makes me wonder if NATO forces got snookered into the attack.
Paula Bronstein/Getty Images
Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 2:56 PM
I didn't realize that the Australian military has permitted its soldiers and sailors to be openly gay since 1992. This surprised me because I tend to think of Australia as America's America. That is, we kind of look at them the way the rest of the world looks at us, as big and loud-mouthed but essentially good-natured and well-meaning. So I was surprised to see how ahead of us they are on gays in the military. Now the Australian military is looking at equal financial benefits for same-sex partners.
I suspect that the Obama administration won't lift "don't ask, don't tell" until 2010, but that when it does, the change toward permitting openly gay service members will go surprisingly smoothly.