The head of a riverine squadron at the center of an international incident 
in January was fired Thursday, the first officer to be publicly disciplined 
for errors that led to 10 sailors being captured by Iran after getting lost 
in the Persian Gulf — a debacle that nearly scuttled the U.S.-Iran nuclear 
deal at the 11th hour.

Cmdr. Eric Rasch, who at the time of the Jan. 12 incident was the executive 
officer of the Coastal Riverine Squadron 3, was removed from his job by 
Capt. Gary Leigh, head of Coastal Riverine Group 1, for what a Navy 
Expeditionary Combat Command release said was “a loss of confidence” in his 
ability to remain in command.

NAVY TIMES

Sailors on seized U.S. Navy boats mistakenly steered into Iranian waters
<http://www.navytimes.com/story/military/2016/01/14/us-sailors-mistakenly-steered-into-iranian-waters/78796140/>

"Capt. Gary Leigh, commander, CRG-1, made this determination following his 
review of a preliminary investigation into the incident near Farsi Island 
in the Arabian Gulf, Jan. 12-13, involving 10 CRS-3 Sailors," the release 
said. "Rasch was assigned as the executive officer of CRS-3 during this 
time-frame."

Cmdr. Gregory Meyer, who was commanding officer at the time of the 
incident, is currently with Coastal Riverine Group 1, and has been put on 
“administrative hold,” meaning the Navy will not transfer him out of the 
unit, while a high-level review of the Navy’s investigation into the 
incident continues, said two officials familiar with internal deliberations.

NAVY TIMES

U.S. sailor apologizes in Iran propaganda video
<http://www.navytimes.com/story/military/2016/01/13/us-sailor-apologizes-iran-propaganda-video/78744270/>

The move is the first in what sources expect to be a series of disciplinary 
measures for what was a high-profile embarrassment for the U.S. Navy. The 
10 riverines were captured and their high-speed special mission boats were 
seized when they drifted into Iranian waters around Farsi Island, a remote 
Iranian military outpost in the middle of the Persian Gulf. During their 16 
hour detention, one of the U.S. sailors appeared to apologize while being 
videotaped, which became part of the flurry of Iranian propaganda 
publicized in the wake of the arrests.

The investigation is still under review and is expected to be released by 
the end of May, said two Navy officials.

Navy officials believe that a navigational error, along with some baffling 
errors in judgment on the part of the crew, led to their capture. Officials 
have suggested that the crew may have been taking an unauthorized shortcut 
through Iranian waters to meet up with a U.S. Coast Guard vessel for 
refueling.

NAVY TIMES

2016 Navy firings: Commanding officer, XO, senior enlisted
<http://www.navytimes.com/story/military/2016/03/10/2016-firings-commanding-officer-xo-senior-enlisted/80555718/>

Rasch has been reassigned temporarily to Riverine Group 1.  Capt. Stanfield 
Chien has assumed command of Riverine Squadron 3 until a replacement is 
named. There are about 400 sailors in CRS-3.

Leigh made the call to fire Rasch because the findings showed the officer 
"failed to provide effective leadership," which led to a lack of effective 
oversight.

Rasch is a prior-enlisted officer who joined the Navy in 1989 as an 
intelligence specialist. He was commissioned after graduating from the 
University of San Diego in 2003 and has been a career destroyer officer. He 
has served on the destroyers Benfold, Hopper and Sampson.
[image: Cmdr. Eric Rasch]

Cmdr. Eric Rasch (Photo: Navy)

His shore tours include a spin with the 504th Battlefield Surveillance 
Brigade in Tal’Afar, Iraq, during Operation Iraqi Freedom, and a tour at 
Naval Surface Force Pacific in San Diego.

The investigation into the Farsi Island incident has been under review for 
months and the duration has prompted some lawmakers to question why the 
Navy was taking so long to release it.

NAVY TIMES

Iran releases U.S. Navy sailors held for 16 hours
<http://www.navytimes.com/story/military/2016/01/13/iran-releases-us-sailors-held-18-hours/78716802/>

In February, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Sen. John 
McCain, R-Ariz., threatened to subpoena the captured riverines if the Navy 
didn’t release the investigation findings promptly.

That sent Navy officials scrambling to Capitol Hill to brief the findings 
behind closed doors while the Navy continued its review process, according 
to sources familiar with the exchange.

-- 
-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to