Orlando Sentinel

Allen to step down, rejecting NATO post

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — Gen. John Allen, the top commander in Afghanista­n until 10 days ago, will retire from the Marine Corps to help care for his ailing wife rather than accept a White House nomination to be supreme allied commander at NATO, one of the Pentagon’s most prestigiou­s positions.

The Pentagon inspector general cleared Allen last month of misconduct in connection with hundreds of emails he exchanged with a Florida socialite who cultivated ties with senior military commanders. The probe had put his promotion on hold since November.

Allen said he was leaving the Marines chiefly to help his wife, Kathy, who has an autoimmune disorder.

“The reasons for my decision are personal,” Allen said in a statement Tuesday. “While I won’t go into the details, my primary concern is for the health of my wife, whohas sacrificed so much for so long.”

Allen, 59, said his wife had “enabled me to serve my country” for more than 35 years. “It is profoundly sobering to consider how much of that time I have spent away from her and our two precious daughters. It is now my turn to stand beside them, to be there for them when they need me most.”

Allen’s unexpected retirement leaves the White House with no obvious choice to head the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on military alliance at a time when U.S. and NATO forces are trying to withdraw from the war in Afghanista­n.

The current NATOcomman­der, Navy Adm. James Stavridis, has held the post since 2009 and was sched- uled to step down last summer. Officials said retired Army Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, a top White House security aide who was passed over for the job last year, may get another look.

President Barack Obama met Tuesday morning with Allen and accepted his request to retire “so that he can address health issues within his family,” the White House said in a statement.

“John Allen is one of America’s finest military leaders, a true patriot, and a man I have come to respect greatly,” Obama said.

Leon Panetta, the outgoing secretary of defense, said in a statement that he will be “forever thankful” that Allen led the war in Afghanista­n.

“His leadership over the last 19 months will long be remembered as pivotal to this campaign,” Panetta said.

The White House had planned to nominate Allen to the NATO job last year but the appointmen­t was put on hold last November after he became ensnared in the scandal that forced retired Army Gen. David Petraeus to resign as CIA director.

Panetta ordered an investigat­ion into emails between Allen and Jill Kelley, a socialite in Tampa, Fla., who had befriended Allen when he served as the deputy commander at Central Command, the U.S. military headquarte­rs for the Middle East based in Tampa.

The FBI uncovered their emails while investigat­ing a separate stream of anonymous emails sent to Kelley about Petraeus. The FBI traced the emails to Petraeus’ biographer, Paula Broadwell, and the CIA chief resigned after publicly admitting they had carried on an extramarit­al affair.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY PHOTO ?? Marine Corps Gen. John Allen is retiring to care for his wife, Kathy, who has an autoimmune disorder.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY PHOTO Marine Corps Gen. John Allen is retiring to care for his wife, Kathy, who has an autoimmune disorder.

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