<p>The US defense secretary Monday defended the decision to sack his navy secretary, saying he went behind his back to make a deal with the White House over a convicted Navy SEAL's future.</p>.<p>Mark Esper told reporters Richard Spencer, the Navy's top civilian, admitted he had gone around Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley.</p>.<p>Esper and Milley were holding their own discussions with President Donald Trump last week about the SEAL's case, which caused a rare public split between the Pentagon leadership and the US commander in chief over military justice.</p>.<p>"We were completely caught off guard by this information, and realised that it undermined everything we have been discussing with the president," Esper said of Spencer's secret talks.</p>.<p>"We have a chain of command that should be followed and that chain of command must be kept informed," he said.</p>.<p>"Secretary Spencer broke these rules and thus lost my trust and confidence."</p>.<p>Spencer was fired on Sunday amid a dispute over whether Edward Gallagher, a Navy SEAL accused of war crimes in a high-profile case but convicted of a lesser offense, should be demoted and expelled from the elite commando force.</p>.<p>Gallagher, a SEAL sniper and medic, was originally accused of premeditated murder after allegedly stabbing to death a captured, wounded Islamic State fighter in Iraq in May 2017.</p>.<p>After Gallagher went on trial at the beginning of 2019, his case became a cause celebre in conservative media, championed especially by Fox News, and Trump voiced support for him.</p>.<p>In March the president intervened to have him taken out of a Navy jail and placed in a Navy hospital, where he had more freedom.</p>.<p>In July, he was acquitted of murder by a military jury, but convicted of having posed for a picture next to the body of a dead Islamic State fighter.</p>.<p>He was demoted and the navy moved to remove his official Trident pin, an insignia that signified he remained a member in good standing of the elite group.</p>.<p>Trump intervened again, to order the trident pin and rank restored, saying he would not be expelled from the force.</p>.<p>"Eddie will retire peacefully with all of the honors that he has earned," Trump tweeted.</p>.<p>Esper conformed that Spencer had threatened to resign over the case, which military experts said risked undermining confidence in the Pentagon's system of justice.</p>.<p>But Esper said that while he and Milley sought a resolution with Trump, Spencer, a subordinate to both, had tried to cut his own deal with the White House.</p>.<p>Spencer "was completely forthright in admitting what had been going on," Esper told reporters Monday.</p>.<p>In a letter to Trump on Sunday, Spencer explained his resistance to the president's interference in the case.</p>.<p>He wrote that he could not "in good conscience obey an order that I believe violates the sacred oath I took... to support and defend the Constitution."</p>.<p>He added that his responsibility was "to maintain good order and discipline" throughout the navy's ranks. "I regard this as deadly seriously business," he said.</p>.<p>Esper said Monday that the case had dragged on too long and had become "distracting."</p>.<p>"Eddie Gallagher will retain his Trident as the commander in chief directed, and will retire at the end of this month," he said. </p>
<p>The US defense secretary Monday defended the decision to sack his navy secretary, saying he went behind his back to make a deal with the White House over a convicted Navy SEAL's future.</p>.<p>Mark Esper told reporters Richard Spencer, the Navy's top civilian, admitted he had gone around Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley.</p>.<p>Esper and Milley were holding their own discussions with President Donald Trump last week about the SEAL's case, which caused a rare public split between the Pentagon leadership and the US commander in chief over military justice.</p>.<p>"We were completely caught off guard by this information, and realised that it undermined everything we have been discussing with the president," Esper said of Spencer's secret talks.</p>.<p>"We have a chain of command that should be followed and that chain of command must be kept informed," he said.</p>.<p>"Secretary Spencer broke these rules and thus lost my trust and confidence."</p>.<p>Spencer was fired on Sunday amid a dispute over whether Edward Gallagher, a Navy SEAL accused of war crimes in a high-profile case but convicted of a lesser offense, should be demoted and expelled from the elite commando force.</p>.<p>Gallagher, a SEAL sniper and medic, was originally accused of premeditated murder after allegedly stabbing to death a captured, wounded Islamic State fighter in Iraq in May 2017.</p>.<p>After Gallagher went on trial at the beginning of 2019, his case became a cause celebre in conservative media, championed especially by Fox News, and Trump voiced support for him.</p>.<p>In March the president intervened to have him taken out of a Navy jail and placed in a Navy hospital, where he had more freedom.</p>.<p>In July, he was acquitted of murder by a military jury, but convicted of having posed for a picture next to the body of a dead Islamic State fighter.</p>.<p>He was demoted and the navy moved to remove his official Trident pin, an insignia that signified he remained a member in good standing of the elite group.</p>.<p>Trump intervened again, to order the trident pin and rank restored, saying he would not be expelled from the force.</p>.<p>"Eddie will retire peacefully with all of the honors that he has earned," Trump tweeted.</p>.<p>Esper conformed that Spencer had threatened to resign over the case, which military experts said risked undermining confidence in the Pentagon's system of justice.</p>.<p>But Esper said that while he and Milley sought a resolution with Trump, Spencer, a subordinate to both, had tried to cut his own deal with the White House.</p>.<p>Spencer "was completely forthright in admitting what had been going on," Esper told reporters Monday.</p>.<p>In a letter to Trump on Sunday, Spencer explained his resistance to the president's interference in the case.</p>.<p>He wrote that he could not "in good conscience obey an order that I believe violates the sacred oath I took... to support and defend the Constitution."</p>.<p>He added that his responsibility was "to maintain good order and discipline" throughout the navy's ranks. "I regard this as deadly seriously business," he said.</p>.<p>Esper said Monday that the case had dragged on too long and had become "distracting."</p>.<p>"Eddie Gallagher will retain his Trident as the commander in chief directed, and will retire at the end of this month," he said. </p>