It's Not the Most Wonderful Time of the Year for Joy Behar and...
Is Chick-Fil-A in the Room With You? MN Hospital Praises 'Courageous' Workers for...
Biden Regime Leaders Flee DC As Trump Prepares to Fire Them All!
Dem NM Gov Won't Cooperate With Trump Deportations (Tom Homan Had a Reminder...
BOOMITY! Elon Musk's Post About What Karma REALLY Looks Like Will Definitely Leave...
A Wildcard Wednesday Whoop A** on Elites
'Unfairly Becoming a Distraction': Matt Gaetz Withdraws From Attorney General Consideratio...
And We're Officially DEAD: Don't Look Now BUT Rob Reiner Just Basically Committed...
AP: Court Overturns Jussie Smollett's Conviction for 'Staging a Racist and Homophobic Atta...
Who They REALLY Are: Thread Shows UNHINGED Trans Activists Attacking Sarah McBride for...
'Not EVERYTHING Is About Trump': Even Cenk Uygur Has ENOUGH of JoJoFromJerz's BS,...
Just for Fun, Here's Rush Limbaugh in 1992 Shredding Al Gore's '10 Years...
Right. In. Our. Veins! Mark Cuban Pisses Tolerant Lefties OFF Pushing for Free...
Bucks County Commissioner Plays Victim After Getting BUSTED Trying to Steal PA Seat...
Propaganda Alert! ABC News Journo Tries Hard to Blame Trump for Laken Riley...

US Navy commanding officer relieved of duty over Iran's capture, detention of 10 sailors

In January, America’s new deal partner Iran captured two U.S. Navy vessels moving between Kuwait and Bahrain and detained 10 sailors. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed that the boats had entered Iranian waters illegally and added insult to injury by releasing photos of the sailors held at gunpoint along with video of them apologizing to Iran.

Advertisement

Iran capped off the incident by awarding the Fath (“Victory”) medal to the head of the navy of the Revolutionary Guard and four commanders involved in the incident. The officer in charge of the two boats that were captured, however, didn’t fare so well.

CNN reports that Cmdr. Eric Rasch was relieved of his position of commanding officer due to his failure to provide effective leadership and a loss of confidence in his ability. He remains in the Navy but has been reassigned. In his previous position, Rasch was responsible for the training and readiness of more than 400 sailors.

 

Advertisement

Further, Navy officials added that the sailors involved could still face disciplinary action. The sailors “did not conduct a standard operational briefing for themselves prior to setting sail, during which they would have fully reviewed their route and navigation plan,” reads the Navy’s report on the incident.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement