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Obama's 'favorite' general out of running for top job Washington (AFP) May 25, 2011 President Barack Obama's "favorite general" has been passed over for the US military's top job amid concerns over his standing among fellow officers, defense officials said Wednesday. While General James Cartwright is out of the running, the current chief of the US Army, General Martin Dempsey, is seen as the most likely candidate to succeed the outgoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, defense officials told AFP. The White House was expected to announce a final decision on the military's highest ranking officer next week, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Nominating Dempsey would be an unusual move and suggested earlier plans were scrapped, as the four-star army general only took over as chief of the US Army in April. Dempsey served in the Iraq war, commanding the 1st Armored Division in Iraq in 2003-2004 and later led training efforts for Iraqi forces. The choice on who should succeed Mullen as the president's top military adviser highlights uneasy relations between civilians in Obama's White House and top officers, who have clashed over the war in Afghanistan. Cartwright, a technology-savvy Marine who is the current vice chairman, was described in the best-selling book "Obama's War" as the president's preferred general who drew up an alternative plan in 2009 for the war in Afghanistan, breaking ranks with senior military leaders who were pushing for a large surge of US troops. Obama in the end agreed to most of what the military asked for, ordering 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan. But Cartwright emerged as a favorite of a White House team that had sharply disagreed with other military leaders over Afghan strategy, including the current chairman, Admiral Mullen. As a result of his role in the Afghan strategy sessions and other episodes, some officers concluded he was not a "team player," raising potential questions about whether he would enjoy the confidence of senior officers, officials and analysts said. Cartwright, known for his expertise on missile defense and cyber warfare, once had been seen as the likely successor to Mullen -- whose four-year tenure ends in September. But speculation mounted in recent weeks that he would be passed over. Last month the White House announced nominations for the next defense secretary and Afghan commander but not for the chairman's job. An investigation by the Pentagon's inspector general in February cleared Cartwright of allegations that he had a sexual relationship with a junior officer. The probe found no evidence of a romantic relationship prohibited under military rules, but it did criticize the general for failing to discipline the woman after she passed out drunk on a bench in his hotel room during a work trip. Some officials said the episode investigated by the inspector general was not a crucial factor in the decision not to nominate Cartwright. The next chairman of the Joint Chiefs will form part of a new national security team under Obama that will have to contend with the nine-year-old war in Afghanistan, turmoil in the Middle East and mounting pressure on the defense budget. In April, Obama nominated CIA Director Leon Panetta to take over as defense secretary and Afghan war commander General David Petraeus to succeed Panetta at the spy agency. Media reports said the current chief of the air force, General Norton Schwartz, was a top contender to succeed Cartwright as the next vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The nominations all have to be confirmed by the Senate.
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