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1994-05-26
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<text id=94TT0522>
<title>
May 02, 1994: Public Eye
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PUBLIC EYE: Page 68
SEEING STARS OVER KELSO
</hdr>
<body>
<p>by Margaret Carlson
</p>
<p>The press of other business was about to draw the curtain over
the part Admiral Frank Kelso played in the disgrace known as
Tailhook. There would be no prosecutions. It was a done deal
in the Senate to whisk Kelso off to a four-star retirement at
full pay as if nothing untoward had happened on his watch. Then
an astonishing thing occurred. Two of the most venerable forces
in Washington--the Pentagon and the Senate Armed Services
Committee--were confronted by one of the newest: seven women
Senators. And for a moment the militarists were forced to regroup.
Kelso's supporters had to launch a sudden offensive to squeeze
out a 54-43 victory. By saying, "Not so fast," and impeding
the old-boy network, the women, and the 36 men who joined them,
rallied around that rarely observed principle: accountability.
Still, they lost.
</p>
<p> Tailhook is one more sorry example of the practice of conceding
that mistakes were made without punishing those who made them.
A Navy judge found that Kelso was on the third floor of the
Las Vegas Hilton when women--not just Top Gun groupies but
also 15 female officers--were assaulted. The judge accused
Kelso of lying about his presence there and of trying to manipulate
the investigation to shield himself. A Pentagon inspector-general
report found otherwise, but Kelso decided against a further
inquiry to sort out the discrepancies in favor of stepping down
two months early. He bargained for a statement of praise from
the Secretary of the Navy, who earlier had urged him to resign
for a "failure of leadership." The Senate would then vote him
a four-star retirement rather than two stars, and full pension,
$84,340 a year, vs. $67,467.
</p>
<p> A lopsided Senate vote in Kelso's favor would have been the
expected end of it. Instead, a bipartisan group of women forced
a daylong debate. Those who tried to defend the admiral were
reduced to praise for a solid 38-year career--minus Tailhook
and logic. Republican Senator Ted Stevens of Arkansas asked
his female colleagues to "remember that ((Kelso is)) a father
of two young women who are very sensitive of their father's
role in this matter"--whatever that meant. John Warner of
Virginia worried about the hardship Kelso's wife would bear
if he were to get $17,000 a year less. Sam Nunn got tangled
up in sailing analogies--Kelso's opponents were putting him
in a rowboat and tying an anchor to his leg and saying he "should
have been down on the bottom of the ship"--and concluded that
the Senate should not take two stars away from Kelso because
it "would set a different standard." But that was exactly what
Kelso's opponents were hoping for.
</p>
<p> Just the contemplation of punishment for Kelso was sufficient
for his supporters to insist that he had suffered enough. One
reason for the surprising lack of sympathy in the U.S. for the
American student Michael Fay after he was sentenced to be caned
in Singapore is the increasing recognition that Americans have
too much compassion and too little accountability. Our usual
way would be to understand the root causes for Fay's vandalism
spree--his attention-deficit disorder and the breakup of his
parents' marriage--and send him on his way. From top to bottom,
American society is soaked with the sense that with enough explaining,
a good lawyer and the pressing of the right buttons of guilt
and victimology, there is a way out of most things. The most
heinous acts get a round of applause on the talk-show circuit,
as if confession were a substitute for contrition. Forgiveness
has its place, but so does retribution. There's a way well short
of lashing an American abroad to restore the notion that acts
have consequences, and it could have started in the Senate with
two fewer stars for Admiral Kelso.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>