Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, September 23, 1993 TAG: 9309230077 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-2 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: Los Angeles Times DATELINE: WASHINGTON LENGTH: Medium
Although he knew that his father served in an expatriate unit of the German army during the war, the Polish-born Shalikashvili said he only recently learned of the SS association from his father's own writings and had been shocked and "deeply saddened" by it.
Expressing sympathy, members of the Senate Armed Services Committee made it clear that his father's past would be no impediment to Shalikashvili's confirmation as Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman. It would be "grossly unfair" and "un-American . . . to judge you by anything your father may have done," Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., told the general.
But while the senators' comments signaled that Shalikashvili would be easily confirmed, Committee Chairman Sam Nunn, D-Ga., indicated that approval may be delayed until the Senate acts on the confirmation of the general's successor as NATO commander - a post for which the administration has yet to choose a nominee.
Nunn said, given the continuing fighting in Bosnia and the swiftly escalating political crisis in Russia, it might be wiser to keep Shalikashvili in his current post as supreme allied commander in Europe until a successor is confirmed. Adm. David Jeremiah, deputy chairman of the Joint Chiefs, would in this case temporarily succeed Powell as acting chairman if a new NATO commander is not ready to be confirmed before Powell retires Sept. 30.
"We're going to have to decide whether we're better off not having someone in NATO . . . or whether we're better off having Adm. Jeremiah run the Joint Chiefs for what I hope will be only a few days," Nunn said as Shalikashvili nodded his head in agreement.
In response to questions, Shalikashvili said the latest information available to the Pentagon from Moscow does not suggest that the Russian military is about to take sides in the constitutional crisis now unfolding between Russian President Boris Yeltsin and hard-liners in the parliament he dissolved shortly before it voted to impeach him.
"For the moment, it appears like [Russian Defense Minister Pavel] Grachev is trying to keep the military neutral in this, in what he considers a purely political matter," Shalikashvili said, adding that there are no indications of abnormal troop movements.
However, the 57-year-old general also said the real danger lies in the possibility that lower-level military commanders could begin to take sides if the crisis persists, resulting in "the sort of unraveling effect that ought to give us all great, great concern."
If that should happen, he added in response to other questions, a "nightmare scenario" could begin to unfold in which the democratic forces in Russia are suppressed and there is a "breakdown of control" over Russia's nuclear weapons.
by CNB