Ex-US general Petraeus escapes demotion over mistress scandal

David Petraeus. AP file photo

Retired US General David Petraeus. AP FILE

Washington, United States — The Pentagon won’t strip David Petraeus of his fourth star for providing his mistress classified information, a scandal that forced the resignation of a man feted for changing the course of the Iraq War.

The retired general was given two years’ probation and fined $100,000 in 2015 over the matter following a guilty plea in a US court.

READ: An apologetic Petraeus expresses regret for affairWomen linked to Petraeus scandal made White House visits

The US Army “completed its review of his case and recommended no additional action,” Assistant Secretary of Defense Stephen Hedger wrote Friday in a letter to Senator John McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

“Given the Army review, Secretary (Ashton) Carter considers the matter closed.”

A defense official confirmed the authenticity of the three-sentence letter, obtained by AFP, but declined further comment.

The loss of his fourth star would have been a symbolic slap in the face for the military icon who is still widely respected.

His retroactive demotion to a three-star general could reportedly also have cost him hundreds of thousands of dollars over the course of his retirement.

Petraeus had been regularly praised for his efforts during the “surge” of troops in Iraq and credited for helping salvage the troubled war effort in that country.

Following his retirement in 2011, Petraeus went on to head the Central Intelligence Agency, but resigned in 2012, after serving just 14 months.

Before his guilty plea in a North Carolina court, the Justice Department had said that Petraeus had acknowledged giving eight “black books” — logs he kept as the US commander in Afghanistan — to his lover and biographer, Paula Broadwell.

READ: Biographer regrets affair with former CIA director

The five-by-eight-inch notebooks in question were meant to serve as source material for Broadwell’s book about the general, “All In: The Education of General David Petraeus.”

They included Petraeus’s daily schedule, classified notes, the identities of covert officers, details about US intelligence capabilities, code words and accounts of his meetings with President Barack Obama, according to court documents.

The black books contained “top secret” and “national defense information,” they said.

Petraeus now works at the global investment firm KKR.

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