Maryland Governor Wes Moore’s long-standing narrative surrounding his military service has faced intense scrutiny following an investigative report exposing severe discrepancies in his official deployment record. Documents indicate that the governor overrepresented his actual “boots on the ground” combat time in Afghanistan by nearly double, while his rapid career progression raises questions regarding military favoritism.
13 Months vs. 6 Months
For over a decade, Moore has consistently framed his military background around a “hard year” deployed with the 82nd Airborne Division. In a prominent 2019 media interview, he explicitly stated he had spent “about 13 months total” in the theater of war.
However, an exhaustive review of official Army records, mobilization orders, and his DD Form 214 completely contradicts that timeline: Moore’s total active-duty mobilization lasted exactly 7 months and 15 days. His official deployment window in Afghanistan spanned only 6 months and 27 days (from August 15, 2005, to March 14, 2006). Even that sub-seven-month window overstates his actual presence.

Records confirm that in December 2005, Moore took emergency leave following the death of his grandfather. Public marriage registries verify that during this mid-deployment leave window, Moore traveled to Las Vegas to get married on December 30, 2005. Factoring in emergency leave and mandatory military transit windows, Moore’s physical presence in Afghanistan was likely closer to 5 months and 27 days, less than half of the 13-month timeline he repeatedly shared with the public.
The investigation also cast doubt on the exact nature of Moore’s assignments and evaluations while deployed. Though officially arriving in the theater as a newly qualified Military Police lieutenant, Moore was immediately diverted from troop-leading duties with an active MP company.
Instead, the brigade’s deputy commander, Lt. Col. Mike Fenzel—a close personal friend of Moore bypassed standard Army regulations to place the green lieutenant into a high-level Information Operations (IO) staff position. IO roles typically require advanced captaincy status, specialized 12-week training at Fort Leavenworth, and a top-secret clearance—none of which Moore possessed at the time. Retired officers consulted in the report noted the reassignment effectively insulated Moore from direct combat dangers.
Furthermore, Moore’s subsequent Officer Evaluation Report (OER) was riddled with administrative errors, including listing him at an incorrect, lower rank that shielded him from being evaluated against more experienced peers. The report was heavily padded with what regulations call “prohibited narrative gimmicks,” with Fenzel directly writing that Moore was a “Top 1% officer” whose talents put him “on par with majors and lieutenant colonels,” unverifiable praise Moore has frequently cited to build his national political brand.
To date, Governor Moore has refused to comment on the record or provide the authorization required for Fenzel to speak to investigators regarding the timeline.
The Cynical Commodification of Military Service
There is a massive, unforgivable difference between expanding on your professional achievements and flat-out doubling your time in a combat zone. To stand in front of military academy graduates and preach an ethical code of “not lying, cheating, or stealing” while your own twenty-year history of self-promotion is built on artificial numbers is the height of political hypocrisy.
This situation exposes a deeply transactional approach to military service. It appears Moore’s deployment wasn’t about leading troops or fulfilling his basic branch duties as a Military Police officer; it was treated as a resume-building exercise designed to sell books, secure fellowships, and manufacture a flawless political identity.
When an influential friend in the chain of command bypasses strict deployment protocols to keep you in a comfortable staff office away from the front lines and then signs off on an inflated evaluation calling you a “Top 1% officer,” the integrity of the institutional framework is compromised. Veterans have every right to be deeply cynical. True service is defined by the realities of the assignment, not by rewriting history to fit the needs of a future campaign speech.




