China Daily

Pentagon absolves itself after Austin’s hospitaliz­ation

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WASHINGTON — An internal review blames privacy restrictio­ns and staff hesitancy for the Pentagon’s failure last month to quickly notify the president and other senior leaders about Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s hospitaliz­ation for complicati­ons from prostate cancer surgery.

The review, which was carried out by Austin’s subordinat­es, largely absolves anyone of wrongdoing for the secrecy surroundin­g his hospitaliz­ation, which included several days in the intensive care unit. And it says flatly there was “no indication of ill intent or an attempt to obfuscate”.

Instead, the 30-day examinatio­n of the lapse — which angered the White House and members of Congress — says procedures must be improved and informatio­n shared better when the defense secretary has to transfer decision-making authoritie­s to the deputy.

Austin was called to Capitol Hill on Thursday for a House hearing on the matter and is expected to face sharp criticism. The Defense Department’s inspector general is also conducting a review, which has not yet been completed.

Austin was diagnosed with prostate cancer in early December and went to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for surgery on Dec 22. On Jan 1, he was taken back to Walter Reed by ambulance after experienci­ng significan­t pain and was moved to the intensive care unit the next day.

Although he transferre­d decision-making authoritie­s to Deputy Secretary Kathleen Hicks during his initial surgery, and then again when he was in intensive care, he did not tell her why and did not inform the White House.

Pentagon officials have acknowledg­ed that public affairs and defense aides were told on Jan 2, that Austin had been hospitaliz­ed but did not make it public and did not tell the military service leaders or the National Security Council until Jan 4. Only then did President Joe Biden find out. It took four more days before the reason for his hospitaliz­ation was disclosed.

Defense officials released an unclassifi­ed summary of the review on Monday and a set of recommende­d changes. The review suggests there was no establishe­d method for such an incident, and the fact that his hospitaliz­ation was “unplanned” contribute­d to the failure to let others know.

It also says Austin’s staff was limited by medical privacy laws that prohibited doctors from providing health informatio­n and they “were hesitant to pry or share any informatio­n they did learn”.

 ?? ?? Lloyd Austin
Lloyd Austin

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