Baltimore Sun Sunday

Virus takes toll on military as it moves to aid civilians

Pentagon shields vital missions as it faces calls for help

- By Robert Burns and Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — The coronaviru­s is taking a growing toll on the U.S. military, and commanders and senior officials are bracing for worse. From nuclear missile fields at home to war zones abroad, from flight lines to ships at sea, the Pentagon is striving to shield vital missions even as it faces urgent calls for help on the civilian front.

Training exercises big and small, including one of the largest in Europe since the end of the Cold War, have been curtailed. Army recruiting stations have closed. Troops around the globe are hunkering down to confront an enemy unlike anything the world’s most lethal armed forces have encountere­d before.

“It’s unpreceden­ted in my lifetime,” Defense Secretary Mark Esper said, adding that he believes that “in a period of months” the worst will be over and the force will once again be “fully mission capable.”

Until then, the ramificati­ons of COVID-19 for the military are likely to expand. There are worries about the defense industry being weakened and key weapons developmen­t slowed.

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that in a worsecase scenario, the military will lose some of its preparedne­ss for combat and other missions.

But the impact is likely to be “moderate to minor to low in terms of its risk“to national defense, he told reporters Monday.

The Pentagon budget also is taking a hit, although a coronaviru­s relief package that passed Friday will provide billions for the growing list of new expenses, including loans to industry that would enable accelerate­d production of medical equipment like ventilator­s and respirator­y masks for civilian use.

Many of America’s closest allies are waging their own COVID-19 battles, including Britain, France, Germany, Italy and other NATO partners, as well as South Korea, which hosts about 28,500 U.S. troops. The pandemic has taken the edge off conflict in some of the globe’s major flashpoint­s, such as Iran, as government­s focus on fighting the disease inside their own borders.

Gen. Joseph Lengyel, chief of the National Guard Bureau, accustomed to responding to single-event domestic natural disasters like a flood or hurricane, said the coronaviru­s outbreak is akin to having hurricanes of varying ferocity hit every U.S. state and territory, as well as the District of Columbia.

“This is a historic event that will require a historic response,” Lengyel said.

The Guard has been mobilized by every state governor and in three territorie­s.

In California, New York and Washington state, the federal government is footing the bill. The active-duty military also is helping, with three field hospitals deploying to New York and Washington state, and Navy hospital ships sent to Los Angeles and New York.

The Guard is chipping in with a range of expertise, including what it calls weapons of mass destructio­n teams helping set up drive-thru testing stations.

No U.S. military member is known to have died from COVID-19, although infections are spreading.

Brig. Gen. Paul Friedrichs, the top doctor on the staff of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday that it appears highly likely that the spread inside the military will continue. Over the next three weeks, which he said is as far ahead as modeling data can reliably support a forecast, “we think we’re going to see this — no surprise — continue to grow.”

His comment aligns with those of many others in the medical community and across the military, standing in contrast to President Donald Trump’s statements about starting to return the country to normalcy by Easter.

As of Thursday, 280 of the 1.4 million-strong active duty force had been confirmed with the disease, up from 51 a week earlier.

“Our curve is not flattening,” Friedrichs said.

The virus has penetrated the Pentagon, but with modest impact thus far as Esper and Milley remain at work in the military headquarte­rs. As a precaution, Esper and the deputy defense secretary, David Norquist, are being kept physically separated.

On Monday, the building’s health risk alert level was raised a notch, and Esper on Wednesday ordered the higher alert level for all Defense Department sites worldwide.

In a virtual town hall meeting with Defense Department

employees, Esper on Tuesday said his top priority is protecting troops and their families, but he noted that the military cannot function free of risk.

“You can’t do social distancing in a submarine or even a tank,” he said.

Navy ships have stopped port visits abroad, except when resupply or maintenanc­e requires it.

On Friday, the Navy said at least two dozen sailors aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt tested positive after the aircraft carrier made a port visit in Vietnam.

The Roosevelt and its contingent of warplanes may be sidelined for days, sitting pier side in Guam as the entire crew — more than 5,000 — is tested.

 ?? TONY DEJAK/AP ?? National Guard Cpl. Tommie Davis, left, and Spc. Scott Eubanks move peaches to prepare for repackagin­g emergency boxes for distributi­on last week at the Cleveland Food Bank.
TONY DEJAK/AP National Guard Cpl. Tommie Davis, left, and Spc. Scott Eubanks move peaches to prepare for repackagin­g emergency boxes for distributi­on last week at the Cleveland Food Bank.

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