Panel OKs Joint Chiefs pick despite assault allegations
WASHINGTON — The Senate Armed Services Committee voted Wednesday to recommend that President Donald Trump’s pick to be the military’s second-highest officer be confirmed by the full Senate, despite an Army colonel’s allegations that he repeatedly sexually assaulted her while she served under him.
The vote was 20 to 7, reflecting bipartisan support for Gen. John Hyten, currently in charge of the national’s nuclear arsenal as the head of U.S. Strategic Command, and who was nominated in April to serve as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The vote also reflected bipartisan opposition, after Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, decided to vote against recommending Hyten’s confirmation due to “his inability to address toxic leadership and exercise sound judgment while serving as STRATCOM Commander,” said her spokeswoman, Kelsi Daniell.
Hyten appeared before the committee for his confirmation hearing Tuesday, where he flatly denied Col. Kathryn Spletstoser’s charges that during 2017, he attempted to kiss or have sex with her on multiple occasions while the two were on work trips.
The Air Force Office of Special Investigations’ probe produced a 1,400-page report that did not substantiate Spletstoser’s claims, according to the military and senators on the panel, who were able to review it. Most of them backed Hyten up this week — including, critically, Sen. Martha McSally, RAriz., who was raped by a superior officer while she served in the Air Force, and who said she was sure that Hyten had been “falsely accused.”
Former Air Force secretary Heather Wilson also defended Hyten to the panel, telling senators that he “was falsely accused,” and surmising that Spletstoser might be “a wounded soldier who believes what she is saying is true, even if it is not.”
Spletstoser, who was watching from the audience after the committee denied her request to speak publicly at the hearing, said Wilson’s comments were “disrespectful and uninformed.” She also fully disputed Hyten’s testimony that the encounters she alleged did not happen, telling reporters afterward that Hyten “lied” and made “false official statements under oath.”
On Wednesday, she responded to what she called the committee’s “gut-wrenching” decision to recommend Hyten for confirmation.
“I want the best for our military, and General Hyten is not the best qualified senior officer for this position, based on what he did to me and how he handled this situation,” she said.
Hyten testified that Spletstoser had been a “brilliant” employee but one who created a “toxic work environment” that ultimately led to him signing off on a reprimand that pushed her out of his command in early 2018. Yet his enthusiastic support of her through late 2017, reflected in performance evaluations provided by Spletstoser to the Washington Post that could not be independently verified, perplexed some senators.
In December 2017, she alleges that Hyten came to her hotel room while both were traveling for the Reagan National Defense Forum and pinned her to him while he attempted to have sex with her. She did not tell anybody about it at the time, she said in an interview, because she was concerned about the personal and professional repercussions.
After reviewing the materials and hearing from both Hyten and Spletstoser behind closed doors, as well as Hyten in his public confirmation hearing, most senators on the panel decided they did not believe her.
“If at the end of this process there had still been ambiguity over whether General Hyten may have committed the heinous crimes described in the allegations, I would have voted against advancing his nomination,” Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said in a statement. “But the investigations conducted both by the military and the Committee produced evidence that General Hyten did not sexually assault Colonel Spletstoser or engage in an unprofessional relationship with her.”