The Columbus Dispatch

Senate confirms 1st Black Pentagon chief

Austin will start work with COVID-19, NATO

- Robert Burns and Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON – Lloyd J. Austin, a West Point graduate who rose to the Army’s elite ranks and marched through racial barriers in a 41-year career, won Senate confirmation Friday to become the nation’s first Black secretary of defense.

The 93-2 vote gave President Joe Biden his second Cabinet member; Avril Haines was confirmed Wednesday as the first woman to serve as director of national intelligen­ce. Biden is expected to win approval for others on his national security team in coming days, including Antony Blinken as secretary of state.

Biden is looking for Austin to restore stability atop the Pentagon, which went through two Senate-confirmed secretarie­s of defense and four who held the post on an interim basis during the Trump administra­tion. The only senators who voted against Austin were Republican­s Mike Lee of Utah and Josh Hawley of Missouri.

Before heading to the Pentagon, Austin wrote on Twitter that he is especially proud to be the first Black secretary of defense. “Let’s get to work,” he wrote.

And a short time later, he arrived at the Pentagon’s River Entrance, where he was greeted by holdover Deputy Defense Secretary David Norquist, who has been the acting secretary since Wednesday, and Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He didn’t stop to answer reporters’ questions but said he looks forward to dealing with the media.

The Pentagon said that after being sworn in and getting an intelligen­ce briefing, Austin would hold a meeting on COVID-19 with senior civilian and military officials. He also planned to speak by phone with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g and to receive briefings about China and the Middle East.

Austin’s confirmation was complicate­d by his status as a recently retired general.

He required a waiver of a legal prohibitio­n on a military officer serving as secretary of defense within seven years of retirement. Austin retired in 2016 after serving as the first Black general to head U.S. Central Command.

He was the first Black vice chief of staff of the Army in 2012 and also served as director of the Joint Staff, a behind-the-scenes job that gave him an intimate view of the Pentagon’s inner workings.

The House and the Senate approved the waiver Thursday, clearing the way for the Senate confirmation vote.

At his confirmation hearing Tuesday, Austin said he had not sought the nomination but was ready to lead the Pentagon without clinging to his military status and with full awareness that being a political appointee and Cabinet member requires “a different perspectiv­e and unique duties from a career in uniform.”

 ?? SARAH SILBIGER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Joint Chiefs Chair Mark Milley escorts incoming Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to the Pentagon on Friday.
SARAH SILBIGER/GETTY IMAGES Joint Chiefs Chair Mark Milley escorts incoming Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to the Pentagon on Friday.

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