USA TODAY US Edition

Acting defense secretary to resign

Dems question vetting after report of fight with wife

- Tom Vanden Brook and Kevin Johnson

WASHINGTON – Acting Defense Secretary Pat Shanahan said Tuesday that he will resign after coming under scrutiny over a violent fight with his wife nine years ago, leaving the military’s top leadership in transition even as it prepares for a possible confrontat­ion with Iran.

The announceme­nt, disclosed in a tweet by President Donald Trump, injects uncertaint­y into the highest echelon of the national security system at a time of escalating tensions with Iran, which the Trump administra­tion blamed for attacks on two oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman this month. The Pentagon ordered 1,000 U.S. troops deployed to the region Monday.

Shanahan, 56, has been the acting defense secretary since January, the longest period the Pentagon has been led by a temporary chief. Senior lawmakers from both parties said Tuesday they were concerned that the lack of a permanent defense secretary will complicate U.S. relationsh­ips with its allies and could undercut efforts to deal with security threats.

“The uncertaint­y surroundin­g this vacant office encourages our enemies and unsettles our allies,” said House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry, R-Texas.

“I am deeply concerned that the Department of Defense has no permanent

leader, and that sends exactly the wrong message to the world,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a member of the Armed Services Committee. “The picture of the Department of Defense is one of turnover and turmoil at the top levels.”

Trump said in April that he planned to make Shanahan his permanent defense chief, but the White House had not formally submitted his nomination to the Senate, which must vote to approve Cabinet officials.

Trump announced Shanahan’s resignatio­n about an hour after USA TODAY published a story revealing that before Shanahan’s potential confirmati­on hearing, the FBI investigat­ed a violent fight in 2010 between Shanahan and his then-wife. Trump said in the tweet that Shanahan was leaving to spend more time with his family.

Trump said he would replace Shanahan with Army Secretary Mark Esper, a West Point graduate, and nominate him to be the permanent defense chief.

Trump said he did not ask Shanahan to withdraw.

In a statement, Shanahan described his time at the Pentagon as “a deep honor and privilege to serve our country alongside the men and women of the Department of Defense.”

“I am proud of the work accomplish­ed over the last two years,” he said, adding that the department made “significan­t progress rebuilding and modernizin­g the military to compete with China and Russia.”

He said: “I believe my continuing in the confirmati­on process would force my three children to relive a traumatic chapter in our family’s life and reopen wounds we have worked years to heal. Ultimately, their safety and well-being is my highest priority. I would welcome the opportunit­y to be Secretary of Defense, but not at the expense of being a good father.”

Shanahan and his former wife, Kimberley Jordinson, acknowledg­ed in court filings and police reports that a late-night argument spilled from their bedroom to the front yard of their home

in an affluent Seattle neighborho­od and escalated into a clash that police said left him with a bloody nose and hand and her with bloodstain­s – possibly from offensive moves – on her forearm.

Their accounts diverge sharply on who was to blame, as well as the claim Jordinson reported to officers that night and later outlined in divorce papers: that Shanahan punched her in the stomach. Shanahan, in a statement to USA TODAY, denied that he ever struck his wife.

Blumenthal said he was troubled that he and other senators were unaware of the allegation­s in Shanahan’s past and that he may have failed to disclose that

informatio­n to the Senate. Shanahan received Senate confirmati­on for the Pentagon’s No. 2 job in 2017.

“I’m deeply concerned that the full truth may not have been forthcomin­g,” Blumenthal said. “And the committee is due an explanatio­n. I’m not alleging wrongdoing or criminalit­y. I simply want full disclosure of who knew what and when.”

Trump selected Shanahan as the Pentagon’s second-in-command in 2017, his first government posting after a career as an engineer and top executive at Boeing, a major defense contractor. The decision put Shanahan in one of the government’s top national security positions.

Trump elevated Shanahan to be acting defense secretary after Jim Mattis resigned in December in protest of Trump’s treatment of allies and decisions to withdraw U.S. forces from the Middle East.

Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the senior Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, knew that Shanahan had been involved in a contentiou­s divorce when he was confirmed as deputy defense secretary but was unaware of the extent of domestic violence, his spokesman, Chip Unruh, said.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said the fight “raises serious questions about how this administra­tion is conducting its vetting processes and needs to be investigat­ed.” Two FBI agents questioned Jordinson in early June about the incident in 2010 as part of a background examinatio­n of the presumptiv­e nominee, she said. The FBI declined to comment.

Trump said Tuesday he had been unaware of possible issues in Shanahan’s background but defended his administra­tion’s handling of his nomination.

“I had heard about it yesterday for the first time,” Trump said of the domestic violence incident. “I didn’t know about it. I heard about it yesterday. It’s very unfortunat­e, very unfortunat­e.”

Jordinson maintained that Shanahan struck her as the two struggled over a briefcase, an allegation she repeated to Seattle police, in a divorce filing and in an interview with USA TODAY.

“My husband is throwing punches at me,” Jordinson told a Seattle 911 operator that night, according to a recording of the call. “He’s been hitting me. … I don’t need a medic, I need you guys to get him out of the house. … He’s just swinging punches at me.”

One of the couple’s sons submitted a statement recounting a physical struggle and his mother’s call for help, though he said he did not see either parent strike the other.

The son, Will, who was 15 at the time of the incident, asserted his mother “coerced” him to sign the document meant to assist her defense, according to a statement he provided to USA TODAY. “I did what she told me,” he said. Jordinson stood by her account in an interview with USA TODAY in May and said her son’s statement in 2010 was his idea. “I’m just trying to get on with my life,” she said Tuesday.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP ?? Pat Shanahan says he never struck his wife.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP Pat Shanahan says he never struck his wife.
 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? Pat Shanahan has served as acting defense chief since January, the longest the Pentagon has been without a permanent leader.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES Pat Shanahan has served as acting defense chief since January, the longest the Pentagon has been without a permanent leader.
 ??  ?? Esper
Esper

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