Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VIRUS-HIT military races to keep up.

Carrier’s ailing sailors illustrate U.S. defense quandary

- GLEN CAREY, ROXANA TIRON, TRAVIS TRITTEN AND TONY CAPACCIO

The Pentagon is struggling to stay ahead of the expanding coronaviru­s pandemic as early missteps start piling up, a scattersho­t response sows confusion and the Navy is forced to sideline an aircraft carrier.

The USS Theodore Roosevelt, a 5,000-person aircraft carrier meant to be patrolling the Pacific and South China Sea, is instead sitting dockside in Guam indefinite­ly as the number of infected sailors rises daily. Infections started cropping up after an early March port call in Vietnam, which Pentagon leaders say had about 16 known virus cases at the time.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper says he’s leaving key decisions about how to address the outbreak to local commanders. But as infections mount and more service members are sidelined, Pentagon leaders will face difficult questions about how to stay fully ready to confront rivals from North Korea to Iran and how to signal unflagging resolve to such adversarie­s.

“The military is torn between its need to maintain operations, which cannot be done with ‘social distancing,’ and the need to restrict interactio­ns to inhibit infections,” said Mark Cancian, a military analyst with the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington who’s a retired Marine Corps colonel. “It has still not figured out how to strike that balance.”

As of Friday, the Pentagon said there have been 309 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s among active military personnel, a small fraction of the force. But the case of the USS Roosevelt encapsulat­es how quickly a seemingly minor problem can hamper one of the world’s biggest warships.

After the first three sailors on the carrier were evacuated, Acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly projected confidence about the ship’s status, saying it would continue sailing.

“This is an example of our ability to keep our ships deployed at sea, underway even with active covid-19 cases,” Modly said March 24. But two days later, the carrier was sidelined indefinite­ly in Guam as the Navy tries to contain the outbreak.

Like many states and cities, the military’s ability even to test for the virus is limited. Modly said in an interview Friday with Hugh Hewitt that the Roosevelt can test about 200 sailors per day, meaning it would take more than three weeks to test everyone on board. But he disputed the idea that the ship would be out of action if major hostilitie­s erupted.

“If there was a reason for her to go into action she would just go,” Modly said. “She’s close enough to some trouble spots that she could mobilize and go quickly.”

There have been other missteps. The Army briefly stopped most training exercises only to restart them days later. And the service waited until Thursday to raise its health protection status to “D,” the highest level, for critical rapid-response forces that would be deployed in a national security crisis, in order to keep those troops isolated and ready to fight.

It wasn’t until March 13 that the Pentagon establishe­d a coordinati­on task force to work closely with Office of the Secretary of Defense, Joint Staff, the military services and other agencies to develop policy documents and provide recommenda­tions to senior leadership, according to a memo signed by Navy Captain Oliver Lewis, the Defense Department’s executive secretary.

The Pentagon has also earned praise for ramping up to help in the national fight against the virus, deploying two hospital ships to hard-hit New York City and Los Angeles and picking up all the costs for National Guard troops deployed to help stem the crisis, instead of requiring cost-sharing from cashstrapp­ed state government­s. It also closed recruitmen­t centers.

Before Congress managed to draft an economic stimulus bill to help workers and businesses affected by the pandemic, the Pentagon moved quickly to accelerate payments to contractor­s to help ensure they keep production lines open.

Military leaders also have praised Gen. Robert Abrams, the commander of U.S. forces in South Korea, for taking drastic measures to prevent troops from being exposed to the coronaviru­s by locking down bases in February, as that country’s outbreak exploded.

“Where the threat was most acute, the leadership acted the quickest and most decisively,” said Thomas Spoehr, a retired Army lieutenant general and director of the Center for National Defense at the Heritage Foundation.

Some military leaders concede the scope of the virus threat wasn’t fully understood before it took root globally.

“We started putting some of these data points together and trying to string it together over the course of February,” Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy, who visited South Korea to see the situation firsthand in February, said at the Pentagon Thursday. “It’s just been a very, very complex issue that’s taken time to get the data points together.”

 ?? (AP/Bullit Marquez) ?? The U.S. Navy has sidelined the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier as an increasing number of sailors on board test positive for the coronaviru­s.
(AP/Bullit Marquez) The U.S. Navy has sidelined the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier as an increasing number of sailors on board test positive for the coronaviru­s.

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