San Diego Union-Tribune

REPORT: NAVY LEADERS WANT FIRED CAPTAIN’S RETURN

Defense chief, Navy secretary reviewing recommenda­tions

- BY ANDREW DYER

Navy leaders have recommende­d reinstatin­g Capt. Brett Crozier to his former position as commanding officer of the San Diego-based aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt, according to a report in the New York Times.

However that recommenda­tion is being held up by Defense Secretary Mark Esper, the Times reported.

Friday afternoon, Jonathan Hoffman, the chief Pentagon spokesman, released a statement saying Esper is awaiting a written copy of the complete results of an inquiry into the recent COVID-19 outbreak on the ship.

“This afternoon, Secretary Esper received a verbal update from the acting Secretary of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations on the Navy’s preliminar­y inquiry into the COVID-19 outbreak on the USS Theodore Roosevelt,” Hoffman said.

“After the secretary receives a written copy of the completed inquiry, he intends to thoroughly review the report and will meet again with Navy leadership to discuss next steps. He remains focused on and committed to restoring the full health of the crew and getting the ship at sea again soon.”

In a later statement, the Navy said its acting secretary, James Mcpherson, and Esper, are reviewing the recommenda­tions from Adm. Mike Gilday, the chief of naval operations.

“Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Mike Gilday has presented recommenda­tions to the Acting Secretary of the Navy James Mcpherson,” the Navy said. “Secretary Mcpherson is continuing discussion­s with Secretary of Defense Mark Esper. No final decisions have been made.”

News of the recommenda­tion bookends a tumultuous month for the Navy.

The Roosevelt has been pierside in Guam since March 26, coping with an outbreak of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Its former captain, Crozier, was fired from command a week later after a letter he sent to a handful of Navy captains and ad

mirals asking for help to move thousands of sailors into quarantine off the ship was leaked to the media.

The acting Navy secretary who fired him, Thomas Modly, then told the crew over the ship’s loudspeake­r that Crozier was naive or stupid to believe his letter wouldn’t be leaked. Modly’s speech also was leaked, and Modly subsequent­ly resigned on April 7.

The Navy has since been investigat­ing the leak. An announceme­nt of the results was expected earlier this week, but no announceme­nt came.

According to the Times, both Gilday and Mcpherson recommende­d Crozier be reinstated and Esper is the holdout.

Last week Esper said on NBC “Today” that the Department of Defense had not ruled out reinstatin­g Crozier, depending on results of the Navy’s leak investigat­ion. Esper also said he was keeping an “open mind” on the issue.

In total, 856 Roosevelt sailors had tested positive for the novel coronaviru­s as of Friday, including Crozier, with 100 percent of the crew tested. That is more than 17 percent of the roughly 4,845 sailors on board.

A little more than 100 have recovered, the Navy said.

Some who are positive for the virus are housed on base in isolation. Four sailors with COVID-19 are in the hospital on Naval Base Guam.

One sailor, Chief Aviation Ordnancema­n Charles Thacker, 41, died from the virus last week.

More than 4,000 sailors have tested negative, and 4,234 have moved off the ship into hotels and facilities on Guam.

A Navy spokesman said Friday about 50 percent of the sailors who have tested positive for the virus showed no COVID-19 symptoms, a number that fluctuates as reports come in daily.

Also on Friday the Navy announced that another Navy warship, the guidedmiss­ile destroyer Kidd, is heading back into port after 18 sailors on board tested positive for the virus.

One sailor was evacuated to a medical facility in San Antonio. The ship, based in Everett, Wash., has been deployed to the eastern Pacific near South America conducting counter-drug operations.

The guided-missile destroyer left its home port in Washington state in January, making a stop in San Diego to join the Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group when it left for deployment, according to a post on the ship’s Facebook page.

It’s unclear how the virus came on board either ship, Defense officials have said.

The Roosevelt made a port call in Da Nang, Vietnam, 15 days before the ship’s first confirmed case of the virus. That country had known cases of the disease at the time.

The Kidd was not with the Roosevelt at the time its strike group made that port call, having already been redirected to the eastern Pacific, said Lt. j.g. Rachel Mcmarr, a Pacific Fleet spokeswoma­n.

 ?? SEAN LYNCH U.S. NAVY/NYT ?? Capt. Brett Crozier was dismissed as commander of the carrier Roosevelt.
SEAN LYNCH U.S. NAVY/NYT Capt. Brett Crozier was dismissed as commander of the carrier Roosevelt.

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