USA TODAY US Edition

Trump Navy secretary spent $2M on travel in 8 months

- Tom Vanden Brook, Janet Loehrke and Ramon Padilla

WASHINGTON – Former Navy Secretary Kenneth Braithwait­e traversed the globe in his brief tenure under the Trump administra­tion, spending more than $2.3 million on air travel, according to figures and documents obtained by USA TODAY.

Braithwait­e spent $232,000 the week before President Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on to fly to Wake Island, a tiny

Pacific atoll, where, according to Navy spokesman Capt. Jereal Dorsey, no sailors or Marines are stationed. The executive director of the government watchdog Project On Government Oversight called the trip “an expensive abuse of power.”

Braithwait­e was Navy secretary, the service’s most senior civilian, from May 29 until Biden took office on Jan. 21. During that time, Braithwait­e took 22 trips to foreign and domestic destinatio­ns – more than any other senior Pentagon civilian – even as the COVID-19 pandemic trimmed the wings of other senior officials, according to two Defense Department officials.

The pandemic, according to the two Defense Department officials, who were not authorized to comment publicly, cut back foreign travel for most senior officials. Some countries limited travel for visiting delegation­s, making trips less useful, one official said. Domestic travel also was limited, the other official said, to prevent exposure and spread of the virus among troops and officials.

Braithwait­e’s internatio­nal travels included Norway, Italy, Greece, Japan and India. His domestic trips included more than $24,000 to attend the Army-Navy football game with his family and more than one visit to Hawaii.

Over the same period, thenDefens­e Secretary Mark Esper and his successor, acting Defense Secretary Christophe­r Miller, took 15 trips. Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy took 17 trips, and Air Force Secretary Barbara Barrett recorded 19 trips. McCarthy and Barrett had led their services since 2019. McCarthy’s trips cost roughly $900,000, and his family did not accompany him on any trips, said spokeswoma­n Army Lt. Col. Audricia Harris. Army Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, took four trips during Braithwait­e’s tenure.

Braithwait­e’s response

Former President Donald Trump nominated Braithwait­e for Navy secretary after acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly resigned. Modly came under criticism from Congress for his $243,000 flight to Guam, where he stayed briefly to address the crew of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt, which suffered a COVID-19 outbreak that made national headlines. Modly told USA TODAY on Thursday that he made the urgent flight to the Roosevelt because he learned Capt. Brett Crozier had released sensitive informatio­n.

In a statement, Braithwait­e said his trips were necessary to bolster the Navy, citing recent crises it had endured, including, presumably the troubles surroundin­g the Roosevelt.

“I am extremely proud of the record of accomplish­ments of Our Sailors and Marines during my tenure as Secretary, especially following such a tumultuous chapter in the Navy’s recent history,” Braithwait­e wrote in an email. “I submit it’s impossible to lead men and women deployed around the world from behind a desk in Washington.”

Among Braithwait­e’s travels, his trip to Hawaii and Wake Island in the South Pacific stands out. The Air Force, not the Navy, has administra­tive control of the Wake Atoll, a string of islands generally not accessible to civilians. Navy F-18 pilots use the strip and ranges nearby for training. It serves chiefly as a refueling stop and emergency landing strip in the middle of the ocean, thousands of miles from Hawaii. Wake, according to a senior Defense Department official, is not a strategic base like Guam, where the Navy and Air Force have extensive facilities.

While on Wake Island, Braithwait­e recorded his farewell message to the Navy and Marine Corps. He appeared in a flight jacket with a gravelly beach, scrubby brush and water in the background. Braithwait­e recounted the bravery of sailors and Marines who defended the island. Wake came under attack by the Japanese in December 1941 just before Pearl Harbor sparked America’s entry into World War II.

“The focus of the end of an administra­tion should be the peaceful transfer of power and how to best help the next administra­tion to lead the Navy,” said Danielle Brian of the Project on Government Oversight. “Given that Wake Island has no strategic significan­ce, it looks like this trip was an expensive abuse of his power.”

Braithwait­e traveled in January and sought and received a waiver from a 2018 Pentagon policy for ethical use of military aircraft that cracked down on the use of multiple crews and planes in order to “be peerless stewards of taxpayers’ dollars,” according to a memo outlining the policy.

$8,000 an hour to fly

Braithwait­e flew aboard a C-37B, a Gulfstream 550 business jet modified for military use. It has a crew of four and costs $8,007 an hour to operate. He took several short trips, including three to Norfolk, Virginia, home to a sprawling Navy presence. In all, Braithwait­e’s trips cost about $2.4 million, according to Dorsey.

In comparison, the Air Force estimates that Barrett’s trips, aboard a C-37 and C-40, based on a Boeing 737, cost $1.6 million, said Lt. Col. Justin Brockhoff, an Air Force spokesman.

Braithwait­e’s trip to Wake Island was Jan. 11 to Jan. 14, taking off from Joint Base Andrews outside Washington and arriving in Hawaii. From there, he boarded a separate plane with a new crew for the flight to Wake Island. Braithwait­e’s waiver request notes that the use of two planes and two crews for his trip would ensure he would return for a full day of work on Jan. 15, where he was needed to help with the transition to the Biden administra­tion. He cites a minimal increase in cost because the extra crew and plane were based in Hawaii and did not have a previously scheduled mission.

His wide travels, Braithwait­e said, were necessary to put the Navy back on course. “I believe that as a result of meeting and working with those brave Americans serving in Wake, in Japan, in Bahrain and all the far corners of the world, I left the Navy and the Marine Corps better positioned to respond to our nation’s defense today and tomorrow,” he wrote.

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