From Military.com:
“Top Navy Leaders Want Crozier
Reinstated as Roosevelt's Commanding Officer: Report”
The Navy's most-senior leaders
have recommended that the captain removed from his job this month after warning
about a growing health crisis on his aircraft carrier be reinstated as the
ship's commanding officer, The New York Times is reporting. Chief of Naval
Operations Adm. Mike Gilday presented his recommendations to acting Navy
Secretary James McPherson, Navy officials said in a statement. McPherson is
continuing discussions with Defense Secretary Mark Esper. If you are a military
member and have experienced hearing loss, impairment or tinnitus after using 3M
earplugs, contact Alexander Law Group, PLC. “No final decisions have been
made,” the statement reads. Esper will now review the full report and meet
again with Navy leadership "to discuss next steps," said Jonathan
Hoffman, the defense secretary's spokesman. He did not mention a timeline for
the follow-up meeting. "[Esper] remains focused on and committed to
restoring the full health of the crew and getting the ship at sea again
soon," he added. Hoffman said earlier Friday that Esper was set to meet
with Navy leaders and that he would keep an open mind and likely support the
service's recommendation.
Reinstating Crozier as the nuclear-powered carrier's
skipper would be a rare move for a commanding officer publicly relieved of
command. But the fallout from the decision, made by former acting Navy
Secretary Thomas Modly, has left the service facing significant backlash. The
situation has led to several public relations firestorms, first when video
emerged of Crozier's crew cheering for him and chanting his name as he walked
off their ship. That was followed just days later by a stunning speech Modly
made to the crew aboard the Roosevelt in which he insulted Crozier's
intelligence, calling him "too naïve or too stupid" to command the
ship. Modly's trip, which ran taxpayers more than $240,000 for the 35-hour
round-trip flight to Guam, would ultimately cost him his job. He stepped down
from his role as acting secretary -- the second person to vacate the office
amid controversy in less than six months. Crozier's firing stemmed from a
letter he wrote that was published by the San Francisco Chronicle on March 30.
In it, Crozier pleaded with the Navy to take seriously the fast-moving spread
of COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, on his ship.
The virus has
since infected at least 840 crew members, including Crozier. One sailor,
Aviation Ordnanceman Chief Petty Officer Charles Robert Thacker Jr., died of
COVID-19. In his letter, Crozier urged Navy leaders to evacuate most of the
Roosevelt's crew to better isolate the personnel and disinfect the ship. "We
are not at war. Sailors do not need to die," he wrote. "If we do not
act now, we are failing to properly take care of our most trusted asset -- our
Sailors." Modly, after first telling reporters Crozier would likely only
be punished if he was found to have leaked the letter to the media, later
removed the captain from his position. Crozier, Modly said, revealed sensitive
information about the ship's readiness while it was deployed, putting its crew
at risk. The former secretary repeatedly told reporters that Crozier had
emailed his letter to between 20 and 30 people. The email was sent to 10
people, according to a copy obtained by The Washington Post, and in it, Crozier
acknowledged it could cost him his Navy career. Modly later told David
Ignatius, a columnist at The Washington Post, that he believed Crozier was
"panicking" about the situation on the Roosevelt. The former
secretary also said he relieved Crozier before President Donald Trump ordered
the captain to be fired. "I didn't want to get into a decision where the
president would feel that he had to intervene because the Navy couldn't be
decisive," Modly told the Post. That was despite, he added, other Pentagon
leaders -- including Esper, Gilday and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley
-- wanting to wait until an investigation into Crozier's actions was completed.
Since Crozier was later diagnosed with the virus he warned was spreading
through the crew, he has spent weeks following his relief in isolation. Modly
was also forced to self-isolate after he was exposed to the crew after flying
to Guam and boarding the ship to give his damning speech over the carrier's
loudspeaker system.
Trump has said he is considering getting involved in
Crozier's case. Crozier was wrong to send the letter, the president said,
adding that he didn't want to see the officer's life ruined over one mistake. It
was not immediately clear whether Trump has followed other developments
involving the captain's case.
Esper's decision not to immediately accept the
Navy's recommendation that Crozier be reinstated "could reflect a fear of
getting on the wrong side of his boss," officials told The New York Times.
The Roosevelt isn't the only Navy ship battling coronavirus cases among its
crew. Dozens of ships have had cases, including a new outbreak aboard another
deployed ship, the destroyer Kidd. The Kidd is heading back to port after a
cluster of COVID-19 cases, including one that led to a sailor being medically
evacuated from the ship.
^ Captain Brett Crozier should be
reinstated on the Roosevelt. He is a real American hero in the truest sense of
the word. Also those who have gone after him (ie. Modly) have lost their own
jobs so it would probably be best if Mark Esper just reinstated Captain Crozier
so the US Navy, the US Department of Defense, the White House, Trump and the
American people can see the mistake corrected and move on. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/04/24/top-navy-leaders-want-crozier-reinstated-roosevelts-commanding-officer-report.html
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