From Military.com:
“Navy Orders Deeper Investigation
into Crozier Firing Over 'Unanswered Questions'”
The new acting Navy secretary has
ordered a deeper look into the controversial firing of Capt. Brett Crozier,
delaying his possible return to command and potentially opening other leaders
up to scrutiny. Acting Navy Secretary James McPherson said on Wednesday that he
has "unanswered questions" about the preliminary inquiry into his
predecessor's decision to remove Crozier from command. Those questions
"can only be answered by a deeper review," he said. "Therefore,
I am directing [Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Mike] Gilday to conduct a
follow-on command investigation," McPherson said in a statement.
"This investigation will build on the good work of the initial inquiry to
provide a more fulsome understanding of the sequence of events, actions, and
decisions of the chain of command surrounding the COVID-19 outbreak aboard USS
Theodore Roosevelt." Gilday last week recommended that Crozier be
reinstated as commanding officer of the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt.
The Roosevelt has been sidelined in Guam for a month as leaders deal with a
health crisis on board after nearly 1,000 cases of COVID-19, the illness caused
by the novel coronavirus, spread among its crew.
Almost the entire crew has since
been moved off the ship and into isolation as the carrier is disinfected.
Crozier had warned Navy leaders about the situation in a letter that was
published last month by the San Francisco Chronicle. Former acting Navy
Secretary Thomas Modly first said the captain wouldn't be punished unless
leaders determined he had leaked his letter to the paper. Modly fired Crozier
24 hours later, despite saying he had no proof the captain sent the letter to
the newspaper. The situation has caused a firestorm for the Navy that
ultimately led to Modly resigning from his position. Many questions remain
about what Crozier did to inform his chain of command about concerns over the
coronavirus cases onboard his ship before he sent the now-famous letter, and
whether leaders acted on those warnings. Questions also remain about the military's
decision to have the carrier make a port call in Vietnam in early March as
coronavirus was spreading across the Asia-Pacific region. A wider investigation
is likely to examine some of those topics. Navy officials have said it's
unclear how the coronavirus began spreading among the crew. There were
confirmed cases at a hotel in Vietnam that some of the crew members had
visited, though officials later said those sailors tested negative for the
virus. Leaders have since turned their attention toward air crews who flew
deliveries out to the ship from Japan, the Philippines and other locations in
the region, but officials stress they may never know how the outbreak started. Politico
first reported McPherson's decision to widen the investigation. That's after
Joint Chiefs Chairman Army Gen. Mark Milley advised Defense Secretary Mark
Esper to defer a decision on approving the Navy's push to reinstate Crozier
until there was a broader probe, according to Politico. Esper on Friday got a
verbal update from McPherson and Gilday on the preliminary inquiry. The defense
secretary wanted to review a written copy of the report before deciding whether
to approve the recommendation, his spokesman said last week. Milley was
"not against Crozier being reinstated," Politico reported, "just
that a larger investigation should be conducted." Navy officials have not
offered a timeline for when the new investigation is expected to be completed.
^ This seems like a stall tactic
to hope the American people simply forget about how badly Trump, Esper, Modly
and other in the US Navy have treated Captain Brett Crozier. We have long
memories - especially when it involves a
true American hero. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/04/29/navy-orders-deeper-investigation-crozier-firing-over-unanswered-questions.html
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