Pentagon drops Friday news bomb: Defense Sec. Lloyd Austin was admitted to Walter Reed on Monday
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Monday evening, the Pentagon announced on Friday.
"On the evening of January 1, Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for complications following a recent elective medical procedure. He is recovering well and is expecting to resume his full duties today. At all times, the Deputy Secretary of Defense was prepared to act for and exercise the powers of the Secretary, if required," Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said in a statement which did not divulge what procedure the cabinet official had undergone.
The Pentagon Press Association called it an "outrage" that the information had been concealed.
"The fact that he has been at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for four days and the Pentagon is only now alerting the public late on a Friday evening is an outrage," a PPA letter to Ryder and assistant to the secretary of defense for public affairs Chris Meagher reads. "The public has a right to know when U.S. Cabinet members are hospitalized, under anesthesia or when duties are delegated as the result of any medical procedure."
Austin has previously promoted climate alarmism. In a 2021 statement, he claimed, "Climate change is an existential threat to our nation's security, and the Department of Defense must act swiftly and boldly to take on this challenge and prepare for damage that cannot be avoided."
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Defense secretary calls for review after Marine goes viral criticizing handling of misconduct claim
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told reporters Friday that he is asking for the facts that led to a Marine posting a video online sobbing about how her "perpetrator" would be allowed to remain in the military despite an admission of guilt in an alleged misconduct claim.
What are the details?
An advocacy group called Not In My Marine Corps — which says its mission is to "end sexual harassment and assault in the Armed Forces" — shared a video Thursday of the unidentified Marine with message, "This is what happens when you report your assault in the @USMC He admits his guilt and then is retained by the Commanding General after everyone else recommended do not retain. @RepSpeier@SenGillibrand@KamalaHarris@SecDef this is bullshit."
(Warning: Extensive profanity.)
This is what happens when you report your assault in the @USMC He admits his guilt and then is retained by the Comm… https://t.co/k1COKObb8r— #NotInMyMarineCorps (@#NotInMyMarineCorps)1613679249.0
In the video, the Marine is seen driving down the road and crying as she explains how earlier in the day she posted a video complaining of how unfair it is that she was "able to see her f***ing perpetrator in court" and learning that he would be receiving an honorable discharge.
She went on to say that she had just been told minutes prior that the Commanding General had actually decided to allow her alleged perpetrator to remain in the military despite what she called "admission to guilt."
She adds at the end of the video, "This is exactly why f***ing females in the military f***ing kill themselves. This is exactly why. Nobody takes this seriously."
Austin was asked about the viral clip during a press conference, and he called the video "deeply disturbing." The defense secretary said that he had asked his staff for further information surrounding what occurred and vowed to make sure the Marine in the video was being cared for.
"We have to get the facts," Austin said. "We have to understand just what happened."
The Marine Corps later issued a statement saying that the service was "aware of the video and is gathering all the details of the situation," stressing: "Sexual assault is a crime, is unacceptable, and violates our core values of honor, courage, and commitment."
However, the Corps told Business Insider later that despite some reports of the incident being a sexual assault, the issue was not an assault but "misconduct of a sexual nature."
The force clarified, "This video specifically refers to an allegation of misconduct regarding the wrongful appropriation and distribution of personal information."
Lloyd Austin Apologizes | Guest: Hilary Kennedy | 2/2/24