National Review Online
Monday,
January 08, 2024
Secretary
of Defense Lloyd Austin was hospitalized at Walter Reed Medical
Center on January 1 for complications related to an as-yet-unspecified “minor
elective surgery” he received on December 22. Austin had been at home
recovering from the surgery since December 23, but, when he was admitted to Walter
Reed with acute pain, he was sent straight to the intensive care unit, where he
remained for the next four days.
All
of this would be fairly unremarkable — complications from surgery, however
unfortunate, are a regular occurrence — were it not for the fact that by all
accounts Secretary Austin went AWOL with the White House during this period.
Although a few top officials in the Pentagon were apparently aware that Austin
had been rushed to the ICU on Monday, they failed to notify either President Biden or Jake
Sullivan and the National Security Council until several days later that the
secretary of defense was in the ICU. (Austin reportedly avoided detection of his hospitalization by
claiming to be “working from home” during the entire week, quite the luxury for
a secretary of defense during such fraught times.)
Austin
was hospitalized on a Monday. General C. Q. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, was not informed that Austin had been hospitalized
until Tuesday. Neither the White House nor Austin’s understudy, Deputy Defense
Secretary Kathleen Hicks, was informed of his whereabouts or the threat to his
health until Thursday — a matter of particular concern given that Hicks herself
was vacationing in Puerto Rico at the time. Austin remains in the hospital as
of this writing, although he has been removed from intensive care and is said
to be on the mend.
Nothing
about this is remotely normal. The secretary of defense does not typically
disappear “off the grid” and remain unaccounted for to his superiors for
several days, like Mark Sanford hiking the Appalachian Trail. In any sane
world, the details of this story as reported by Politico, NBC News,
and others would require Lloyd Austin’s immediate resignation. The American
public’s ignorance as to the secretary’s whereabouts is immaterial; the public
doesn’t need to be told when our military and civilian leaders have scheduled
their colonoscopies. The fact, rather, that Austin, said to be an intensely
private person, failed to notify members of his chain of command, as well as
key stakeholders in the government — there can be few more important than the
commander in chief or the NSC — is a transparently fireable offense.
And
yet Joe Biden’s administration has been at great pains to signal that Secretary
Austin is welcome back to the fold. Politico reported today that President Biden “would not accept
a resignation if Austin were to offer one,” which is as clear a signal as the
administration is capable of sending to the media to back away from covering
this. If the White House didn’t fire anyone over the Afghanistan pullout, why
start insisting on competence now?
Perhaps
the most fitting commentary on the administration’s passivity in the Middle
East, and particularly the Red Sea, is that its secretary of defense went
missing and no one noticed.
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