By Rich Lowry
Tuesday,
January 09, 2024
Anyone following
how weak and passive the U.S. has been in the face of provocations from our
adversaries in the Middle East might conclude that the secretary of defense has gone missing.
And,
at least for a few days last week, he literally was.
In
an age when it’s nearly impossible to go off the grid, Secretary of Defense
Lloyd Austin managed it. He failed to notify the White House and other key
players that he was hospitalized in the intensive care unit. This, needless to
say, is not an incidental detail about his life — like, say, that he routinely
does his grocery shopping on Saturday afternoons, or is taking the Kansas City
Chiefs and giving the points this weekend.
If
the principal deputy assistant secretary for fair housing and equal opportunity
went missing, presumably only her personal assistant would notice, and the
country would be better for it.
The
secretary of defense, in contrast, is a rather consequential position in the
U.S. government. He is in charge of the largest and most important part of the
executive branch and second in the chain of command only to the president of
the United States. He is central to any number of scenarios crucial to U.S.
national security, including the decision to launch a nuclear strike.
If
a U.S. destroyer gets hit in the Red Sea, you don’t want U.S. commanders and high U.S.
officials wondering where the SecDef is.
Although
much remains unanswered, we know that Austin had an elective procedure at
Walter Reed hospital on December 22. Back home, he experienced severe pain and
went back to the hospital on January 1 and was put in intensive care.
Somehow
even Austin’s deputy secretary, who picked up some of his duties, didn’t learn
of his whereabouts until four days after his hospitalization.
Loose
lips may sink ships, but a spectacularly dysfunctional lack of communication at
the top of the U.S. government is its own problem.
Just
as no Harvard freshman could get away with the plagiarism that Claudine Gay
engaged in, no private first class could go AWOL and expect to remain in the
military.
The
Pentagon says it couldn’t notify other VIPs like, you know, the president of
the United States, because Austin’s chief of staff was also ill. Are we really
supposed to believe that no one else at the Pentagon has access to a phone or
email?
We
are obviously not living through an era of great bipartisanship, so it was
notable that the Austin absence resulted in a joint statement from the
Republican chairman and the Democratic ranking member of the House Armed
Services committee pointedly asking for more information about the days in
question.
The
White House, naturally, immediately made clear its “complete trust and
confidence in Secretary Austin.”
In
fairness, once someone has presided over the pullout of Afghanistan without
getting fired, it’s hard to cashier him for anything short of losing some other
country in humiliating fashion.
This
fiasco could simply be Austin’s own unbelievable personal lapse. But it’s hard
not to see the controversy in the context of an administration that, when it
comes to national security, cares as much about fashionable ideological
fixations — from DEI to the climate — as about the essentials involved in
maintaining a highly capable war-fighting machine.
And
the most important lack of transparency about health is happening before our
eyes. It doesn’t involve any cabinet official, but the commander in chief
himself. We are told that Joe Biden is robust and energetic, when he is
increasingly rickety and, seemingly, easily confused. We can be sure if the
president gets worse, the White House — adopting the Austin policy — will do
everything in its power to hide the ball.
Meanwhile,
we’ve conducted a real-time experiment regarding Biden foreign policy. With a
war on in Gaza and Iranian proxies attacking U.S. interests throughout the
Middle East, the secretary of defense disappeared, and it didn’t matter.
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