A decision
that comes after the findings of a preliminary investigation recommended he be
reinstated, the service's two most senior officials announced Friday.
In a major
reversal, the US Navy has decided to fire the captain of the USS Theodore
Roosevelt aircraft carrier who warned about the spread of the coronavirus
pandemic aboard his ship.
"I will
not reassign Captain Brett Crozier as the commanding officer of the USS
Theodore Roosevelt, nor will he be eligible for future command. Captain Crozier
will be reassigned," Adm. Michael Gilday, the Chief of Naval Operations
told reporters during a Pentagon briefing, which took place shortly after news
of the decision broke.
"While I
previously believed Captain Crozier should be reinstated, following his relief in
April, after conducting an initial investigation, the much broader, deeper
investigation that we conducted in the weeks following that had a much deeper
scope," he said, speaking alongside Navy Secretary Kenneth Braithwaite.
The
investigation concluded that Crozier and the Strike Group Commander, Rear Adm.
Stuart Baker, "did not do enough, soon enough to fulfill their primary
obligation ... and they did not effectively carry out our guidelines for events
spread of the virus," according to Gilday.
"Both Admiral
Baker and Captain Crozier fell well short of what we expect of those in
command. Had I known then what I know today, I would have not made that
recommendation to reinstate Captain Crozier. Moreover, if Captain Crozier were
still in command today, I would be relieving him," he said.
Though
Crozier has been relieved of command of the ship, he is expected to remain in
the Navy.
Baker will
also be held accountable for poor decision-making and his promotion is being
put on hold, a US Navy official and a congressional aide briefed on the
investigation told CNN prior to the briefing.
Crozier was
initially fired in April for what the acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly, who
subsequently resigned, said was poor judgment for too widely disseminating a
warning about the spread of virus aboard his vessel, a warning that eventually
made its way into the press.
Several
defense officials told CNN that the Navy initially recommended that Crozier be
restored to command of the carrier following a preliminary inquiry later that
month.
Officials
told CNN that the Navy was so confident that the Pentagon leadership would
endorse its recommendation to reinstate Crozier that it was forced to scuttle a
planned press conference to announce the results after Defense Secretary Mark
Esper did not immediately endorse the findings, helping to convince then acting
Navy Secretary James E. McPherson to launch a broader inquiry.
The fallout
from the outbreak aboard the Roosevelt, which spread to more than 1,000 crew
members before the Navy ceased publishing data on the number of infected
sailors, sparked a major controversy within the Navy, leading to Modly's
resignation.
Crozier's
memo which set off the chain of the events warned Navy leadership that decisive
action was needed to save the lives of the ship's crew. "We are not at
war. Sailors do not need to die. If we do not act now, we are failing to
properly take care of our most trusted asset — our Sailors," it read,
three US defense officials confirmed to CNN.
Modly
resigned days later over his handling of the incident, actions which included a
$240,000 trip to Guam where he slammed Crozier and admonished sailors for
giving Crozier a rousing send off in public remarks to the crew.
"I
believe if there is ever a time to ask for help it is now regardless of the
impact on my career," Crozier wrote in his email, the contents of which a
US official directly familiar with the message confirmed to CNN.
The email was
addressed to Crozier's immediate superior Baker and several other senior Navy
officials in the region.
The
investigation did not fault Crozier for sending the email and attached memo but
faulted him for not having all the facts in hand, leaving off people that
needed to see it, and not warning Baker in advance that he was sending It.
In his memo,
Crozier implored Navy leaders to take immediate steps to address the situation.
"Decisive
action is required. Removing the majority of personnel from a deployed US
nuclear aircraft carrier and isolating them for two weeks may seem like an
extraordinary measure," his memo said.
"This is
a necessary risk. It will enable the carrier and air wing to get back underway
as quickly as possible while ensuring the health and safety of our Sailors.
Keeping over 4,000 young men and women on board the TR is an unnecessary risk
and breaks faith with those Sailors entrusted to our care," Crozier added.
Video of
Crozier receiving raucous applause from his crew while departing the aircraft
carrier following his initial ouster went viral on the internet and several
lawmakers had called for him to be reinstated.
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