The Daily - A Crisis Inside the Navy
Episode Date: April 8, 2020Note: This episode contains strong language.The upheaval and anguish caused by the pandemic led to a series of actions that cost both the captain of an aircraft carrier and the head of the Navy their ...jobs. Today, we explore how the coronavirus has created a crisis inside the service.Guest: Eric Schmitt, who covers terrorism and national security for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: In a letter that leaked to the news media, Capt. Brett E. Crozier described what he said were the Navy’s failures to provide the resources to combat the virus spreading aboard his aircraft carrier. Now the captain himself has tested positive for Covid-19.Thomas B. Modly, acting Navy secretary, condemned the ousted captain to his former crew on the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt. Days later, Mr. Modly resigned.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily.
Today, the military's handling of the coronavirus has cost both the captain of an aircraft carrier
and the head of the Navy their jobs. Eric Schmidt on the crisis inside the Navy.
It's Wednesday, April 8th.
Eric, tell me about this letter.
So this letter, dated March 30th, 2020, is written by Captain Brett Crozier. He's the
commander of the USS Theodore Roosevelt, an aircraft carrier that's been in the Western
Pacific. Several of his sailors have come down with the virus, and he has been doing all he can
to get the entire crew, nearly 5,000 sailors, off the ship.
This letter, it's really an act of frustration.
In fact, let me just read you from the letter.
Subject line, request for assistance in response to COVID-19 pandemic.
First paragraph reads, B-L-U-F, bottom line up front.
If required, the USS Theodore Roosevelt would embark all assigned
sailors, set sail, and be ready to fight and beat any adversary that dares challenge the U.S. or our
allies. The virus would certainly have an impact, but in combat we are willing to take certain risks
that are not acceptable in peacetime. However, we are not at war and
therefore cannot allow a single sailor to perish as a result of this pandemic unnecessarily.
Decisive action is required now. And he then goes on in the next three or four pages to explain why
it's so difficult aboard an aircraft carrier. The cramped
quarters, the fact that everybody's eating in the same dining halls and sharing the same restrooms,
and they're going up and down the ladders of this ship, and they can't but help at being very close
together. In other words, it's a social distancing nightmare. Right. In fact, he ends the letter with this,
keeping over 4,000 young men and women on board the TR,
Teddy Roosevelt, is an unnecessary risk
and breaks faith with those sailors entrusted to our care.
He's basically saying the most important thing here,
since they're in peacetime, is the health of the crew.
Get them off, get them safe, get them well. And in his view, the Navy is not helping him fast enough
with enough supplies to do that. Help me understand that. What exactly prompted
this captain to write this letter to his superiors in the Navy?
So we need to go back to early March. Theodore Roosevelt was scheduled to make a port
call in Da Nang, Vietnam. Vietnam borders China. So there was concern by Captain Crozier and many
of his staff about the obvious impact of the COVID-19 virus there. But in checking with Navy
health officials, they told him that there were very few cases in Vietnam at that time,
the beginning of March, and they were mostly in and around Hanoi and in northern Vietnam,
several hundred miles north of Da Nang, where the USS Roosevelt would go.
This was an important show of American military strength at a time when China is reasserting
itself militarily in the South China Sea. it was important for the United States to follow through on its strategic commitments and demonstrate to the government of Vietnam that it was willing to go ahead with this visit.
So this ship showing up at a port in Vietnam is considered strategically important for United States national security.
is considered strategically important for United States national security.
That's right.
So despite Captain Crozier's concerns, the Roosevelt docks in Hanoi and nearly 5,000 sailors and crew members pour into the city of Da Nang,
going out to restaurants, going out to bars, going out to what sailors do in port calls.
Now, at the end of their port call, the sailors and crew get back on the ship. And so, as the Roosevelt pulls out of Da Nang, Captain Crozier is still
concerned because even though his crew has shown no open signs of infection, in his mind, a clock
is ticking, roughly a 14-day clock in which the symptoms could appear, after which they'll feel they're more or less in the clear.
And as they approach the end of the 14 days, Captain Crozier and his top aides believe they're almost clear.
And literally on the last day of that period of time that they're watching, the first two sailors test positive
for the virus. And the captain knows he has a huge problem on his hands. So the first two sailors who
are infected with the virus are immediately flown off the ship. Captain Crozier, realizing that the
infection is probably spreading silently through the crew,
speeds up a scheduled visit to Guam,
which is the home of a major naval base, a major naval hospital.
And it's over these next four days that the captain,
working with his immediate boss, an admiral on board the Roosevelt,
as well as others up his chain of command,
are doing all they can to follow through on the guidance that we now know.
How many sailors can we get off this ship into some kind of quarantine basis?
He wants to have proper social distancing. And obviously he wants to treat the sailors who are increasingly in numbers testing
positive. But by March 30th, we know Captain Crozier feels the Navy's not moving fast enough
to help him. All his pleas, while they may have delivered some aid and some relief, they're not
getting the crew off fast enough. They're not
getting supplies to the ship quickly enough. And so he writes this letter and he sends it
over an unclassified email to about 20 other people, all naval personnel. But by sending it
over an unclassified email and not the usual classified system the Navy has, the captain almost
certainly knows somebody will leak it to the media. And that's probably what he wants, some
kind of outside force to apply pressure to the Navy to respond faster to what he believes is essential.
to what he believes is essential.
So what happens after Crozier sends this letter?
So the letter is sent, and within a day,
it's leaked to the San Francisco Chronicle,
and it causes an immediate firestorm.
The Navy Secretary, Thomas Mowdley, is outraged.
First of all, that this letter has leaked.
And he had just had a conversation with Captain Crozier the night before,
basically asking, have you got everything you need?
Do I need to do anything more?
And according to Mowdley,
the captain said,
I'd like things to go faster,
but I realize you're doing as much as you can.
So I think Mowdley feels a little bit blindsided by this.
And the next day,
on April 2nd,
he calls a press conference.
I'm here today to inform you
that today at my direction, the commanding officer of the USS Theodore Roosevelt, Captain Brett Crozier, was relieved of command by a carrier strike crew commander, Admiral Stuart Baker.
Secretary Mobley reads a statement saying he is dismissing Captain Crozier.
Wow. I lost confidence in his ability to continue to lead that warship as it fights through this virus to get the crew healthy and so that it continues to meet its important national security requirements.
Basically says he's lost confidence in him.
I would like to send a message to the crew of Theodore Roosevelt and their families back here at home.
I am entirely convinced that your commanding officer loves you.
He may be a great officer most of the time. He may be well beloved by his crew, but in this case...
But it's my responsibility to ensure that his love and concern for you is matched by his sober
and professional judgment under pressure. He's blown it. Okay. Thank you. And so by the next day, back out in Guam,
Captain Crozier is packing up his things. And as he walks down the gangway off the ship
to an awaiting car, and it's a scene, it's just remarkable, Michael, in that the whole crew that's gathered hundreds
in this huge hangar bay are chanting and cheering for the captain.
Captain Crozier, Captain Crozier.
They're thanking him because by now they've read the letter.
They know what's happened here.
And this is kind of his valedictory as he leaves
and gets into the car and drives off
to this really stunning ovation.
And that's how you send out one of the greatest captains you ever had.
And this only makes the Navy brass back in Washington even angrier.
We'll be right back.
Eric, the scene you just described on the USS Roosevelt, I mean, it seems very clear from that that the Navy is not just at odds with the captain of the ship, but with its own sailors there. So how did that huge gap form between the top brass and the rank and file?
So in part, that division is created essentially by the priorities that the military overall has.
What the military's job is, it's first to be ready for combat.
The Secretary of the Navy, the Defense Secretary, they have to worry about threats and how they would respond to them.
Whereas the captain's immediate view is that he is worried about the health of his crew.
But there's another important factor in all this, and that's President Trump.
For these civilian leaders back in Washington at the Defense Department and the Navy,
they're worried of how President Trump is going to view this.
And they've got good reason to worry.
Now, President Trump has ignored advice from his military
and absolved three U.S. service members accused of war crimes.
Mr. Trump pardoning...
The president has actively meddled in criminal investigations in the military.
The president also pardoned...
Has intervened on the behalf of accused war criminals.
...who was charged with the murder of an Afghan bomb maker.
And overturned their punishments repeatedly.
And Mr. Trump reinstated Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher to the rank of chief petty officer
after he was convicted of posing with the corpse of an ISIS detainee.
In fact, the last Navy secretary was fired.
The Navy secretary is out,
asked to resign over his handling of disgraced Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher.
And trying to deal with one of these interventions that the president did.
And so the president has gotten into the heads
of civilian leaders, including the Navy.
So what Mr. Moatley said, in fact, was he worried that the president, seeing what had happened
about this letter being released, the president would intervene and order the captain to be dismissed before the Navy could
even act on it. And that would be further embarrassment to the Navy. Mr. Mowdley was
basically trying to preempt the president from doing what he feared he might do.
So what happens after the Navy secretary, possibly preempting the president, fires Crozier.
So on Monday, Mr. Modley, trying to tamp down the furor of his dismissal of the captain,
flew 8,000 miles to Guam to address the crew.
The American people believe in you.
Aboard the ship, he gets on the intercom system.
And in a 15- minute obscenity laced
terrain
everyone's scared about this thing
but I tell you something if this ship was in combat and there were hypersonic missiles coming at it
you'd be pretty fucking scared too
but you do your jobs
criticizes Captain Crozier
that if he didn't think that information was going to get out into the public in this information age that we live in And then he rebukes the crew
For cheering this guy
Everything I'm telling you
guys right now, I will never, ever, ever throw you guys under the bus in Washington or anywhere
else in the media, anywhere else. He tells them how much he respects them and will never throw
them under the bus. And then finally, he says, there no conditions and in no situation should you go to the media with your complaints.
And of course, the irony is that the audio of Mr. Modley's speech was almost immediately leaked to the media, which is why you can hear it now.
They use it to embarrass the Navy.
They use it to embarrass you.
And this did not go over well.
You had a number of retired Navy officers, lawmakers reacting, outraged that he would not just criticize the captain, which he'd already done, but
criticize the crew.
This was just too much.
And by Monday night, the president had asked about it.
And for the president, who had initially supported Captain Croce's firing,
now he seems to be having second thoughts.
He, you know, looks to me like he's an outstanding guy.
I looked, I looked at his whole...
Trump says, maybe he's not such a bad guy after all.
You know, maybe I can help the situation out.
I mean, you guys are saying, why is the president getting involved?
Well, I like to solve problems.
It's a problem, you know?
And so there's a hint that the president
may once again intervene in this case.
But not the way that the Navy secretary feared,
in the opposite way.
That's right.
And maybe reinstate the captain.
That's when, shortly after that...
In a letter overnight, Modley writing,
I want to apologize to the Navy.
Mr. Modley issues this late night apology.
I do not think Captain Brett Crozier is naive nor stupid.
He is smart and passionate.
I believe precisely because he is not naive and stupid that he sent his alarming email with the intention of getting it into the public domain.
And by late Tuesday afternoon, Mr. Motley resigns.
And it just kind of underscores
the turmoil within the ranks
of the Navy right now.
But it also kind of shows
the turmoil within the Pentagon overall
and this kind of revolving door.
Because remember, Mr. Motley
is an acting secretary.
He replaced a guy who was fired last November, and he in turn will be replaced by another acting
secretary. So the Navy leadership now has gone through three different secretaries in just a
few short months. Eric, you have been covering this from the moment that
letter became public, and you have been covering the military for years. And what do you make
of this entire episode? It is extraordinary. And I think what you have here is a conflict
between, in many ways, the kind of storied history of the United States military,
specifically the United States Navy,
with its hierarchy, its chains of command,
set against a very unusual enemy,
this once-in-a-century pandemic,
and also a very unusual and unpredictable president.
And caught in the middle of all this are the sailors, the sailors
aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt with pandemic spreading through their ranks, even as they sit
on the docks in Guam. And it's those sailors who are kind of looking both to their captain,
their now departed captain, and to Washington for some help. How do we get out of this?
And how do we get back to our mission safely?
What's the answer?
I mean, what has happened to these 5,000 sailors on the USS Roosevelt?
Well, roughly half of the sailors have come off the ship.
Some are in quarters on the naval base in Guam. Some have been put up in
private hotels. There are more than 150 cases of sailors who've tested positive.
So this process will go on for no doubt weeks until the crew is healthy enough and the ship is
clean enough again for the crew to get back on and go on its way and continue its mission.
Eric, it sounds like Captain Crozier pretty much got what he asked for.
The military is more or less emptying this ship and putting people in quarantine, right?
I think you're right.
And most important, he got the Navy to focus its attention even more on these sailors, which is what he wanted all along.
What do you expect is going to happen to Captain Crozier?
Well, Captain Crozier right now is in quarantine in Guam. He actually tested positive for coronavirus himself.
So he is waiting.
Friends say he's doing okay right now.
But otherwise, the Navy has said he would be reassigned to his desk job in San Diego.
But with all the twists and turns of the last few days,
the man who fired Crozier has now been fired himself.
And there's talk that Captain Crozier could possibly be reinstated.
There's a petition going online with more than 250,000 signatures demanding that he be reinstated.
So the fate of Captain Crozier is still to be decided.
Thank you, Eric.
Thank you, Michael.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
China has ended its lockdown of Wuhan,
the city where the coronavirus epidemic began,
allowing residents to travel in and out of the city where the coronavirus epidemic began, allowing residents to travel in and out of the city
for the first time in 76 days.
Wuhan, jiā yóu!
Wuhan, jiā yóu!
Wuhan, jiā yóu!
Wuhan, jiā yóu!
Wuhan, jiā yóu!
Wuhan, jiā yóu!
The news was greeted with chants and singing in Wuhan,
where 50,000 people were infected with the virus
and more than 2,500 died from it.
And on Tuesday, President Trump removed the federal official
overseeing how trillions of taxpayer dollars from the coronavirus stimulus package
are spent by his administration.
Is this a wise move?
I mean, shouldn't somebody be watching over this?
Yes, the president thinks he should be the one, and that's exactly upside down.
The stimulus bill specifically required such oversight, prompting Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on CNN, to immediately denounce the president's move.
The president's sending in some of his loyalists. So this is really a problem.
Finally, thousands of Wisconsin voters headed to the polls on Tuesday at the height of the pandemic,
after Republican lawmakers blocked an attempt by the state's Democratic governor to postpone the election.
This is so wrong. This is just so wrong. This election should have been called off.
Many voters expressed
fury over the situation,
saying that they should not
have to choose between
their health and their right to
vote. You know, they're telling us to
stay in the house and, you know,
stand six feet from each other, but then
one of the most important times
they're forcing us to come out here in a group.
Stop playing politics with our lives.
You know, that's what I'm feeling.
The results of the election, including the presidential primary,
are not expected until Monday.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.