Sailor on Roosevelt, Whose Captain Pleaded for Assist, Dies From Coronavirus

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Sailor on Roosevelt, Whose Captain Pleaded for Assist, Dies From Coronavirus

WASHINGTON — A crew member from the plane service Theodore Roosevelt who had the novel coronavirus died on Monday, in a poignant punctuation to the


WASHINGTON — A crew member from the plane service Theodore Roosevelt who had the novel coronavirus died on Monday, in a poignant punctuation to the plea from the ship’s captain two weeks in the past for assist from the Navy as a result of “sailors don’t have to die.”

The demise of the sailor got here as Navy officers continued to battle to fight the an infection that has crippled the nuclear-powered ship, now docked in Guam. The identify of the sailor is being withheld till 24 hours after members of the family are notified, Navy officers stated.

“All the division is deeply saddened by the lack of our first active-duty member to Covid-19,” Protection Secretary Mark T. Esper stated in an announcement. Adm. Michael M. Gilday, the chief of naval operations, referred to as the demise “an excellent loss for the ship and for our Navy.”

The demise is already wrapped up in what has turn out to be a narrative of disjointed management within the Navy, the place high officers pitted themselves in opposition to the ship’s captain and medical crew within the battle to include the illness. Pleading for extra assist from the Navy to swiftly evacuate the ship because the virus unfold, Capt. Brett E. Crozier implored officers to place considerations for the well being of the sailors forward of considerations for the ship’s capability to take care of army readiness ought to a warfare crop up.

The fate of Captain Crozier’s career now lies in the hands of Admiral Gilday, the Navy’s top uniformed official. He told reporters last week that the investigation of the Roosevelt matter, which he ordered, was complete and he had started to review the findings.

Results could be made public this week, Navy officials said on Monday.

The inquiry, conducted by Adm. Robert P. Burke, a former submarine captain who is the vice chief of naval operations, relied on interviews with more than a dozen Navy personnel aboard the Roosevelt and in Captain Crozier’s chain of command, according to people familiar with the scope of the investigation.

Admiral Gilday said he had not ruled out any courses of action, including the potential of reinstating Captain Crozier, if that was where the investigation led.

“I am taking no options off the table,” Admiral Gilday said, adding that he had not spoken to the captain, who is in quarantine on Guam after testing positive for the coronavirus.

The pivotal issue, Admiral Gilday said, is why Captain Crozier felt compelled to send his four-page letter outside normal communications channels, and whether it illustrated a breakdown in communications with his chain of command.

Before the results are made public, Admiral Gilday will consult with Mr. Esper; the new acting Navy secretary, Jim McPherson; and Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Pentagon officials said on Monday.

Former top Navy officials said the service would probably be criticized regardless of what actions it took.

“No matter the direction recommended, the critics of the action will align,” said Sean O’Keefe, who was the Navy secretary under President George Bush. “The investigation will force actions regardless of whether they are popular or not.”

Meanwhile, health care providers at the naval hospital on Guam have been directed by top levels of the Navy to begin a research project on the quarantined Roosevelt sailors that examines the serology of the coronavirus, to learn more about how the immune system responds to the infection, according to military officials. This project has drawn anger from some of the providers because of a lack of any defined research protocol, compounded by safety concerns over the amount of protective equipment required and their already strained reserves. Some have refused to participate on ethical grounds.

In another sign of how the coronavirus has upended military deployments, the Navy said on Monday that the aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman, wrapping up a five-month tour to the Middle East, would remain at sea off the East Coast for at least three more weeks in case the warship and its Covid-free crew were needed elsewhere before returning to its home port in Norfolk, Va.

John Ismay contributed reporting.



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