BFF-13 Pentagon confirms push to hide USS John McCain from Trump

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BFF-13

US-POLITICS-MILITARY

Pentagon confirms push to hide USS John McCain from Trump

SEOUL, June 3, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The acting Pentagon chief confirmed Sunday
that the White House had requested the hiding of a warship bearing the name
of late Senator John McCain during a visit by Donald Trump to Japan.

In Washington, White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said the request
probably was made by somebody on the president’s advance team but no one
would be fired for it.

US media reported that efforts were made to obscure the USS John S.
McCain’s name during Trump’s visit to an American military facility last
week, accusations denied by acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan and the
president.

But Shanahan said Sunday that the president’s staff had contacted the
Japan-based 7th Fleet of the US Navy and given “the directive that the USS
John S McCain should be hidden from view”.

“That directive was not carried out,” Shanahan told media while flying to
Seoul for the third leg of his week-long tour of Asia.

Shanahan said he commissioned an investigation led by the Pentagon chief of
staff upon learning of the incident.

“There is no room for politicising the military,” he added. “I’ll deal with
this in an appropriate manner.”

Shanahan’s spokesman, Lieutenant-Colonel Joe Buccino, said the Pentagon had
already lodged a protest at a White House meeting on Friday.

“Secretary Shanahan directed his chief of staff to speak with the White
House military office and reaffirm its mandate that the (Pentagon) will not
be politicised,” Buccino said.

Mulvaney, in comments on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” acknowledged the request
was probably made by someone on the White House advance team but said it was
“not an unreasonable thing to ask.”

“Is someone going to get fired for this? No,” he said.

– McCain feud –

Trump had a combative political relationship with McCain, who died last
August and was taken prisoner and tortured during the Vietnam war.

According to the Wall Street Journal, which first reported the story,
Shanahan was aware of concern about the ship’s name and “approved measures to
ensure it didn’t interfere with the president’s visit.”

Those measures included hanging a tarpaulin over the ship’s name, the
Journal said. The tarpaulin was removed before Trump arrived, but a barge was
moved closer to the ship, blocking the view of its name.

Crew serving aboard the 154-metre (505-foot) vessel, whose uniforms bear
the ship’s name, were prevented from attending a speech Trump delivered from
a neighbouring ship, media reports said.

Shanahan denied any involvement when asked by reporters on Thursday.

Trump insisted the same day that he would not have ordered hiding the
vessel from view during his visit, and said he “couldn’t care less” whether a
Navy destroyer bore the name of his late rival.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0916 hrs