Biden taps General Lloyd Austin as first Black Pentagon chief

WILMINGTON, United States, Dec 9, 2020 – US President-elect Joe
Biden named retired army general Lloyd Austin on Tuesday as his pick to be
secretary of defense — and the first African-American to lead the Pentagon.

“Throughout his lifetime of dedicated service — and in the many hours
we’ve spent together in the White House Situation Room and with our troops
overseas — General Austin has demonstrated exemplary leadership, character,
and command,” Biden said in a statement.

“He is uniquely qualified to take on the challenges and crises we face in
the current moment.”

The 67-year-old four-star general was the US commander in Iraq and then
the head of the US Central Command covering all of the Middle East from 2010
to 2016 when Biden was vice president.

If confirmed, Austin will take charge of an institution where racial
minorities are overrepresented in the lower ranks but rare at the top.

He was a surprise choice for secretary of defense, bypassing a highly
qualified former senior Pentagon civilian official, Michele Flournoy.

Biden will have to persuade the US Senate to waive a law that says the US
military must be led by a civilian or, if a former military official, someone
who has been out of the service at least seven years.

The law has been waived only twice before, including in 2017, when retired
general Jim Mattis was made defense secretary under President Donald Trump.

But Mattis’s waiver was granted begrudgingly, and several major names in
the Democratic Party voted against it, including former presidential hopefuls
Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Cory Booker.

Austin’s confirmation is no sure thing either. As soon as media reports of
his nomination began to surface, critics lamented the decision to choose a
recently-retired general to supervise an army sometimes accused of having too
much influence.

Several Democratic senators announced Tuesday that they would oppose his
confirmation, including influential Connecticut senator Richard Blumenthal
and Virginia senator Tim Kaine.

The Biden campaign called Austin “a trusted and crisis-tested leader who
has overseen some of the most complex and impactful operations in the history
of the armed services,” citing the campaign against the Islamic State group
and the withdrawal of nearly 150,000 military personnel from Iraq before
that.

“I look forward to once again working closely with him as a trusted
partner to lead our military with dignity and resolve, revitalize our
alliances in the face of global threats, and ensure the safety and security
of the American people,” Biden said in the statement.

– ‘Back on track’ –

An anonymous source close to the transition team told CNN the two men
forged personal ties through Biden’s son Beau, who died of cancer in 2015
after fighting in Iraq under Austin’s command.

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Beau Biden and Austin became friends, the source told CNN, adding that
they would attend mass together and sit next to each other almost every
Sunday.

In a separate piece in The Atlantic magazine explaining why he picked
Austin, Biden wrote: “I’ve sought his advice, seen his command, and admired
his calm and his character.”

He acknowledged the issue of nominating a recent service member to helm
defense and said he hoped Congress would grant a waiver so that his
nomination could be quickly approved.

“Austin also knows that the secretary of defense has a different set of
responsibilities than a general officer and that the civil-military dynamic
has been under great stress these past four years,” Biden wrote.

“He will work tirelessly to get it back on track.”

Austin spent four decades in the army, graduating from West Point Military
Academy and following a career with a wide range of assignments, from leading
platoons to running logistics groups, overseeing recruiting and senior
Pentagon jobs.

In March 2003, he was the assistant commander of the 3rd Infantry Division
when it marched from Kuwait into Baghdad in the US invasion of Iraq.

From late 2003 to 2005, he was in Afghanistan commanding the Combined
Joint Task Force 180, the principle US-led operation seeking to stabilize the
security situation in the country.

In 2010, he was made commanding general of US forces in Iraq, and two
years later became the commander of the Central Command, in charge of all
Pentagon operations in the Middle East and Afghanistan.

That put him in charge of the fight against Islamic State militants as
they captured large swathes of Iraq and Syria.

Since retiring, Austin has been on the board of one of the Pentagon’s
largest weapons suppliers, Raytheon, as well as other companies.

He also was part of a small group of shareholders in an investment group,
Pine Island Capital Partners, that included Biden’s pick for secretary of
state, Antony Blinken, and his rival for the Pentagon job, Flournoy.

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