17/05/2024

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Biden blasts Sen. Tuberville’s holds on military nominations as ‘totally irresponsible’

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Biden blasts Sen. Tuberville’s holds on military nominations as ‘totally irresponsible’

President Joe Biden denounced Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s blockade of hundreds of military nominations during a joint news conference with Finland’s president in Helsinki on Thursday, calling the Republican’s actions “totally irresponsible.”

Military promotions are usually approved by Congress without delay, but Tuberville, of Alabama, who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, has blocked hundreds of such appointments, citing his objection to a Pentagon policy that provides paid time off and reimburses travel costs for service members and dependents seeking abortions.

Biden, standing beside Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, said he would be willing to talk to Tuberville “if I thought there’s any possibility of him changing his ridiculous position. He’s jeopardizing U.S. security with what he’s doing.”

“I expect the Republican Party to stand up — stand up and do something about it,” Biden continued.

“The idea that we don’t have a chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the idea that we have all these promotions that are in abeyance right now and we don’t know what’s going to happen, the idea they we’re injecting into fundamental foreign policy decisions what in fact is a domestic social debate on social issues, is bizarre,” Biden said. “I don’t ever recall it happening, ever. And it’s just totally irresponsible, in my view.”

“I’m confident that the mainstream Republican Party no longer, does not support what he’s doing, but they got to stand up and be counted,” Biden said. “That’s how it ends.”

Tommy Tuberville during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., has put holds on hundreds of military nominations in protest over the Pentagon’s abortion policies.Tom Williams / CQ Roll Call via AP file

Tuberville told NBC News that he would consider lifting his blockade if the Senate would agree to vote on whether to keep the current policy and the Pentagon and White House would promise to rescind it should the vote fail.

“If it fails, it’s got to go back to the original,” Tuberville said of the administration policy. He had previously said he would lift his holds only if the policy is rescinded.

The senator said he is willing to meet with Biden to work toward a compromise, but expressed disappointment that Biden had blasted him abroad.

“If I’d have been president, I’d call me a long time ago,” Tuberville said. “But you know, I understand we’ve got a lot of problems in this country. We got a lot of foreign problems and, and he got — that’s a hard job. I can’t imagine doing that. So, you know, he got pretty, pretty fired up about me and on foreign soil. I wish he hadn’t done that,” he said.

A spokesperson for Tuberville told NBC News that the senator spoke to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Thursday, pointing to a tweet characterizing their conversation as “cordial and productive.”

In a briefing to reporters, Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder confirmed that Austin and Tuberville spoke on Thursday, and said Austin explained to the senator how the holds are causing “uncertainty in the force” and jeopardizing “military readiness.”

“A key principle in the effectiveness of our military is a well-defined chain of command,” Ryder said. Any uncertainty about the fate of “incoming or outgoing commanders, and senior leaders, can make it difficult to plan for advanced mission requirements,” he said.

Tuberville and Austin agreed to speak again next week, Ryder said.

Separately, Austin told CNN he will “continue to engage” with the Alabama Republican to try to clear the impasse, though he added that service members will still be reimbursed for abortion-related travel expenses.

“That’s our policy,” Austin said.

The defense secretary also said the stalled appointments are affecting both national security and military readiness.

“This is a national security issue. It’s a readiness issue. And we shouldn’t kid ourselves, I think any member of the Senate Armed Services Committee knows that,” Austin told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer.

“We have a policy that allows our troops to get access to non-covered reproductive health care, and I think that’s an important policy,” Austin said.

“One in five of my troops … is a woman, and our women provide tremendous value to this force, and I think we need to do everything we can to take care of them,” he added.

Lloyd Austin attends a relinquishment of office ceremony for former commandant Gen. David Berger at the Marine Barracks Washington
Lloyd Austin attends a relinquishment of office ceremony for former commandant Gen. David Berger at the Marine Barracks Washington earlier this month. Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images file

The comments by Biden and Austin come as criticism of the senator’s blockade continues to mount.

Some Republicans have begun to criticize Tuberville’s tactics. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a longtime defense hawk, told NBC News that he too opposes the Pentagon’s abortion policy, but said the blockade must end.

“The point about holding up promotions, we need to end that,” Graham said, adding that he will also “be asking for a vote to change the policy.”

As a result of Tuberville’s holds, the Marine Corps is without a confirmed chief for the first time in more than 150 years, and a Pentagon spokesperson said as many as 650 military leadership positions may be vacant by year’s end if the holds continue.

Austin’s comments echoed those of Air Force Gen. Charles “C.Q.” Brown, Biden’s pick to serve as the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who on Tuesday told the Armed Services Committee that the holds could affect readiness, with less experienced deputies having to take up leadership positions temporarily, and could discourage junior officers from staying in the military while creating financial and logistical burdens for troops’ families.

A spokesperson for Tuberville told NBC News in May, when Brown’s nomination was announced, that the hold would also apply to Brown. The term of the current Joint Chiefs chairman, Army Gen. Mark Milley, ends in October.

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