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Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin risked national security 'unnecessarily,' Inspector General says Tom Vanden Brook and Cybele Mayes-Osterman, USA TODAY Updated January 15, 2025 at 12:30 PM
Austin, 70, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in early December after a routine screening. Amid firestorm created by Austin's cancer secrecy, missed opportunities to build trust and educate Skip ...
The Pentagon disclosed Tuesday afternoon, after days of silence on Austin’s medical diagnosis, that the secretary has prostate cancer. Austin, 70, was admitted to Walter Reed National Military ...
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Thursday admitted he mishandled communication around his treatment for prostate cancer and apologized to his colleagues and the American public in his first ...
A statement from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Tuesday revealed after days of uncertainty that US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had been hospitalized in December for prostate ...
Like former defense secretary James Mattis, [57] Austin required a congressional waiver of the National Security Act of 1947 to bypass the seven-year waiting period after leaving active-duty military, as prescribed by 10 U.S.C. § 113 (a), in order to be appointed as secretary of defense. [56] Austin's nomination, and the attendant requirement ...
The Pentagon's internal watchdog said Thursday he will review the secrecy surrounding Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s hospitalization and why the Defense Department waited days to inform the ...
Peter Brian Hegseth (born June 6, 1980) is an American government official, author, and former Army National Guard officer and television presenter who has served as the United States secretary of defense since 2025. Hegseth studied politics at Princeton University, where he published for The Princeton Tory, a conservative student newspaper.