Hundreds of sailors cheer dismissed Navy captain

The USS Theodore Roosevelt is underway in the Philippine Sea during late March. 
(U.S. Navy handout photo by Specialist Seaman Jomark A. Almazan)
The USS Theodore Roosevelt is underway in the Philippine Sea during late March. (U.S. Navy handout photo by Specialist Seaman Jomark A. Almazan)

Thundering chants of "Captain Crozier!" from hundreds of sailors filled the USS Theodore Roosevelt hangar deck, according to multiple videos on social media, showing the last moments with their commanding officer, who was relieved of duty by the Navy on Thursday for his plea for help with the coronavirus outbreak onboard.

Navy Capt. Brett Crozier showed "poor judgment" by sending the letter by email to 20 or 30 people, acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly said, and he implied that Crozier leaked it to the San Francisco Chronicle, although he later backed away from that suggestion.

The aircraft carrier is now docked in Guam.

"Now that's how you send off one of the greatest captains you ever had ... the GOAT," a person says in one video, using the acronym for greatest of all time. "Man for the people."

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The bond between ship commanders and crew is distinct from every other military command, fused at the "elemental level" in an understanding of the unique power and responsibility a skipper wields, said Bryan McGrath, a former commander of a Navy destroyer.

So the emotional outpouring was not unprecedented, McGrath said Friday, and Crozier is not the first commander who has received such a send-off. But the feelings were obvious, he said.

"It speaks volumes," McGrath said of the videos. "They're grateful to him for looking out for them, which is one of the jobs of the commanding officer of a Navy ship. It's clear they have great affection for him."

McGrath, now a defense consultant, counts the Navy as one of his clients.

[Video not showing up above? Click here to watch » https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6syLaEQXeA]

The Roosevelt's climbing infection rate, which rose past 100 as of Thursday, became the military's biggest outbreak.

As infections mounted, Crozier wrote a letter to senior leaders, asking that most of his crew of 4,800 sailors be removed for testing, quarantining and disinfecting the ship.

U.S. aircraft carriers, floating cities powered by nuclear reactors, are symbols of the nation's global projection. The Navy has 11 active carriers in its inventory.

The consequences of taking one offline -- especially a ship assigned to patrol the Pacific as a check against China's military power -- is enormous, but Crozier described it necessary to protect the health of his crew.

"We are not at war. Sailors do not need to die. If we do not act now, we are failing to properly take care of our most trusted asset -- our sailors," Crozier wrote in his letter first obtained by the San Francisco Chronicle.

"I could reach no other conclusion than that Capt. Crozier had allowed the complexity of his challenge with the covid breakout on his ship to overwhelm his ability to act professionally, when acting professionally was what was needed most at the time," Modly said at a news conference Thursday.

It is not yet clear what steps Crozier took to raise concerns with senior leaders before sending the letter.

McGrath said it was apparent both Crozier and Navy leaders believed they were doing the right thing by their respective actions.

Information for this article was contributed by Missy Ryan, Dan Lamothe and Paul Sonne of The Washington Post.

A Section on 04/04/2020

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