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		Amid USS McCain controversy, Pentagon 
		says military will not be politicized 
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		 [June 03, 2019] 
		By Idrees Ali 
 SEOUL (Reuters) - The Pentagon has told the 
		White House that the U.S. military will not be politicized, a U.S. 
		official said on Sunday, in response to a controversy after officials 
		directed the United States Navy to keep the USS John S. McCain out of 
		sight during a recent speech by President Donald Trump in Japan.
 
 The White House military office directed the U.S. Navy's Seventh Fleet 
		to minimize the visibility of the USS John S. McCain, a warship bearing 
		the name of Trump's former political rival, during the president's 
		speech last week.
 
 While the directive was not implemented after senior Navy officials 
		found out about the request, the incident has raised questions about the 
		politicization of the military, which has traditionally been seen as 
		being apolitical.
 
 "Secretary (Patrick) Shanahan directed his chief of staff to speak with 
		the White House military office and reaffirm his mandate that the 
		Department of Defense will not be politicized," Lieutenant Colonel Joe 
		Buccino, a Pentagon spokesman, said in a statement.
 
		 
		
 "The chief of staff reported that he did reinforce this message," 
		Buccino said.
 
 Concern has increased about the politicization of the U.S. military 
		under Trump. He has given a number of overtly political speeches to 
		military audiences and the military has been drawn into a mission along 
		the border with Mexico, which some critics have described as a political 
		stunt rather than a national security necessity.
 
 The USS John S. McCain controversy led acting U.S. Defense Secretary 
		Patrick Shanahan to ask his chief of staff to find out what happened. On 
		Sunday he told reporters that after reviewing the facts, he did not plan 
		to call for an inspector general investigation into the incident.
 
 "There is no room for politicizing the military," Shanahan told 
		reporters traveling with him to Seoul.
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			The U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain is seen, 
			in Singapore waters August 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmad Masood/File Photo 
            
 
		Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney on Sunday downplayed the 
		incident, saying that a young White House staffer - knowing how Trump 
		felt about McCain - likely made the request to the Navy. 
            "That's not an unreasonable thing to ask," Mulvaney said on NBC 
			News' Meet the Press program. He said it would be "silly" to fire 
			that staffer over the incident.
 Shanahan said he had spoken with late Senator McCain's wife in the 
			past few days about the incident but declined to give details of the 
			conversation.
 
 He said that his chief of staff did not have prior knowledge of the 
			White House directive and reiterated that a search had not found any 
			emails to his staff about it. Trump said on Wednesday he had not 
			been aware of the request.
 
 The USS John S. McCain was initially named after the late Senator 
			McCain's father and grandfather, who were both Navy admirals. In 
			2018, the Navy added Senator McCain to the official namesake of the 
			guided missile destroyer.
 
 McCain, the unsuccessful 2008 Republican presidential nominee, was 
			shot down during the Vietnam War and tortured by his North 
			Vietnamese captors during more than five years in captivity as a 
			prisoner of war.
 
 Trump has long criticized McCain on a variety of fronts, and has 
			kept up his attacks even after McCain's death in August.
 
 (Reporting by Idrees Ali; additional reporting by Valerie Volcovici 
			Editing by Alex Richardson and Bill Berkrot)
 
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