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		Pentagon chief says he should have handled cancer diagnosis better
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		 [February 02, 2024]  
		By Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Thursday 
		apologized for failing to tell President Joe Biden and senior staff 
		about his recent prostate cancer diagnosis ahead of time, adding that 
		the health scare was a "gut punch" that had shaken him.
 
 Austin, 70, also apologized for the way he handled his subsequent 
		hospitalization, which was kept secret from the public, senior staff and 
		Biden himself for days.
 
 "(Biden) has responded with a grace and warm heart that anyone who knows 
		President Biden would expect and I'm grateful for his full confidence in 
		me," Austin said in his first press conference since his secret 
		hospitalization.
 
 Austin's secrecy surrounding his condition and his Jan. 1 
		hospitalization caught the White House and Congress off guard, and even 
		Biden didn't know Austin was hospitalized during much of the first week 
		of January.
 
 "I did not handle this right," Austin said.
 
 The incident triggered a political uproar. Republicans accused Austin of 
		dereliction of duty. Biden, a Democrat, has said he has confidence in 
		Austin despite what the president agreed was a lapse in judgment.
 
		
		 
		Austin said privacy and not secrecy was behind his decision not to tell 
		the White House or public about the diagnosis earlier.
 "It was a gut punch," Austin said referring to his diagnosis.
 
 Austin said he still had some leg pain, but his doctors were confident 
		it would improve over time.
 
 Austin was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in 
		Maryland on Dec. 22 to treat prostate cancer. He returned to the 
		hospital on Jan. 1 due to complications that included a urinary tract 
		infection.
 
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            U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin meets with British Defense 
			Minister Grant Shapps at the Pentagon in Washington, U.S., January 
			31, 2024. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo 
            
			 
            His hospitalization was not disclosed until four days later, and the 
			Pentagon did not specify why he was being treated until Jan. 9.
 Austin said he had never directed anyone in his staff to keep his 
			January hospitalization from the White House or the public.
 
 He added that he did not know what information had been passed to 
			his deputy, Kathleen Hicks, who temporarily took over his duties.
 
 Some prominent Republicans, including former President Donald Trump, 
			called for Austin to be removed from his job. Austin is a retired 
			four-star general who led forces in Iraq and who is America's first 
			Black defense secretary.
 
 The chair of the U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services 
			Committee has asked Austin to testify before the panel over the 
			failure to timely disclose his hospitalization.
 
 "Congress must understand what happened and who made decisions to 
			prevent the disclosure of the whereabouts of a cabinet secretary," 
			committee chairman Mike Rogers wrote last month.
 
 (Reporting by Phil Stewart, Idrees Ali and Doina Chiacu; Editing by 
			Howard Goller)
 
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