Who is Rear Adm. Ken Braithwaite? Trump's choice for Navy secretary has distinguished career
President Trump has nominated retired Rear Adm. Kenneth Braithwaite to assume the position of Navy secretary after the Pentagon ousted Richard Spencer on Sunday amid the ongoing controversy surrounding the handling of a high-profile Navy SEAL case.
Trump
had clashed with the Navy over its plan to convene a review board that
could have led to the loss of SEAL Edward "Eddie" Gallagher's Trident
pin. The president said Gallagher will retire with the pin, and he's
chosen Braitwaite to replace Spencer.
The current U.S. ambassador to Norway and a retired Navy rear admiral, Braithwaite, 59, a native of Michigan, served on the Pentagon's
Trump transition team and was nominated by the president to his current
role in 2018, after the post had been vacant for nearly two years.
In
his capacity as ambassador, Braithwaite scrimmaged with Norway in
September after Trump expressed his displeasure that the country's
defense spending was at 1.62 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP)
-- below the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries'
pledge to spend at least 2 percent. Trump repeatedly has called on Oslo
to boost its defense expenditures, noting the Scandanavian country's
close proximity to Russia.
President Trump on Sunday nominated retired Rear Adm. Kenneth John Braithwaite to become the next Navy secretary.
"Norway is both a founding member of NATO and a key
member of the alliance, and is financially capable of meeting these
commitments," Braithwaite said. "I have emphasized that it is important
for Norway to show leadership and reach the two-percent goal well before
2024."
Braithwaite, if confirmed, would report directly to the president and Defense Secretary Mark Esper to
oversee all aspects of the Navy. A 1984 graduate of the U.S. Naval
Academy with a degree in political science, he later earned a Master’s
degree in government administration from the University of
Pennsylvania in 1995.
Braithwaite trained as a naval aviator, and after 21 years of military service, was the first of his class to earn a flag rank.
In
his first assignment in 1986, he flew anti-submarine missions as a
member of Patrol Squadron 17, stationed at Naval Air Station Barbers
Point in Hawaii, tracking Soviet submarines throughout the Northern and
Western Pacific regions. After a two-year stint in Naval aviation,
Braithwaite became a public affairs officer and rose to chief of public
affairs for Naval Base Philadelphia in 1990.
He initially went to
work on legislative affairs on Capitol Hill, including strategic
communications and public affairs. His job titles included special
assistant in the Navy’s Office of Legislative Affairs and director
of public affairs aboard the aircraft carrier USS America, before
leaving active duty and joining the reserves in 1993.
He assumed
command of the Naval fleet tasked with providing support to the joint
task force commander at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in October 2001, shortly
after the terror attacks of Sept. 11.
Braithwaite deployed
overseas several times in the Navy reserves. In 2003, he served a naval
support role as part of the fleet involved in the initial invasion into Iraq.
A
portion of his command supported the naval operations to capture the
port of Umm Qasr in March 2003, which marked the first military
confrontation during the Iraq War to regain control of a key port that
played an important role in the shipment of humanitarian supplies to
Iraqi civilians.
He later deployed to assist with relief efforts after a major 2005 earthquake in Pakistan.
Aside
from his naval service, Braithwaite also served as executive and state
director to U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania from 1997-2000.
A
successful businessman, Braithwaite also served in executive positions
at ARCO, a prominent American oil company, and Ascension Health in
Washington, D.C.
In March 2007, Braithwaite was named the senior
vice president of the Hospital & Healthsystem Association of
Pennsylvania and executive director of its Delaware Valley Healthcare
Council lobbying group, which represented more than 50 acute-care
hospitals and 50 other facilities providing health care services to
Southeastern Pennsylvania. That same year, he was promoted to the rank
of rear admiral.
Although Braithwaite's tenure in the Navy and
public service has been seen as relatively free of controversy, he
slammed then-President George W. Bush's proposed cuts to Medicare and
Medicaid as "draconian" in 2008.
Braithwaite retired from the
Naval Reserve in 2011 as a highly decorated rear admiral, his last post
being vice chief of information and head of Naval Reserve public
affairs.
He's
married with two children. His father, Kenneth J. Braithwaite Sr.,
served in World War II and survived being shot in the head soon after
storming Normandy Beach on D-Day, June 6, 1944.
Trump announced the nomination Sunday on Twitter,
writing: "Admiral and now Ambassador to Norway Ken Braithwaite will be
nominated by me to be the new Secretary of the Navy. A man of great
achievement and success, I know Ken will do an outstanding job!"
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