Austin Denies Requesting ‘Subtle’ Ride To Hospital‚ Blames Aide: ‘Should Come Out In The Review’
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Austin Denies Requesting ‘Subtle’ Ride To Hospital‚ Blames Aide: ‘Should Come Out In The Review’

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said his assistant requested a low-profile ambulance ride to a hospital on January 1 after Austin experienced complications from an earlier surgery. Austin apologized on Thursday for his role in a coverup earlier this year after he and his team failed to inform the White House and the American public that the defense chief had been hospitalized because of complications from prostate cancer surgery. Austin entered the hospital on January 1‚ but failed to inform the White House that he was indisposed until four days later. On January 1‚ an assistant requested an ambulance for Austin‚ but asked if it could show up without lights and sirens on to keep the situation “subtle.” Austin said Thursday that the request did not come from him‚ and that the reasons for why the aide asked should come out in a review. “I asked my assistant to call the ambulance. I did not direct him to do anything further than just call the ambulance‚ and so what he said and why he said it‚ I think that should come out in the review‚” Austin said. Defense Sec. Lloyd Austin can’t explain why his staff told the ambulance “no lights‚ no sirens.” Repeatedly throughout this press conference‚ Austin doesn't answer questions about who knew what when. pic.twitter.com/qDrBTU20uv — RNC Research (@RNCResearch) February 1‚ 2024 A recording of 911 call for Austin’s ambulance was reviewed by The Washington Post. “Can the ambulance not show up with lights and sirens? We’re trying to remain a little subtle‚” Austin’s aide said‚ according to the Post. The 911 dispatcher replied‚ “Usually‚ when they turn into a residential neighborhood they’ll turn them off.” The dispatcher said that ambulances are legally required to activate lights and sirens on main roads‚ however. Austin began the Thursday press conference by taking “full responsibility” for how his cancer diagnosis and hospitalization were handled. CLICK HERE TO GET THE DAILYWIRE+ APP “We did not handle this right‚ and I did not handle this right. I should’ve told the president about my cancer diagnosis. I should have also told my team and the American public. And I take full responsibility. I apologize to my teammates and to the American people‚” Austin said. He said he initially kept the information private because he is a “private guy.” He added that he has “learned from this experience” and that‚ as a public official‚ he cannot expect the same level of privacy as a private citizen. “I want you all to know why this happened. I was being treated for prostate cancer. The news shook me‚ and I know that it shakes so many others‚ especially in the black community. It was a gut punch‚ and‚ frankly‚ my first instinct was to keep it private. I don’t think it’s news that I’m a pretty private guy. I never liked burdening others with my problems. It’s just not my way‚” Austin said. .@SecDef Austin on his recent cancer diagnosis and transparency: "We did not handle this right. I did not handle this right. I should have told the president about my cancer diagnosis‚ and I should have also told my team and the American public. I take full responsibility." pic.twitter.com/rt3WjjjJdl — CSPAN (@cspan) February 1‚ 2024