Ex-acting Navy secretary's trip to Guam cost $243,000

A trip to Guam that led to the resignation of former acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly cost $243,000, a Navy official said Wednesday.

Modly resigned Tuesday, shortly after taking a 35-hour trip to the USS Theodore Roosevelt and upbraiding the ship’s commanding officer, Capt. Brett Crozier. Modly’s comments were broadcast over the ship’s loudspeakers.

Crozier had sent a letter to Navy officials pleading for help with a COVID-19 outbreak aboard the ship. The letter leaked to the San Francisco Chronicle, drawing attention to the outbreak and generating a wave of headlines.

The cost of Modly’s flight on a Gulfstream 550 was first reported by the Washington Post.

Modly relieved Crozier of his command on April 2, saying the captain’s letter “unnecessarily raised the alarm of the families of our sailors and Marines.” On Monday, in an expletive-laden comment aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt, Modly excoriated the captain, suggesting that he was “stupid or naïve” for writing the letter and accusing him of a “betrayal of trust.”

Initially, Modly stood by his comments, but after President Donald Trump offered support to Crozier, Modly issued an apology.

“Let me be clear, I do not think Captain Brett Crozier is naïve nor stupid,” Modly said. “I think, and always believed him to be the opposite.”

On Tuesday, Modly offered his resignation to Defense Secretary Mark Esper, who later said Modly had had quit on his own accord, “putting the Navy and the sailors above self so that the USS Theodore Roosevelt, and the Navy as an institution, can move forward.”

source: nbcnews.com