Hagel: Assaults challenge military’s leaders

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Friday that new officers will be counted on to lead the fight against sexual assault. Hagel told the graduating class of the U.S. Naval Academy that students have seen how sexual assault can destroy trust and confidence at the core of the military. He told them to use their experience to make sure everyone is treated respectfully. In the past year, the academy has seen the prosecution of three academy football players accused of sexually assaulting a classmate. Charges against two were dropped. A third man was acquitted. Their female classmate at the center of the case graduated Friday.

Associated Press

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in an interview broadcast Friday that the focus of an investigation into alleged delayed treatments and deaths in the Veterans Administration’s health care system should be to “fix the problem” rather than to fire VA Secretary Eric Shinseki.

“I’ve known him a long time,” Hagel said in an interview with CBS News.

Hagel said more facts need to be learned and that it would be premature to oust Shinseki, a retired Army general.

“There does have to be accountability, right up and down the line,” said Hagel, himself a military veteran. He said the government has “no higher responsibility” than to provide top-shelf medical care to servicemen and women who have worn the country’s uniform.

“We know things went wrong,” Hagel said. “Somebody’s got to be accountable here, like in any institution.”

A growing number of lawmakers and candidates, both Democrats and Republicans, have called for Shinseki’s resignation.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said reports of “horrors” at the VA were “appalling.” Boehner has not called for Shinseki to resign, but he said, “I have to admit that I am getting a little closer” to doing so.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., called allegations of misconduct at the VA “completely and utterly unacceptable” and urged a broad review of services for veterans.

President Barack Obama earlier this week told a White House news conference that allegations of misconduct at VA hospitals will not be tolerated, and he left open the possibility that Shinseki could be held to account.

“I will not stand for it — not as commander in chief but also not as an American,” Obama said following an Oval Office meeting with Shinseki.

The growing controversy surrounding the Department of Veterans Affairs centers on allegations of treatment delays and preventable deaths at VA hospitals.

The department’s inspect general’s office says 26 facilities are being investigated nationwide, including a Phoenix hospital facing allegations that 40 people died while waiting for treatment and staff kept a secret list of patients in order to hide delays in care.