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Biden transition team slams Pentagon for halting cooperation

File photo of the US Defense Department building (the Pentagon) near Washington, DC. (Photo by AP)on in Washington

US President-elect Joe Biden's transition team has expressed frustration over resistance to their requests for information from political appointees at the Pentagon, complaining of “an abrupt halt in the already limited cooperation."

Executive director of the transition team, Yohannes Abraham, told reporters on Friday that Biden agency review teams at the US Department of Defense learned Thursday of meetings “being pulled down" and immediately reported it, demanding prompt resumption of the meetings and requests for information.

“We were concerned to learn this week about an abrupt halt in the already limited cooperation there,” Abraham stated, further insisting that “a failure to work together can have consequences well beyond January."

The Pentagon, however, offered a different version of events in a Friday statement, noting that there was a “mutually-agreed upon holiday pause” that begins on Saturday.

Acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller further asserted in the statement that some meetings have been rescheduled but none have been canceled or refused, saying the department and the transition team had agreed to a two-week pause in discussions over the December holiday period.

But Abraham underlined no such agreement existed, and that he expects Pentagon officials to reverse the decision.

“Let me be clear: There was no mutually agreed upon holiday break,” he insisted. “In fact, we think it is important that briefings and other engagements continue during this period as there’s no time to spare.”

After Biden beat President Donald Trump in the November 3 election, the Democrat’s transition team only began meeting with administration officials in late November to coordinate the handover, since Trump refused to concede defeat and his administration only allowed cooperation with Biden on November 23.

Biden's transition team has been meeting with officials at various agencies to get detailed reviews of the programs and challenges the new administration will inherit, a process that was delayed when the General Services Administration refused to issue an official ascertainment that Biden had won the election.

“Our key focus in the next two weeks is supporting essential requests for information” on Operation Warp Speed and COVID-19 to “guarantee a flawless transition,” Miller said in his statement.

Miller, who was appointed by Trump nearly five weeks ago after the sacking of then-Pentagon chief Mark Esper, further claimed the Pentagon remains committed to a full and transparent transition and is working to reschedule about 20 interviews with 40 officials until early next month.

 He also noted that the defense department (DOD) has already done 139 interviews and provided 5,300 pages of nonpublic or classified information.

“There have been many agencies and departments that have facilitated the exchange of info and meetings over the past few weeks,” Abraham further explained, noting: “There have been pockets of recalcitrance, and DOD is one of them.”


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