Pentagon’s Tata Tests Positive for COVID After Lithuanian Visit

FILE - This March 27, 2008, file photo, shows the Pentagon in Washington. The Defense Department must improve the way it responds to child-on-child sexual assault at military bases in the U.S. and abroad as part of a sweeping new law President Donald Trump signed Monday, Aug. 13, 2018. While the Pentagon began addressing sexual assault in the ranks a decade ago, an Associated Press investigation revealed that similar reports involving military kids got lost in a dead zone of justice. Child offenders were rarely held accountable _ even when they confessed _ and victims often received no counseling or other help. Under the new law, more than 70,000 students in Pentagon-run schools now receive the same legal protections as their U.S. public school counterparts. The schools also must overhaul their system for tracking and addressing assault allegations. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

A top Pentagon official, retired Brigadier General Anthony Tata, has tested positive for coronavirus, the second time in recent weeks that the COVID-19 outbreak has impacted the senior ranks of the U.S. military.

Tata, 61, was tested along with other top U.S. defense officials after Lithuanian diplomats on Thursday informed the Pentagon that Defense Minister Raimundas Karoblis tested positive for the virus after visiting the building on Nov. 13 and Nov. 16, Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Hoffman said in a statement.

On Friday last week, Karoblis met with Acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller, Tata, and the secretaries of the Army and Air Force, Hoffman said. Separately, Karoblis met on Monday with the secretary of the Navy.

The statement only said Tata had become ill. He left the Pentagon after learning of his diagnosis.

“We have and are continuing to conduct further contact tracing of DoD personnel who have had close contact with the Lithuanian delegation or Mr. Tata, and are taking appropriate precautions in accordance with CDC guidelines,” according to the Thursday statement from Hoffman. “We will report additional positive cases as appropriate.”

Walter Reed Hospital

Tata is performing the duties of under secretary of defense for policy after President Donald Trump made a flurry of changes last week at the Pentagon, including firing Defense Secretary Mark Esper.

Tata was screened for the virus at the military’s Walter Reed hospital just outside of Washington, where Trump was admitted in October after falling ill with COVID-19, according to two people familiar with the matter.

It wasn’t immediately clear when Tata last briefed other top officials, but he was in a meeting with some of them, including Miller, Deputy Defense Secretary David Norquist and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Mark Milley, as well as others this week.

But Hoffman said Miller as well as the military service secretaries aren’t quarantining since they followed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines in their meetings with the Lithuanian delegation.

Carrier Visit

Miller spent Wednesday visiting troops in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and touring the USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier off the coast of Norfolk, Virginia, with his new chief of staff, Kash Patel.

Tata wasn’t on that trip, but Miller and Patel were sometimes seen unmasked throughout the day.

In October, several members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, including Milley, went into quarantine after coming into contact with a senior Coast Guard officer who tested positive for COVID-19.

Via Newsmax