Trump says Navy Secretary Phelan was fired over shipbuilding conflicts

Trump says Navy Secretary Phelan was fired over shipbuilding conflicts
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Summary "He's a hard charger, and ​he had some conflicts with some other ​people, mostly as to building and buying new ⁠ships," Trump told reporters in the Oval ​Office

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Navy Secretary John Phelan was fired after conflicts with senior Pentagon leadership over shipbuilding, ​US President Donald Trump said on Thursday.

Here are ‌some details:

Phelan's dismissal, first reported by Reuters, was the latest wartime shakeup at the Pentagon.

"He's a hard charger, and ​he had some conflicts with some other ​people, mostly as to building and buying new ships," Trump told reporters in the Oval ​Office. "Got to get along, especially in the military, got ​to get along, you know. And some people liked him, some people didn't, and that's usually the truth about ​everything."

Sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, previously ​told Reuters that Phelan was dismissed in part because he ‌was moving too slowly to implement reforms to speed shipbuilding and because he had fallen out with key Pentagon leadership.

The latest departure comes during a ​tense ceasefire with Iran, ​as the US flows more naval assets into the Middle East.

The Pentagon has not ​provided a reason for Phelan's departure, nor ​did it say whether it was Phelan's decision to go.

A billionaire seen as having close ties to Trump, Phelan ​is the first administration-picked service ​secretary to be fired since Trump came back into office ​last year.