WASHINGTON (AP) — Gen. David Petraeus slumped at the witness table Tuesday while testifying at a Senate hearing, and a spokesman said the general was likely dehydrated and jet-lagged from his travels.
Gen. Petraeus, 57, revived after a few seconds and left the room under his own power. After about 20 minutes he returned to the hearing room but Sen. Carl Levin, the panel chairman, decided to postpone the hearing.
“It appears he was maybe a little jet-lagged, dehydrated certainly,” said Gen. Petraeus’ spokesman, Col. Erik Gunhus.
Gen. Petraeus had finished telling Sen. John McCain that he believed the planned 2011 drawdown of U.S. troops in Afghanistan remains on track, and Mr. McCain was responding when the room fell silent and aides began crowding around the four-star general.
Gen. Petraeus, who oversees the war in Iraq and Afghanistan as head of U.S. Central Command, briefly put his head on the table, then rose, appearing dazed. He stood under his own power and was escorted from the room.
Gen. Petraeus was taken to another room, given something to eat and drink and was examined by a doctor, Col. Gunhus said. Gen. Petraeus himself returned to the room briefly and told the senators he “was feeling a little bit lightheaded there.”
“It wasn’t Sen. McCain’s question,” the general added.
Col. Gunhus said Gen. Petraeus had not been ill recently, although he had just returned from a weeklong overseas trip. Col. Gunhus said Gen. Petraeus would continue his day as planned.
Last year, Gen. Petraeus underwent radiation treatment for the early stages of prostate cancer. He later announced the treatment had been successful.
Gen. Petraeus broke his pelvis in a parachute jump in 2000. In his lengthy appearances before the Senate and House armed services committees in September 2007 to testify on Iraq, he was reported to have endured great back pain and got through it with the help of Motrin.
As the most popular and widely known general of his generation, Gen. Petraeus is approaching a new juncture in a career that catapulted him to fame when President George W. Bush sent him to Baghdad in early 2007 to carry out a long-shot “surge” strategy that arguably rescued Iraq from collapse.
The general has had a high-profile career, and many believe he is the leading candidate to become the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He commanded all forces in Iraq under President George W. Bush.
Associated Press writer Pauline Jelinek contributed to this report from Washington.
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