News
Analysis
Trump
Gave the Military’s Brass a Rehashed Speech. Until Minute 44.
On an
almost daily basis, thousands of words pour forth from the president’s mouth.
Sometimes, he tucks in a wildly revealing insight about the direction he is
taking the country.
Shawn
McCreesh
By Shawn
McCreesh
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/30/us/politics/trump-military-brass-speech.html
Sept. 30,
2025
It was a
speech unlike any other and just like every other.
The
makings of it were strange and rare. Washington had raised a collective eyebrow
last week when news began circulating that President Trump and his defense
secretary had summoned the country’s military brass to a base in Virginia for
an unexplained meeting. The timing was notable. This summons had come just as
the president had started to act with a new aggressiveness to carry out his
long-held and oft-stated desire to send the military into U.S. cities,
ostensibly to reduce crime.
Several
hundred military commanders turned up at Quantico on Tuesday morning. Some had
flown in for it from places as far away as Germany, Brussels, Japan and South
Korea. They sat mostly in silence as Mr. Trump talked for 73 minutes about the
same things he talks about almost every day, no matter where he is or to whom
he is speaking.
He talked
to the generals about Joseph R. Biden Jr. and the infamous autopen. He talked
about the media. He talked about tariffs and the border. He talked about the
time he went to a restaurant in Washington to eat dinner. He talked about not
being awarded a Nobel Peace Prize he felt he had earned.
These
were pretty much the same things he talked about a day earlier while standing
next to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel in the State Dining Room at
the White House, which were the same things he talked about at Charlie Kirk’s
memorial service in Arizona, which were the same things he talked about at
Windsor Castle and at Chequers in England.
But if
the generals were paying attention during minute 44 of the president’s speech
Tuesday, they would have heard the fleeting but unmistakable sound of something
new. Something different.
It was at
that moment that the president recounted a conversation with his defense
secretary: “I told Pete, we should use some of these dangerous cities as
training grounds for our military.”
We should
use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military, the
president of the United States said.
On an
almost daily basis, thousands of words pour forth from the president’s mouth.
Sometimes, he tucks in a wild insight about the direction he is taking the
country.
It can be
hard to discern these moments for what they are. Partially that’s because we
hear from Mr. Trump so often. He is on TV constantly. But it’s also because, in
his second term more than ever, he has become so devoid of context. He seems
unwilling or unable to modulate based on his audience, his setting or his
circumstances.
If there
had been any point to dragooning all those high-powered military commanders
from around the country and the world to Virginia on Tuesday, it wasn’t exactly
clear from Mr. Trump’s speech what that might have been. He would occasionally
slip in observations or references that were more on topic, but these flights
from his usual refrains seemed almost beside the point, if indeed there was
one.
“I think
we should maybe start thinking about battleships,” he said at one point. “By
the way, the B-2 bombers were incredible,” he said at another point.
He
mentioned that he used to love watching “Victory at Sea,” the old
black-and-white television series about World War II.
There is
also the matter of his delivery. It has become harder to perceive the
occasionally revealing things the president says — like Tuesday’s admission
that he saw American cities as “training grounds” for troops — because of the
way he sometimes says them.
For a
79-year-old, he’s often shown a great deal of energy, but he seemed a bit
sapped Tuesday. As his remarks went on and on, his voice took on a more
monotonous quality. A day earlier, when he spoke at the White House while
standing beside Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Trump sounded out of breath at times.
Even
though Tuesday’s speech was not so different from all the others, he still
seemed intent on winning over his audience with it.
“I’ve
never walked into a room so silent before,” he said as he began. He
acknowledged that members of the military were not meant to act like partisans,
but told the crowd not to be concerned with such customs. “Just have a good
time,” he instructed. “And if you want to applaud, you applaud. And if you want
to do anything you want, you can do anything you want.”
He told
the brass, “You just feel nice and loose, OK?”
Eric
Schmitt contributed reporting.
Shawn
McCreesh is a White House reporter for The Times covering the Trump
administration.


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