Trump
Pulls the Military Back Into the Political and Culture Wars
The removal
of a portrait of Gen. Mark A. Milley, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, from a Pentagon hallway was among the president’s early actions.
Helene
CooperEric Schmitt
By Helene
Cooper and Eric Schmitt
Reporting
from Washington
Jan. 23,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/us/politics/trump-military.html
In his
early-days blitz, President Trump fired the first woman to ever lead a military
service branch, signed an order to send active-duty U.S. troops to the border
and said he was reinstating, with back pay, former service members who had
refused to take Covid vaccinations, a breach of military health rules.
And a
portrait of his former senior military adviser, whom Mr. Trump has accused of
disloyalty, was swiftly taken down at the Pentagon.
Mr. Trump’s
nominee for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, said at his confirmation hearing
last week that the president wanted a military “laser-focused on lethality,
meritocracy, warfighting, accountability and readiness.”
It is not
starting off that way.
Instead, the
military is back where it has historically not wanted to be: in the middle of
political and culture wars that could erode bipartisan support and, eventually,
the public’s support for a military that is supposed to be apolitical.
The removal
of the portrait of Gen. Mark A. Milley, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, from a hallway lined with portraits of others who have had the job,
may be the least significant and yet most symbolically important of the White
House’s decisions.
Mr. Trump
appointed General Milley during his first term. But the general angered him by
arguing against deploying active-duty troops to quell protesters in 2020. He
also drew the president’s ire when he publicly apologized for walking, in his
Army fatigues, across a park near the White House with Mr. Trump after the
authorities had used tear gas and rubber bullets to break up a peaceful
demonstration.
“There will
be troops who believe that Milley represented the firebreak between lawful and
unlawful orders,” said Douglas E. Lute, a retired three-star Army general who
coordinated operations in Afghanistan, Pakistan and other countries on the
National Security Council for Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
“It’s like
lowering the flag to half-mast,” General Lute said. “Not because everybody
falls in love with Mark Milley, far from it, but the fact that as the chairman,
he believed in doing what was right, and history seems to be showing he was on
the right side of decision-making.”
Also gone is
the Coast Guard commandant, Admiral Linda L. Fagan, who was the first female
uniformed leader of a branch of the armed forces. Among the reasons she was
fired was an “excessive focus on diversity, equity and inclusion,” according to
a statement from the Homeland Security Department.
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Admiral
Fagan, who had previously been the service’s second in command, graduated from
the Coast Guard Academy in 1985 as part of just the sixth class that included
women. She rose through the ranks, serving at sea on an icebreaker and ashore
as a marine safety officer.
The admiral
was told on the evening of Inauguration Day that she had been fired, as she was
waiting to have a photo taken with Mr. Trump at the Commander in Chief Ball, a
military official said. Efforts to reach Admiral Fagan for comment have been
unsuccessful.
As the new
Trump team sweeps into the Pentagon, other senior military officials are
bracing to see if they will face similar fates.
Mr. Hegseth,
a Fox News host and a veteran, has criticized the Pentagon leadership for its
inclusion efforts and has said that women should not serve in combat roles. Of
the nation’s 1.3 million active-duty troops, 230,000 are women, and more than
350,000 are Black.
In his book,
“The War on Warriors,” Mr. Hegseth refers to Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the chief
of Naval Operations and the first woman to serve on the Joint Chiefs, as
“another inexperienced first.”
Admiral
Franchetti has served in the Navy for 40 years and commanded aircraft carrier
strike groups.
Mr. Hegseth
has also called for Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., who succeeded General Milley, to
be fired. General Brown is a four-star fighter pilot with 130 combat flying
hours, and multiple command tours in the Asia Pacific and the Middle East
during his four decades of service.
“If you want
to figure out a way to decimate the military, start wiping out its leadership,”
Admiral Mike Mullen, who was chairman of the Joint Chiefs under President
George W. Bush and President Barack Obama, said in an interview.
On
Wednesday, the new Defense Department team held its first news conference to
announce that it was sending 1,500 active-duty troops to the border to help
stop migrants from entering the United States. They will join about 2,500
troops who are already there doing logistical and bureaucratic jobs like
vehicle maintenance and data entry.
As part of
that new wave, the first of some 500 Marines began arriving near the border
south of San Diego on Thursday. But one Marine officer involved in the
operation said the mission so far was being “planned on the fly.”
The officer,
who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid any reprisals from senior
commanders, characterized this initial phase as largely a photo op aimed to
please Mr. Trump, not an attempt to halt a border emergency.
During his
first term, Mr. Trump declared a national security emergency at the southern
border and ordered thousands of active-duty American troops to deploy there.
Pentagon
officials say Mr. Trump’s order is a misuse of a military that is supposed to
be training to fight wars. The Posse Comitatus Act, a 146-year-old statute,
forbids the use of armed forces for law enforcement purposes on U.S. soil
unless Congress or the Constitution expressly authorizes it.
This is the
same logic General Milley and other senior national security officials used
during the first Trump term when they advised the president not to use the
Insurrection Act to deploy active-duty American troops to quell Black Lives
Matter protesters.
Each of the
armed services was ordered on Tuesday to comply with Mr. Trump’s various
directives. The Army, for instance, received about two dozen orders. In each
case, Army officials were directed to freeze funding, create a review panel and
report back in 30 days on how the Army intends to deal with the directives.
The orders
targeted diversity offices and initiatives, transgender issues, climate change
and funding for service members to travel to states for abortions or other
reproductive health services if they are posted to bases in states where
abortion is now banned.
At the
Pentagon, one soldier on Wednesday noted that there was a repetitive quality to
the new administration’s actions toward the military so far, including sending
troops back to the border and promoting white men over women and members of
minority groups.
There is
even precedent, the soldier said, for taking General Milley’s portrait down.
Back in 2019, the Trump White House asked the Navy to hide a destroyer named
after Senator John McCain in order to avoid having the ship appear in
photographs taken while Mr. Trump was visiting Japan. (Mr. Trump did not like
the Arizona senator.)
As of late
Wednesday, another portrait of General Milley was still hanging in the
Pentagon, several hallways and a floor away from the now empty space where his
other portrait once was.
It is of the
general when he was the Army chief of staff, a job he left in August 2019,
after Mr. Trump promoted him to chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. At the
Pentagon, there was some talk about when the new Trump team would notice.
John Ismay
contributed reporting.
Helene
Cooper is a Pentagon correspondent. She was previously an editor, diplomatic
correspondent and White House correspondent. More about Helene Cooper
Eric Schmitt
is a national security correspondent for The Times, focusing on U.S. military
affairs and counterterrorism issues overseas, topics he has reported on for
more than three decades. More about Eric Schmitt
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