Opinion
W.J.
Hennigan
Trump
Crossed the Line at Fort Bragg
June 11,
2025
W.J.
Hennigan
By W.J.
Hennigan
Mr. Hennigan
writes about national security issues for Opinion from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/11/opinion/trump-wants-the-military-to-be-more-like-trump.html
No president
in modern history has done more to put the military in the middle of political
and cultural crossfire than Donald Trump.
On Tuesday,
just one day after he directed active-duty Marines onto the streets of Los
Angeles in response to protests against his immigration policies and four days
before he plans to oversee an extravagant military parade on his birthday, Mr.
Trump stood before a crowd of beret-wearing soldiers at Fort Bragg in North
Carolina and dragged them into his own political maelstrom.
While past
commanders in chief might have chosen to deliver a speech that celebrated the
U.S. Army’s history ahead of the service’s 250th anniversary this weekend, Mr.
Trump opted instead for a rambling speech that ridiculed “radical left lunatic”
politicians, threatened flag-burning protesters and falsely claimed the 2020
election was “rigged.” He also announced his plan to reverse a Biden
administration decision and restore the names of Fort Robert E. Lee and six
other military bases honoring former Confederate officers.
“You know
what Nov. 5 was? It was the election of a president that loves you,” Mr. Trump
said to scattered applause and cheers from the soldiers.
Presidents
from both parties have been criticized for politicizing the military, but not
one has challenged the military’s time-honored tradition of nonpartisanship as
Mr. Trump has. His Fort Bragg speech was just the latest in a string of
high-profile efforts to reshape the military more in his own likeness.
It began
with his administration’s decision to remove senior officers, many Black and
female, from positions on the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other command positions
reportedly as part of its anti-D.E.I. initiative. It continued with his
determination to reinstate and pay former service members who had been
discharged after refusing Covid vaccinations in violation of military health
mandates. And it was on full display when he sent active-duty troops to create
new military zones along the U.S. border with Mexico.
But it is
best exemplified by Mr. Trump’s decision this week to deploy some 4,000
National Guard troops and 700 Marines onto the streets of Los Angeles after
protests broke out over his immigration policies. The president is now pitting
American forces directly against American citizens, most of whom are not
violent and are simply angered by the Trump administration’s decisions. There
are now more soldiers and Marines in Los Angeles than in the war-torn countries
of Iraq and Syria.
The troops,
sent by the president against the wishes of Gov. Gavin Newsom, are notionally
there to protect federal property and agents. They cannot act independently in
a domestic law enforcement role because of the 147-year-old Posse Comitatus
Act, which generally prohibits them from doing so unless the president invokes
the Insurrection Act — drawn up for the most urgent national security
situations.
“Under the
Trump administration, this anarchy will not stand,” Mr. Trump said at Fort
Bragg. Few would disagree that the scenes of violence that have unfolded in Los
Angeles over the past week are inexcusable. But by any measure, the situation
falls short of anarchy, and the local police managed to largely keep protests
under control.
Mr. Trump
starkly framed his decision to deploy troops in us-versus-them terms. “These
service members defending the honest citizens of California, they’re also
defending our republic itself,” he said. “They’re heroes. They’re fighting for
us. They’re stopping an invasion, just like you’d stop an invasion.”
Few, if any,
past presidents would have felt comfortable drawing those battle lines so
brightly by declaring one group of Americans as fundamentally different from
the other. Republicans and Democrats alike have long understood that the U.S.
military must be detached from partisan political activity. Service members
must be relied upon to carry out lawful orders whether or not they agree with
the acumen of their political leaders. This notion is at the core of American
democracy and civilian control over the military.
It’s why
service members aren’t permitted to attend political rallies or convey
political beliefs while in uniform. Mr. Trump either didn’t know those rules or
didn’t care, reveling in the troop’s laughter and jeers. “You think this crowd
would’ve showed up for Biden?” Mr. Trump asked the soldiers. “I don’t think
so.”
If U.S.
presidents have anything in common in modern history, it’s a shared restraint
in deploying active-duty military forces to suppress civil unrest. Lyndon
Johnson was the last commander in chief to bypass a governor when he sent
troops to protect civil rights advocates marching from Selma to Montgomery,
Ala., in 1965.
Mr. Trump’s
legal rationale for the military deployments has drawn criticism from legal
scholars. California filed a federal lawsuit on Monday, but the wider fear
among state leaders and politicians in other cities is that the deployments in
California could set a precedent and become a harbinger of how things unfold in
other protests in American streets.
Bryn
Woollacott MacDonnell, the Pentagon’s acting comptroller, told Congress on
Tuesday that the current National Guard and Marine deployments are estimated to
last 60 days at a cost of about $134 million. The price could balloon if the
mission expands.
It’s shaping
up to be an expensive weekend at the Pentagon. Tens of millions more will be
shelled out for the Army’s 250th anniversary parade in Washington on Saturday,
when all manner of military vehicles, battle tanks and armored troop carriers
are being readied to roll through the streets.
The
president issued a warning to any potential protesters who may be looking to
interfere with the festivities. “For those people that want to protest, they’re
going to be met with very big force,” Mr. Trump said at the White House before
his trip to Fort Bragg. “And I haven’t even heard about a protest, but you
know, this is people that hate our country, but they will be met with very
heavy force.”
That isn’t
an easy thing to hear for those who value free expression, as well for the
soldiers who are participating. The troops want to enjoy a celebration, not
fight with the neighbors.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário