The Atlantic
Daily
The
Commander in Chief Is Not Okay
Trump put on
a disturbing show for America’s generals and admirals.
By Tom
Nichols
Donald
Trump speaks to military leaders at Quantico
Andrew
Harnik / Pool / Reuters
September
30, 2025
https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2025/09/trump-hegseth-speech-incoherent/684421/
Secretary
of Defense Pete Hegseth’s convocation of hundreds of generals and admirals
today turned out to be, in the main, a nothingburger. Hegseth strutted and
paced and lectured and hectored, warning the officers that he was tired of
seeing fat people in the halls of the Pentagon and promising to take the men
who have medical or religious exemptions from shaving—read: mostly Black
men—and kick them out of the military. He assured them that the “woke”
Department of Defense was now a robust and manly Department of War, and that
they would no longer have to worry about people “smearing” them as “toxic”
leaders. (Hegseth went on a tirade about the word toxic itself, noting that if
a commitment to high standards made him “toxic,” then “so be it.”)
All in
all, an utterly embarrassing address. But that wasn’t the worst of it. The
assembled military leaders likely already knew that Hegseth is unqualified for
his job, and they could mostly tune out the sloganeering that Hegseth, a former
TV host, was probably aiming more at Fox News and the White House than at the
military itself. What they could not ignore, however, was the spectacle that
President Donald Trump put on when he spoke after Hegseth.
The
president talked at length, and his comments should have confirmed to even the
most sympathetic observer that he is, as the kids say, not okay. Several of
Hegseth’s people said in advance of the senior-officer conclave that its goal
was to energize America’s top military leaders and get them to focus on
Hegseth’s vision for a new Department of War. But the generals and admirals
should be forgiven if they walked out of the auditorium and wondered: What on
earth is wrong with the commander in chief?
Trump
seemed quieter and more confused than usual; he is not accustomed to audiences
who do not clap and react to obvious applause lines. “I’ve never walked into a
room so silent before,” he said at the outset. (Hegseth had the same awkward
problem earlier, waiting for laughs and applause that never came.) The
president announced his participation only days ago, and he certainly seemed
unprepared.
Trump
started rambling right out of the gate. But first, the president channeled his
inner Jeb Bush, asking the officers to clap—but, you know, only if they felt
like it.
Just have
a good time. And if you want to applaud, you applaud. And if you want to do
anything you want, you can do anything you want. And if you don’t like what I’m
saying, you can leave the room. Of course, there goes your rank; there goes
your future.
Laughs
rippled through the room.
Trump
then wandered around, lost in the halls of history. He talked about how the
Department of War was renamed in the 1950s. (It was in the late 1940s.) At one
point, he mentioned that the Atomic Energy Commission had confirmed that his
strike on Iran had destroyed Tehran’s nuclear program. (Iran still has a
nuclear program, and the AEC hasn’t existed since the mid-’70s.) He whined
about the “Gulf of America” and how he beat the Associated Press in court on
the issue. (The case is still ongoing.) The Israeli-Palestinian conflict? “I
said”—he did not identify to whom—“‘How long have you been fighting?’ ‘Three
thousand years, sir.’ That’s a long time. But we got it, I think, settled.”
He added
later: “War is very strange.” Indeed.
And so it
went, as Trump recycled old rally speeches, full of his usual grievances, lies,
and misrepresentations; his obsessions with former Presidents Joe Biden and
Barack Obama; and his sour disappointment in the Nobel Prize committee.
(“They’ll give it to some guy that didn’t do a damn thing,” he said.) He
congratulated himself on tariffs, noting that the money could buy a lot of
battleships, “to use an old term.” And come to think of it, he said, maybe
America should build battleships again, from steel, not that papier-mâché and
aluminum stuff the Navy is apparently using now: “Aluminum that melts if it
looks at a missile coming at it. It starts melting as the missile is about two
miles away.”
Ohhhkayyyy.
Even if
these officers had never attended a MAGA event or even seen one, they were now
in the middle of a typical, unhinged Trump diatribe. The president had a speech
waiting for him on the teleprompter, and now and then Trump would hunch his
shoulders and apparently pick off a stray word or phrase from it, like a
distracted hunter firing random buckshot from a duck blind. But Trump has
always had difficulty wrestling Stephen Miller’s labored neoclassical
references and clunky, faux Churchillisms off a screen and into his mouth.
Mostly, the president decided to just riff on his greatest hits to the
stone-faced assembly.
As
comical as many of Trump’s comments were, the president’s nakedly partisan
appeal to U.S. military officers was a violation of every standard of American
civil-military relations, and exactly what George Washington feared could
happen with an unscrupulous commander in chief. The most ominous part of his
speech came when he told the military officers that they would be part of the
solution to domestic threats, fighting the “enemy from within.” He added,
almost as a kind of trollish afterthought, that he’d told Hegseth, “We should
use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our
military—National Guard, but military—because we’re going into Chicago very
soon. That’s a big city with an incompetent governor. Stupid governor.”
This
farrago of fantasy, menace, and autocratic peacocking is the kind of thing that
the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan evocatively called “boob bait for the
Bubbas” and that George Orwell might have called “prolefeed.” It’s one thing to
serve it up to an adoring MAGA crowd: They know that most of it is nonsense and
only some of it is real. They find it entertaining, and they can take or leave
as much of Trump’s rhetorical junk-food buffet as they would like. It is
another thing entirely to aim this kind of sludge at military officers, who are
trained and acculturated to treat every word from the president with respect,
and to regard his thoughts as policy.
But
American officers have never had to contend with a president like Trump. Plenty
of presidents behaved badly and suffered mental and emotional setbacks: John F.
Kennedy cavorted with secretaries in the White House pool, Lyndon Johnson
unleashed foul-mouthed tirades on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Richard Nixon fell
into depression and paranoia, Ronald Reagan and Joe Biden wrestled with the
indignities of age. But the officer corps knew that presidents were basically
normal men surrounded by other normal men and women, and that the American
constitutional system would insulate the military from any mad orders that
might emerge from the Oval Office.
Likewise,
in Trump’s first term, the president was surrounded by people who ensured that
some of his nuttiest—and most dangerous—ideas were derailed before they could
reach the military. Today, senior U.S. officers have to wonder who will shield
them from the impulses of the person they just saw onstage. What are officers
to make of Trump’s accusation that other nations, only a year ago, supposedly
called America “a dead country”? (After all, these men and women were leading
troops last year.) How are they supposed to react when Trump slips the surly
bonds of truth, insults their former commanders in chief, and talks about his
close relationship with the Kremlin?
In 1973,
an Air Force nuclear-missile officer named Harold Hering asked a simple
question during a training session: “How can I know that an order I receive to
launch my missiles came from a sane president?” The question cost him his
career. Military members are trained to execute orders, not question them. But
today, both the man who can order the use of nuclear arms and the man who would
likely verify such an order gave disgraceful and unnerving performances in
Quantico. How many officers left the room asking themselves Major Hering’s
question?
Tom
Nichols is a staff writer at The Atlantic and a contributor to the Atlantic
Daily newsletter.
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