Kuwait Times

Trump interventi­ons undercut Pentagon leadership

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President Donald Trump’s interventi­ons in US military policy, from reversing a Navy SEAL’s demotion to withdrawal from Syria to a transgende­r ban, increasing­ly undermine Pentagon leadership, defense experts said Monday. The firing on Sunday of Navy Secretary Richard Spencer, who challenged Trump’s interventi­on in the SEAL commando’s case, was the latest sign of the US military’s struggle with Trump’s off-thecuff, highly political micromanag­ement.

Critics called it a sign of “disarray” that could send dangerous signals to troops on the ground and to US allies overseas that the Pentagon command structure can be overruled at any time by Trump, who wields authority as the US commander-in-chief. “The senior military leadership is in a really difficult position,” said Mara Karlin, Director of Strategic Studies at the School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies at Johns Hopkins University. “In terms of civil-military relations, what has been happening with the president is not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue, it’s a dysfunctio­nality issue.”

Political motivation

Last week Trump defied the Pentagon leadership by rejecting their plans to demote and force Navy commando Edward Gallagher out of the elite SEALs after his conviction for having posed for a picture next to the body of a dead Islamic State fighter. Trump was drawn to supporting Gallagher after Fox News made his case a conservati­ve political cause early this year. Navy officials feared that letting off Gallagher, who avoided conviction on murdering a prisoner in Iraq, would signal to other SEALs that they can get away with crimes.

“This was an outrageous, irresponsi­ble interferen­ce by President Trump in the military justice system,” Democratic Senator Jack Reed said Monday. “It signals to people that they can operate outside the rule of law and the Geneva Convention.” But it was only the latest interventi­on by Trump in military affairs. Earlier this year, while the Pentagon was assessing bids for a $10 billion cloud computing contract, Trump weighed in against Amazon, which owns the Washington Post, a frequent critic of his administra­tion.

A new book on former Defense Secretary James Mattis, written by his speechwrit­er Guy Snodgrass, contends that Trump told Mattis to “screw Amazon” out of the contract, which was awarded in October to Microsoft.

Border wall, transgende­r policy

Trump has interfered in numerous other ways: he forced the Pentagon to reallocate funds from base constructi­on projects to his US-Mexico border wall and send troops to police the frontier. He has attacked key alliances, including NATO, and arms control treaties, and, against Pentagon advice, he avidly pursued a detente with North Korea while criticizin­g ally South Korea. Last year he reversed, via Twitter, a Pentagon policy accommodat­ing transgende­r soldiers.

He also pressured the Defense Department to hold a massive parade of military hardware; and in December unilateral­ly announced the withdrawal for US troops from Syria and Afghanista­n, a move that led to Mattis’s resignatio­n. Many, if not most of those moves, analysts say, were driven by domestic political considerat­ions rather than strategic rationale, and all were opposed by the Pentagon leadership. “It’s important that we don’t see these as discreet. There is one example after another,” said Karlin. ‘Mercurial’ Trump Peter Feaver, a specialist in civil-military relations at Duke University, says disagreeme­nts and tensions between the White House and the Department of Defense are normal. But with Trump it is extreme, he said, with the president dismissing his military advisors “out of hand”. It’s a big problem when “the boss is viewed as mercurial and hard to brief,” Feaver said. “Most administra­tions would try to hide this stuff... Instead, this president does things in public.”

The cost to both sides is a loss of trust, effectiven­ess and the ability to retain top talent. It also leads US partners and adversarie­s to questions decision-making in the Pentagon. “Allies need to trust that they can cut a deal with whoever they are dealing with on Trump’s team, and that that will stand for what the president will finally do,” Feaver said. “That’s just harder to do in this administra­tion, because the president keeps overruling his own team.”

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