The Manila Times

US Defense chief bucks military use vs protesters

- XINHUA

WASHINGTON, D. C.: US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said Wednesday ( Thursday in Manila) that he opposed the use of active-duty military forces to quell protesters across the country demonstrat­ing against police brutality and racial injustice.

“I say this not only as Secretary of Defense, but also as a former soldier, and a former member of the National Guard: The option to use active-duty forces in a law enforcemen­t role should only be used as a matter of last resort, and only in the most urgent and dire of situations.

We are not in one of those situations now,” the Pentagon chief said at a press conference.

Esper’s statement put him at odds with US President Donald Trump, who on Monday said he might invoke the Insurrecti­on Act of 1807 to crack down on the nationwide unrest over the killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man in Minneapoli­s who was suffocated to death on May 25 as a white police officer kept kneeling on his neck for almost nine minutes.

“I do not support invoking the Insurrecti­on Act,” Esper said. The 213-year-old law authorizes the president to unilateral­ly deploy military forces on domestic soil for law enforcemen­t purposes.

Trump claimed in a speech Monday at the White House Rose Garden that he would send in “thousands and thousands of heavily armed soldiers, military personnel and law enforcemen­t officers” to restore order should state and local

officials fail to do so.

After finishing the speech, Trump walked to the historic St. John’s Episcopal Church where he held a Bible in his hand and later posed for a photo op flanked by senior administra­tion officials, including Esper.

Police reportedly used tear gas, flash grenades and rubber bullets against largely peaceful protesters to clear the way for the president and his entourage.

Criticized for participat­ing in the controvers­ial event, Esper said

Wednesday that he was not aware of the plan to take the group picture at the church, nor did he know protesters were being dispersed when the group made their way.

“I did know that we were going to church, I was not aware that a photo op was happening.”

James Miller, a member of the Pentagon’s Defense Science Board, resigned in response to the incident.

“You may not have been able to stop President Trump from directing this appalling use of force, but

you could have chosen to oppose it. Instead, you visibly supported it,” he told Esper in his resignatio­n letter dated Tuesday.

As violent confrontat­ions between protesters and police seemed to subside in Washington, D.C., active-duty troops deployed to the nation’s capital have started returning to their home bases Wednesday, US media reported.

Esper said at the news briefing that his goal was “to keep the department out of politics and stay apolitical.”

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