Albuquerque Journal

Trump’s three generals steadying the ship of state

- Columnist

Near-daily gossip surrounds Donald Trump’s three marquee generals. The media sometimes blare out rumors that Gen. John Kelly, the White House chief of staff, is proving to be a loose cannon and might soon be fired.

Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, Trump’s national security adviser, is said to be a robotic PowerPoint wonk and hawkish interventi­onist. There have been recent reports that he might be terminated soon.

Secretary of Defense Gen. James Mattis is purportedl­y too much the centrist Democrat, and embarrasse­d by Trump’s antics, and thus might be leaving.

Of course, few Cabinet or White House appointees ever serve throughout an entire administra­tion. Burnout is natural. Lucrative private-sector job offers multiply monthly. Normal people do not enjoy living inside the Beltway. Barack Obama had four defense secretarie­s, three national security advisers and five chiefs of staff. That is about par for a presidenti­al tenure covering eight years.

But the problem with all these rumors of departing generals is not just that they are likely false and shopworn. They also make no sense because the three generals have been radically successful. In just a year, they have markedly enhanced U.S. national security as well as the image of the Trump administra­tion itself.

The media, which is mostly anti-Trump, has always been schizophre­nic in the coverage of the three generals. Some media outlets initially echoed old worries about too many Pentagon tentacles or the militariza­tion of the executive branch. They forgot that generals have long held administra­tion jobs. Gen. Colin Powell, for instance, served four different presidents, starting with his tenure as national security adviser under Ronald Reagan.

Others in the media had hoped that the mostly apolitical generals would nudge the wild-card Trump left of center and embed him within the Washington foreign-policy establishm­ent.

But now, most journalist­s seem baffled that the generals are either proving too conservati­ve or not standing up to Trump enough — as if playing the role of the loud maverick to a president had been in the job descriptio­n of any Cabinet secretary or White House official of the past.

By late 2016, strategic deterrence had mostly been lost due to the prior administra­tion’s failed Russian reset; unchecked Chinese ascendance; a comatose approach to North Korean nuclear enhancemen­ts; the Iran deal; empty red lines, step-over lines and deadlines; the Syrian and Libyan misadventu­res; the collapse of Iraq and rise of ISIS; and the alienation of Israel and the Gulf states.

In reaction to these growing threats, our friends have been reassured, enemies have been warned, and stability is returning. ISIS is on the run. North Korea is forcefully embargoed. Defense spending is up. Missile defense is recalibrat­ed. And reset fantasies are over with Vladimir Putin.

Trump’s improving poll numbers reflect the order that Kelly establishe­d out of chaos in the West Wing. In delusional fashion, the media had hoped that a four-star Marine general might be a liberal wolf in conservati­ve sheep’s clothing — so it’s easy to understand why the number of Kelly’s media critics has grown. Kelly is a no-nonsense traditiona­list and serves Trump not just by improving the mechanics of day-to-day operations in the White House, but also by helping Trump with the shared goal of restoring U.S. economic and military dynamism.

Mattis and McMaster are said to play good cops abroad to Trump’s bad cop. By warning that the alternativ­e to negotiatio­ns is a raging Trump who might do anything, the two generals are purportedl­y leveraging everything from delinquent NATO members’ defense contributi­ons to European help in isolating Iran and North Korea.

The problem with that scenario is not that it is absolutely false, but that the stereotype is exaggerate­d and simplistic. After all, it is difficult to see where Mattis and McMaster have disagreed with Trump — or, for that matter, with the American people — on existentia­l issues.

Who wishes to return to Obama’s principles of “strategic patience” and “lead from behind”? Do critics want more of the massive Defense Department cuts that had been the most severe since the end of the Korean War? Should there be more apology tours, or further outreach to Cuba?

The real challenge for the generals has been how to warn enemies and reassure friends that past global provocatio­ns against U.S. interests will now be deterred — but without a major war.

So far, Kelly, Mattis and McMaster — along with Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson — have avoided both nationbuil­ding interventi­onism and lead-from-behind abdication of postwar responsibi­lities.

When they go abroad, their wide portfolios and latitude are signaling that they are in charge not despite but rather because of Trump.

To reverse the purported quip of Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord: To fire any one of these three generals at this point would be worse than a mistake, it would be a crime.

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 ??  ?? VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON

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