Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP AND HIS GENERALS

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Donald Trump earned respect from the Washington establishm­ent for appointing three of the nation’s most accomplish­ed generals to direct his national security policy: James Mattis (secretary of defense), H.R. McMaster (national security adviser) and John Kelly (secretary of homeland security).

In the first five months of the Trump administra­tion, the three generals — along with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, the former Exxon Mobil CEO — have already recalibrat­ed America’s defenses.

At home, illegal immigratio­n is down by some 70 percent. Abroad, a new policy of principled realism seeks to re-establish deterrence through credible threats of retaliatio­n. The generals are repairing old friendship­s with allies and neutrals while warning traditiona­l enemies not to press their luck.

Trump has turned over most of the details of military operations to his generals. According to his critics, Trump is improperly outsourcin­g to his generals both strategic decision-making and its tactical implementa­tion.

But is Trump really doing that?

In his campaign, Trump vowed to avoid new ground wars while not losing those he inherited. He pledged to wipe out ISIS and radical Islamic terrorism without invading Middle Eastern countries to turn them into democracie­s.

Those are wide but nonetheles­s unmistakab­le parameters.

Within them, the U.S. military can drop a huge bomb on the Taliban, strike the chemical weapons depots of Syria’s Bashar Assad, or choose the sort of ships it will use to deter North Korean aggression — without Trump poring over a map, or hectoring Mattis or McMaster about what particular move is politicall­y appropriat­e or might poll well.

Other critics complain that decorated heroes such as Mattis, McMaster and Kelly should not stoop to work for a firebrand like Trump.

The very opposite is true. Anti-New Dealers such as Republican­s Henry Stimson and Frank Knox served in the Roosevelt administra­tion to ensure national unity and expertise during World War II — in much the same manner that old George W. Bush hand Robert Gates stayed on as secretary of defense to advise foreign policy novice Barack Obama.

Trump entered office with no formal political or military experience. That does not mean his business skills and innate cunning are not critical in setting national security policy — only that he benefits from the wise counsel of veterans.

The patriotic duty for men the caliber of these three generals was to step forward and serve their commander in chief — and thereby ensure that the country would have proven profession­als carrying out the president’s recalibrat­ions.

Of course, there must be tensions between the Trump administra­tion, its Democratic opponents and the largely apolitical Mattis, McMaster and Kelly, who have enjoyed high commands under both Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

Liberals want the generals to leak to the press and hint that Trump is a dunce whose blunders force wise men like themselves to clean up the mess.

Republican­s prefer the three to get on board the Trump team and appoint only conservati­ves who will resonate administra­tion values.

In truth, Trump and his generals share a quid pro quo relationsh­ip that so far has worked.

Mattis, McMaster and Kelly must know that few other presidents would have taken the heat to entrust three military men to guide national security policy. And even if another president did, he might not empower them with anything like their present latitude.

In that regard, the three generals are beholden to Trump for a historic opportunit­y to shape America’s security posture in ways impossible during the last half-century.

On the other hand, Trump must recognize that such generals lend credibilit­y to his role as commander in chief and signal that he is wise enough to value merit over politics.

At least for now, it is a winwin-win solution for Trump, the generals — and the country.

Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University and the author, most recently, of “The Father of Us All: War and History, Ancient and Modern.”

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Victor Davis Hanson

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