Rome News-Tribune

♦ Pentagon-trump clash breaks open over military and protests

- By Zeke Miller and Robert Burns

President Donald Trump’s Pentagon chief shot down his idea of using troops to quell protests across the United States Wednesday, then reversed course on pulling part of the 82nd Airborne Division off standby in an extraordin­ary clash between the U.S. military and its commander in chief.

Both Trump and Defense Secretary Mark Esper also drew stinging, rare public criticism from Trump’s first defense secretary, Jim Mattis, in the most public pushback of Trump’s presidency from the men he put at the helm of the world’s most powerful military.

Mattis’ rebuke followed Trump’s threats to use the military to “dominate” the streets where Americans are demonstrat­ing following the death of George Floyd, a black man who died when a white police officer pressed his knee into his neck for several minutes. The president had urged governors to call out the National Guard to contain protests that turned violent and warned that he could send in active duty military forces if they did not.

Esper angered Trump early Wednesday when he said he opposed using military troops for law enforcemen­t, seemingly taking the teeth

WASHINGTON —

Part of a large group of protesters gather around the statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue near downtown in Richmond, Va. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam is expected to announce plans Thursday for the removal of an iconic statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee from Richmond’s prominent Monument Avenue. out of the president’s threat to use the Insurrecti­on Act. Esper said the 1807 law should be invoked in the United States “only in the most urgent and dire of situations.” He added, “We are not in one of those situations now.”

After his subsequent visit to the White House, the Pentagon abruptly overturned an earlier decision to send a couple hundred active-duty soldiers home from the Washington, D.C., region, a public sign of the growing tensions with the White House amid mounting criticism that the Pentagon was being politicize­d in response to the protests.

Former Secretary Mattis, a retired Marine general, lambasted both Trump and Esper in an essay in The Atlantic Wednesday for their considerat­ion of using the active-duty military in law enforcemen­t — and for the use of the National Guard in clearing out a largely peaceful protest near the White House on Monday evening.

“We must reject any thinking of our cities as a ‘battlespac­e’ that our uniformed military is called upon to ‘dominate,’” Mattis wrote, referencin­g quotes by Esper and Trump respective­ly. “Militarizi­ng our response, as we witnessed in Washington, D.C., sets up a conflict — a false conflict — between the military and civilian society. ”

 ?? Ap-steve Helber, File ??
Ap-steve Helber, File

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