The Columbus Dispatch

Trump shakes up Pentagon leadership

- Tom Vanden Brook and David Jackson

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump has made wholesale changes in the Pentagon’s top civilian leadership, a purge that began with the firing of Defense Secretary Mark Esper and continued Tuesday through the senior ranks.

Three top senior officials resigned Tuesday, including the undersecre­taries for policy and intelligen­ce. Esper’s chief of staff also resigned. The moves sparked concern on Capitol Hill that perceived instabilit­y at the Pentagon could embolden U.S. adversarie­s during the presidenti­al transition.

James Anderson, the acting undersecre­tary for policy, the Pentagon’s No. 3 spot, resigned Tuesday and was replaced by Anthony Tata, a retired Army general who once called former President Barack Obama a “terrorist leader.” Tata had withdrawn his name for that Pentagon post in August before facing a contentiou­s confirmation hearing in the Senate. He was then placed in another job that did not require a hearing.

Rep. Adam Smith, D-wash., the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, called the changes alarming.

“It is hard to overstate just how dangerous high-level turnover at the Department of Defense is during a period of presidenti­al transition,” Smith said in a statement. “The top policy profession­al in the department resigning the day after the Secretary of Defense was fired could mark the beginning of a process of gutting the DOD – something that should alarm all Americans.

“If this is the beginning of a trend – the president either firing or forcing out national security profession­als in order to replace them with people perceived as more loyal to him – then the next 70 days will be precarious at best and downright dangerous at worst.”

Also on Tuesday, the undersecre­tary for defense intelligen­ce, Joseph Kernan, and Esper’s former chief of staff, Jen Stewart, resigned. On Monday, Trump fired Esper on Twitter and replaced him with acting Defense Secretary Christophe­r Miller.

“I want to thank Dr. Anderson, Admiral Kernan and Jen Stewart for their service to the nation and the Department,” Miller said in a statement. “Over their careers each has contribute­d greatly to the national defense and the future of the Department of Defense. We wish them the best in their next endeavors.”

White House officials said Trump wanted his own team at the Pentagon should he prevail with his legal challenges to the balloting. As for policy, officials said he has long wanted to withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanista­n. They noted that generals at the Pentagon would resist such an order.

About 4,000 U.S. troops remain in Afghanista­n. Trump has been pushing for a withdrawal of U.S. forces from that country, negotiatin­g with the Taliban to help end the American involvemen­t there that began in 2001. Pentagon officials insist that the withdrawal should be based on security conditions there.

 ?? ERIC BARADAT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Defense Secretary Mark Esper’s firing was announced Monday via Twitter. He has since been replaced.
ERIC BARADAT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Defense Secretary Mark Esper’s firing was announced Monday via Twitter. He has since been replaced.

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