USA TODAY International Edition

Army general picked as national security adviser

McMaster described as one of the Army’s leading intellectu­als

- David Jackson and Tom Vanden Brook

President Trump on Monday named Army Lt. Gen. H. R. McMaster, who headed up a unit focused on future military challenges, as his new national security adviser. He replaces retired general Michael Flynn, who was forced to resign for misleading Vice President Pence.

“You’re going to do a great job,” Trump told McMaster as he made the announceme­nt at his Mar- a- Lago estate in Florida.

Trump also announced that retired Army three- star general Keith Kellogg — who had been the acting national security in the week since Flynn was fired — would be McMaster's chief of staff.

Kellogg thanked Trump and said it would be an honor and privilege to serve with McMaster.

McMaster, described by Trump as “a man of tremendous talent and tremendous experience,” is the director of the Army Capabiliti­es Integratio­n Center, an internal think tank that looks at future threats and how to deal with them.

Thanking Trump for the appointmen­t that does not require Senate confirmati­on, McMaster told reporters that “I would just like to say what a privilege it is to be able to continue serving our nation. I’m grateful to you for that opportunit­y, and I look forward to joining the national security team and doing everything that I can to advance and protect the interests of the American people.”

McMaster, viewed as one of the Army’s leading intellects, is a protege of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and a noted author.

His 1997 book on the Vietnam War — Derelictio­n of Duty: Johnson, McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Lies That Led to Vietnam — has been required reading for many national security officials.

McMaster has been calling for a larger and better- equipped Army to face growing threats to national security. The Army, until plans were announced recently to grow the ranks, has been shedding soldiers.

The new national security adviser warned the Senate that the Army had shrunk its ranks too far and lacked the weaponry it needed to keep pace with U. S. enemies. It been “outranged and outgunned by many potential adversarie­s,” he told a panel of the Armed Services Committee in April.

Advanced weapons mean the Army’s main armored vehicles, the Bradley Fighting Vehicle and Abrams tank, “will soon be obsolete,” he said. The Army has no plans to replace either vehicle.

In announcing the McMaster appointmen­t, Trump also suggested that another finalist for the national security adviser’s job, former U. N. ambassador John Bolton, would eventually be hired for a different position.

“We’ll be asking him to work with us in a somewhat different capacity,” Trump said of Bolton. “Knows a lot. He had a good number of ideas that I must tell you I agree very much with.”

The moves come a week after Trump asked for Flynn’s resignatio­n for lying about the substance of a conversati­on he had with the Russian ambassador to the United States.

McMaster takes over a National Security Council that still has many unfilled jobs and a reputation for chaotic management.

White House spokespers­on Sarah Sanders said that, in naming his new national security adviser, Trump “gave full authority for McMaster to hire whatever staff he sees fit.”

After a weekend of job interviews, Trump said of McMaster: “He is highly respected by everyone in the military and we’re very honored to have him.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH, AP ??
SUSAN WALSH, AP

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