Boston Herald

Generals are taking their war with President Trump public

- Peter LUCAS

President Trump, in his war with the generals, should channel feisty Harry S. Truman.

It was President Truman who famously fired highly decorated World War II Gen. Douglas MacArthur during the Korean War. Truman took a lot of heat for it, but he stuck to his guns.

He was, after all, the commander in chief and he believed that MacArthur wanted to start a war with China. So, he fired him.

He later said, “I fired him because he would not respect the authority of the president. I didn’t fire him because he was a dumb son of a (expletive), although he was, but that’s not against the law for generals. If it were half to three-quarters of them would be in jail.”

Trump did not say that about retired Marine Corps Gens. James Mattis or John Kelly, both of whom once worked for him, but now have turned against him. Nor did he say that about former Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who also turned against him, even though he was fired by President Obama, not Trump.

Mattis was Trump’s first secretary of defense and Kelly was Trump’s chief of staff. McCrystal early on said he would never work for Trump because “I don’t think he tells the truth.”

Showing the presidenti­al restraint that he is noted for,

Trump merely said that McChrystal, who supported Hillary Clinton, was “fired like a dog by Obama” and was known for his “big, dumb mouth.”

McCrystal, then the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanista­n, was dumped by Obama for making disparagin­g remarks about him and then Vice President Joe Biden at a bar in Paris that turned into a Rolling Stone article. McChrystal later admitted to “poor judgement.”

Trump has not fired or said anything negative against Army Gen. Mark Milley after the current head of the joint chiefs of staff also turned on him.

Milley did this when he apologized for accompanyi­ng Trump, the commander in chief, on Trumps’ staged walk to historic St. John’s Episcopal Church by Lafayette Square. The church had been torched by rioters during a protest over the killing of George Floyd.

Trump is far from the first president to tangle with generals with chests full of shiny badges and medals, and with aides circling them like flies. Generals are used to giving orders, not taking them. So, when they go work for a president, they find that it is the other way around.

Truman’s animosity toward MacArthur did not stop the general from delivering historic farewell remarks to a joint session of Congress in 1951 in which he concluded, “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.”

And MacArthur did quietly fade away, rarely making any public comments. He died in 1964.

That was then. Now nobody fades away, quietly or otherwise, not even the generals. They become consultant­s, media stars, talking heads, cable news personalit­ies and commentato­rs and — once out of uniform — Trump critics.

You must notice, though, how ordinary these generals look dressed in civilian clothes without all the glamour of the uniform, all the medals, the battle ribbons, the saluting and the rank gone. They look like you and me.

In Gen. Milley’s case, his apologetic comments about being with Trump on his visit to the church were not made to the president in private, but to the public at large, and he made them while still in uniform. It was a slap in the face. One wonders what Milley would do if a subordinat­e did that to him.

While a distinguis­hed military officer with years of service, Milley has gone political, like the rest of them, sucking up to the progressiv­es. Better they all should fade away like MacArthur, dignity intact.

It is interestin­g to note how progressiv­es in the past savaged generals they hated, like Gen William Westmorela­nd, a patriot, over the Vietnam War.

Now they swoon over these generals, in and out of uniform, because they turned on a president they also hate.

Is there a course about this at West Point?

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