Los Angeles Times

President f ires Defense secretary

Mark Esper had struggled to keep the president appeased while keeping military out of politics.

- By Molly O’Toole

Mark Esper’s ouster is seen as only the start of a purge of security off icials by Trump.

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Monday became the first high- profile Cabinet member f ired by President Trump in what is expected to be a purge of security officials following the election of former Vice President Joe Biden.

Trump announced Esper’s f iring in a tweet Monday, saying that his third pick for Pentagon leader would be replaced by Christophe­r Miller, director of the National Counterter­rorism Center, “effective immediatel­y.”

“Chris will do a GREAT job!” Trump tweeted. “Mark Esper has been terminated. I would like to thank him for his service.”

Trump and the White House gave no reason for the f iring, but Esper had struggled to navigate between his role leading the military and meeting the president’s demands for political loyalty, so much so that even Trump derided Esper as a yes- man, dubbing him “Yesper.”

But Esper was one of several officials who months ago fell out of favor with the president over disagreeme­nts about the politiciza­tion of national security and intelligen­ce.

In recent months, Esper noticeably distanced himself from Trump, usually an unforgivab­le sin to the president. Esper said publicly he did not support using active- duty troops to confront racial justice demonstrat­ors this summer, as Trump had threatened. Trump reportedly had to be talked out of firing Esper at the time.

Shortly before the election, reports surfaced that Esper was preparing to resign, though his office late last week insisted he had no plans to leave.

In a Military Times interview Nov. 4, Esper sought to throw off the “Yesper” albatross, saying there were others in the administra­tion who were more fawning toward the president.

“My frustratio­n is I sit here and say, ‘ Hmm, 18 Cabinet members. Who’s pushed back more than anybody?’ Name another Cabinet secretary that’s pushed back,” he said. “Have you seen me on a stage saying, ‘ Under the exceptiona­l leadership of blah- blah- blah, we have blah- blah- blah- blah’?”

Trump has yet to concede the presidenti­al election publicly as he and his supporters continue to trumpet unsubstant­iated claims of widespread fraud and file additional lawsuits.

Miller formerly served at the Pentagon as deputy assistant secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Combating Terrorism and now returns to lead it, though it’s doubtful he could have much impact for the final 70 days or so of Trump’s term.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ( D- San Francisco) said Esper’s “abrupt” f iring serves as “disturbing evidence” that Trump will use his last days in office “to sow chaos in our American democracy and around the world,” calling it “an act of retributio­n.”

“It is disturbing and dangerous that, at this precarious moment, our military will now be led by an official who has not been confirmed for this position by the Senate,” Pelosi said.

Republican lawmakers also praised Esper’s tenure.

“Mark Esper was an outstandin­g secretary of Defense,” Rep. Mike Turner ( R- Ohio), ranking member of the House Armed Services Subcommitt­ee on Strategic Forces, said in a statement Monday. “His leadership had the support of our military and the American people.”

Esper, a West Point graduate who once served in the 101st Airborne Division, took the top job at the Pentagon in July 2019, ending the longest period the Pentagon had gone without a leader confirmed by the Senate. He replaced acting secretary Patrick M. Shanahan, who resigned ahead of his confirmati­on hearing after serving in the position for about six months.

Miller, who also advised Trump’s National Security Council as the senior director for Counterter­rorism and Transnatio­nal Threats, was just sworn in as National Counterter­rorism Center director in August.

When Trump f irst took office, he voiced strong support for the military and prided himself on the number of former military leaders in his administra­tion, calling them “my generals.”

But Trump grew to distrust them over policy clashes, and none lasted to the end of his presidency, including retired four- star Marine Corps Gens. James N. Mattis, his f irst Defense secretary, and John Kelly, his f irst secretary of Homeland Security and later chief of staff.

He also picked retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, who’d been heavily involved in his 2016 campaign, as his national security advisor. Trump fired Flynn just weeks into the job for lying to Vice President Mike Pence about contact with Russian officials.

Esper drew Trump’s ire after implicitly criticizin­g the president’s threat to use active- duty troops this spring to respond to unrest and protests over injustice and police brutality.

Esper’s comments came after he walked with the president across a square in front of the White House to a historic church for photograph­s. Authoritie­s had used tear gas to disperse protesters for the photo op.

Hundreds gathered in the same spot on Saturday to celebrate after Biden and Vice President- elect Kamala Harris were declared the winners of the 2020 election.

Using active- duty troops for domestic law enforcemen­t, Esper said at a June news conference at the Pentagon, should be “a matter of last resort and only in the most urgent and dire of situations.”

In August, Trump was asked at a news conference if he’d weighed firing Esper.

“Mark Yesper? Did you call him Yesper? OK, some people call him Yesper,” Trump said, to laughter. “No, I get along with him fine, he’s fine.” But he added, “I consider firing everybody. At some point, that’s what happens.”

The fate of Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who said the walk with Trump across the square was a mistake, remains unclear. Amid outcry over Trump’s politiciza­tion of the military, Milley sent a message to military commanders reminding them of their oath to the Constituti­on, which he said “gives Americans the right to freedom of speech and peaceful assembly.”

The relationsh­ip between Trump and Esper “certainly seemed to be a tense one,” said David Lapan, a former Pentagon and Homeland Security department official. “And, frankly, the president’s made it pretty clear he’s f ine with changing people out at will.”

Lapan noted how Esper kept a much lower profile than many Trump political appointees, trying to keep the military out of politics but also himself out of the media “as a way to avoid the ire of the president.” The tightrope act was “on the one hand, understand­able because of what we’ve seen,” Lapan said, “but on the other hand, not helpful that a senior leader of the military is effectivel­y silencing himself.”

The damage Trump has done to public perception of the military as an “apolitical institutio­n” will long outlast Mattis or Esper, Lapan said. “It will fall upon the next secretary of Defense to start to repair that damage.”

 ?? MARK ESPER Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? was one of several national security off icials who fell out of favor with the president.
MARK ESPER Alex Brandon Associated Press was one of several national security off icials who fell out of favor with the president.

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