Sentinel & Enterprise

Don’t worry, General Mark Milley, President Trump wasn’t losing it

- By Timothy L. O'Brien Timothy L. O’Brien is a senior columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was so consumed with fear that former President Donald Trump might launch “rogue” convention­al or nuclear strikes against China, he acted twice to prevent it, according to excerpts from a new book.

Just days before last November’s presidenti­al election, and then two days after the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, Milley called his “rattled” military counterpar­t in China to reassure him that the U. S. wouldn’t attack, Bob Woodward and Robert Costa report in “Peril.” On one occasion, Milley convened his own military team to discuss proper nuclear launch procedures and, on another, reassured House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi phoned Milley shortly after Jan. 6 to inquire about what “precaution­s are available to prevent an unstable president from initiating military hostilitie­s,” according to a transcript of the call.

There were “a lot of checks in the system,” Milley told her.

“He’s crazy. You know he’s crazy,” Pelosi said. “He’s crazy and what he did yesterday is further evidence of his craziness.”

“I agree with you on everything,” Milley replied.

Milley also came to suspect that Trump had “suffered a mental decline after the election,” according to the Washington Post’s excerpt.

But here’s the thing: Trump was the same guy before and after the 2020 presidenti­al election and on Jan. 6 that he was when he was elected in 2016. He’s the same guy he was decades before that, too. Love him or hate him, Trump is consistent and has stayed true to form for most of his 75 years. It’s that authentici­ty that endears him to his supporters.

Did Trump suddenly go into a psychologi­cal slide in 2020 that made him more dangerous than before? No. It was obvious to anyone watching closely that he would rather burn down the house after the 2020 presidenti­al election than acknowledg­e defeat. He warned of electoral fraud before the 2016 election, too, and he continues peddling the same myth today. It’s utterly predictabl­e, because he doesn’t change.

Milley certainly had other reasons apart from Trump’s mental state to be worried. The excerpts note that intelligen­ce reports indicated Chinese leaders were wary of a random strike, and Milley worried that their fears might prompt them to lash out. The general also was an unhappy cast member in Trump’s infamous stroll through Lafayette Square during protests in Washington in June 2020.

The misery of the Trump years is that what was once cinematic became real.

I’m glad Milley took the steps he did, and I honor his military service. But that he had to maneuver around

Trump demonstrat­es how broken things are. Milley, a dedicated public servant, was well aware how his actions would appear.

Milley knew he was “pulling a Schlesinge­r,” Woodward and Costa write, referring to former Defense Secretary James Schlesinge­r’s efforts to check former President Richard Nixon’s military authority when Nixon was in danger of being impeached.

But the general weighed the fact that critics would “contend that Milley had oversteppe­d his authority and taken extraordin­ary power for himself” against his belief that his actions were “a good faith precaution to ensure there was no historic rupture in the internatio­nal order, no accidental war with China or others, and no use of nuclear weapons.” Milley, a man of enormous courage and character, chose the latter course.

Milley also understand­s where all this might be headed. He compared the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on to the failed 1905 uprising in Russia. While the 1905 rebellion sputtered out and was repressed, it paved the way for the more seismic and indelible Russian Revolution of 1917. Milley told senior staff that

Jan. 6 might have been “a precursor to something far worse down the road.”

His choices and prediction­s should scare all of us.

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