The Guardian (USA)

Mark Milley: retiring general appears to call Trump ‘wannabe dictator’

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Retiring as chair of the US joint chiefs of staff, the army general Mark Milley directed a parting shot at Donald Trump, the president he served but whom he seemed to call a “wannabe dictator”.

Speaking at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Virginia, Milley said of the US armed forces: “We don’t take an oath to a country. We don’t take an oath to a tribe. We don’t take an oath to a religion.

“We don’t take an oath to a king, or queen, or tyrant or a dictator, and we don’t take an oath to a wannabe dictator.

“We don’t take an oath to an individual. We take an oath to the constituti­on, and we take an oath to the idea that is America, and we’re willing to die to protect it.”

Trump, who nominated Milley in 2019, did not immediatel­y comment. But Milley’s struggles to contain Trump, particular­ly in 2020, the tumultuous final year of his presidency, have been long and widely reported.

Such struggles concerned foreign policy, as Milley and other officials sought to stop the erratic president provoking confrontat­ions with foes including China and Iran.

But Milley and others also had to keep the US military out of domestic affairs, as Trump chafed against nationwide protests for racial justice, openly yearning to invoke the Insurrecti­on Act of 1807 and thereby call in the army.

Last week saw publicatio­n of an indepth profile by the Atlantic, in which

Milley again expressed his regret over an infamous appearance with Trump in June 2020, when the president marched from the White House to a historic church, slightly damaged amid the protests, in an attempt to project a strongman image.

The Atlantic profile prompted Trump to rail at Milley again, calling a widely reported conversati­on in which the general sought to reassure his Chinese counterpar­t that Trump would not order an attack “an act so egregious that, in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH!”

Milley has said he has taken “adequate safety precaution­s” against potential threats from Trump supporters perhaps also encouraged by the words of Paul Gosar, an Arizona Republican congressma­n who told supporters Milley should be hanged.

The general also previewed his remarks in Arlington in an interview with CBS News.

“As much as these comments are directed at me, it’s also directed at the institutio­n of the military,” he said. “And there is 2.1 million of us in uniform. And the American people can take it to the bank, that all of us, every single one of us, from private to general, are loyal to that constituti­on and will never turn our back on it no matter what. No matter what the threats, no matter what the humiliatio­n, no matter what.

“If we’re willing to die for that document, if we’re willing to deploy to combat, if we’re willing to lose an arm, a leg, an eye, to protect and support and defend that document and protect the American people, then we are willing to live for it too.”

On Thursday, at a fundraisin­g event in Arizona, Joe Biden also decried Trump’s threat.

“Did you see recently where he called for the assassinat­ion – or the death penalty for Gen Milley, one of the leading military minds we have had in the last 20 years in America, because Trump disagreed when he gave him an honest answer?

“Think about that,” the president said. “Think about that.”

Milley’s time at the head of the US armed forces saw other challenges, particular­ly in the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanista­n in summer 2021, after 20 years of war, and in the supervisio­n of US support for Ukraine in its war with Russia.

In Arlington on Friday, Milley spoke after Biden and Charles Q Brown, an air force general and the new chair of the joint chiefs of staff.

Praising Milley, Biden said the general’s “north star” was the constituti­on and “the idea of America”.

The president also hit out at Tommy Tuberville, though without naming the Alabama Republican senator whose hold on senior military promotions, in protest of Pentagon policy on abortion, has infuriated military leaders and veterans’ groups.

“A single senator” and other Republican­s who have not stopped him were responsibl­e for a “totally unacceptab­le” situation in which “more than 300 military officers and reservists are held in limbo”, Biden said, adding: “It’s an insult.”

Biden also criticized House Republican­s set to shut down the federal government this weekend, saying: “You can’t be playing politics while our troops stand in the breach.”

 ?? Virginia. Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images ?? Mark Milley inspects troops during an armed forces farewell tribute in his honor at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington,
Virginia. Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images Mark Milley inspects troops during an armed forces farewell tribute in his honor at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington,

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