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On Monday, Senator Tom Cotton wrote to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, criticizing actions within the Department of Defense that have been reported in the press. I haven’t seen the letter in downloadable form, but I believe this is the complete text:
Secretary Austin,
I write to express my concern that Pentagon officials are seeking to undermine President Trump’s incoming administration. It appears that partisans and obstructionists inside the Department of Defense are laying groundwork to defy or circumvent President Trump’s plans for both military and civil-service reform. These actions undermine civilian control of the military and our constitutional structure of government.
For example, media reports indicate that Pentagon officials have held meetings to strategize against President Trump’s defense agenda, while also promulgating false claims that the incoming administration plans to arbitrarily fire uniformed leaders. You also issued a message to the department the day after the election commenting that the military will follow “lawful orders” from the new president—a thinly veiled and baseless insinuation that President Trump will issue unlawful orders.
That is really beneath contempt.
Similarly, the department has also attempted to preemptively obstruct President Trump’s plans for (badly needed) defense civil-service reform. Earlier this year, you released a memo on the “Integrity and Continuity of the Defense Career Civilian Workforce” to impede efforts to remove underperforming personnel and eliminate unnecessary positions. Comptroller Michael McCord also lectured the incoming administration about avoiding the “self-inflicted wound” of civil-service reform.
I have to observe that these actions and reports only prove the need for reform and fundamental change at the Department of Defense. And, of course, while inappropriate and annoying, these tactics are also useless because no action be the outgoing administration can limit the incoming president’s constitutional authority as commander-in-chief.
Please, therefore, knock off this nonsense and get on with the business of handing over the reins to the next administration.
Sincerely,
Tom Cotton
United States Senator
Efforts by military personnel to frustrate the president’s defense policies certainly threaten to undermine the principle of civilian control over the military. But one could go further: don’t such actions smack of insurrection?
But I can’t pretend to be surprised. Democrats don’t really believe in democracy. They think they own the federal government, and they do not accept the idea that just because the voters have elected a Republican president, that president’s policies should be implemented.