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Pentagon officials discuss how to respond if Trump issues controversial orders

Báo Tin TứcBáo Tin Tức09/11/2024

Pentagon officials are holding informal discussions about how the Defense Department would respond if incoming President Donald Trump orders the deployment of active-duty troops and lays off large numbers of department employees.
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Mr. Donald Trump speaks to supporters at the Palm Beach Convention Center, Florida, November 6, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/TTXVN
Mr Trump has indicated he would be open to using active duty forces to enforce domestic law in an effort to deport immigrants en masse, saying he wants to use loyalists and “clean up the corruption” in the national security system. During his previous term, Mr Trump had a tense relationship with many of his senior military leaders, including retired General Mark Milley, who took steps to limit the president’s ability to use nuclear weapons when he was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Meanwhile, President-elect Trump has repeatedly described US military generals as “weak” and “ineffective leaders”. Dealing with a “reshaping” of the Pentagon Officials are now working through various scenarios as they prepare for a “reshaping” of the Pentagon from Mr Trump. “We’re all preparing and planning for the worst-case scenario, but the reality is we don’t know how this will play out,” said one defense official. Trump’s election has also raised questions about what would happen at the Pentagon if the president issued an illegal order, especially if his political appointees in the Defense Department did not object. “The military is legally obligated to disobey illegal orders,” said another defense official. “But the question is what happens after that — will we see senior military leaders resign? Or will it be seen as abandoning their people?” It remains unclear who President-elect Trump will choose to lead the Pentagon, although officials believe he and his team will try to avoid the strained relationship he had with the military during the previous administration, according to a former defense official with experience in the first Trump administration. “The relationship between the White House and the Department of Defense has been really bad, and so I know that’s the most important thing when they’re choosing who they put into the Department of Defense this time,” the former official said. Defense officials are also trying to identify civilian employees who could be affected if Trump reinstates Schedule F, an executive order he first issued in 2020. If enacted, the order would reclassify a large number of non-political federal employees across the government to make them more vulnerable to firing. The ability to mobilize troops into the streets In addition, many top defense officials are concerned about how Mr. Trump plans to use American military power domestically. Last month, Mr. Trump said the military should be used to deal with what he called "the enemy from within" and "far-left crazy people."
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US National Guard troops stand guard in Olympia, Washington state. Photo: Getty Images/TTXVN
“I think if necessary, the National Guard would easily handle it, or if absolutely necessary, the military would handle it, because they can’t let that happen,” he added, referring to potential protests on Election Day. Several former senior military officials who served under Trump have warned in recent years about his decisions, including Milley and retired Gen. John Kelly, Trump’s former White House chief of staff. There’s little the Pentagon can do to protect the force from potential abuses of power by a commander in chief. Defense Department lawyers can and do advise military leaders on the legality of orders, but there’s no real legal protection that would prevent Trump from deploying American troops to patrol the country’s streets (in an effort to crack down on illegal immigration). A former senior Defense Department official who served under Trump said he believed it was likely that additional active-duty forces would be assigned to support Customs and Border Protection at the southern border. There are already thousands of active-duty forces at the border, including active-duty, National Guard and Reserve members. The Biden administration sent 1,500 active-duty troops last year and has since sent several hundred more. But the former official said it was also possible that forces could be sent to American cities if asked to support the mass deportation plan that Trump repeatedly mentioned during the campaign.
Trump said domestic law enforcement agencies "don't have the manpower, they don't have the helicopters, the trucks, the expeditionary capability" that the military provides. But he stressed that a decision to put active-duty troops on American streets would be carefully considered. "You can never take that lightly, you can never seriously say it's not a big deal. It is a big deal," the former senior official said. Another military official told CNN they could imagine the new Trump administration ordering a few thousand more troops to support border duties, but warned that it could harm the military's readiness to respond to foreign threats. The president's authority would be particularly broad if Trump invoked the Insurrection Act, which states that in limited circumstances related to protecting constitutional rights, the president can unilaterally deploy the military domestically. Civilians at risk In a video posted last year, Mr. Trump said that if elected, he would "immediately reissue my 2020 Executive Order, restoring the president's authority to remove rogue officials... We will purge all of the corrupt people in our national security and intelligence apparatus, and there are many of them." The Pentagon has been preparing for such a policy change. "My emails have been flooded on this topic," a defense official said of Schedule F. "It's definitely going to be a busy few months." After Mr. Trump first issued Schedule F, at the end of his final term, the Pentagon and other federal agencies were tasked with creating a list of which employees would be moved into that removal category. The department is currently creating a similar list. The Office of Personnel and Management issued a regulation in April aimed at strengthening protections for federal employees. But “there are still ways a new administration could address these protections,” a defense official said.
Thu Hang/Tin Tuc Newspaper (According to CNN)
Source: https://baotintuc.vn/the-gioi/gioi-chuc-lau-nam-goc-ban-cach-ung-pho-neu-ong-trump-ban-hanh-cac-lenh-gay-tranh-cai-20241109161919729.htm

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