Jeffrey Goldberg wrote in The Atlantic about how General Mark Milley saved the country and the Constitution from the ignorance of former President Donald Trump. I’m a subscriber to The Atlantic, and I can attest that it’s a great magazine, with articles like this one. It is titled “The Patriot.” I have followed the discussion of this article on Twitter. Trump supporters say that Milley was obliged to follow the orders of the President; Trump critics say that Milley took an oath to defend the country and the Constitution “from all enemies, foreign and domestic.” And he upheld his oath of office.
The missiles that comprise the land component of America’s nuclear triad are scattered across thousands of square miles of prairie and farmland, mainly in North Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming. About 150 of the roughly 400 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles currently on alert are dispersed in a wide circle around Minot Air Force Base, in the upper reaches of North Dakota. From Minot, it would take an ICBM about 25 minutes to reach Moscow.
These nuclear weapons are under the control of the 91st Missile Wing of the Air Force Global Strike Command, and it was to the 91st—the “Rough Riders”—that General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, paid a visit in March 2021. I accompanied him on the trip. A little more than two months had passed since the January 6 attack on the Capitol, and America’s nuclear arsenal was on Milley’s mind.
In normal times, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the principal military adviser to the president, is supposed to focus his attention on America’s national-security challenges, and on the readiness and lethality of its armed forces. But the first 16 months of Milley’s term, a period that ended when Joe Biden succeeded Donald Trump as president, were not normal, because Trump was exceptionally unfit to serve. “For more than 200 years, the assumption in this country was that we would have a stable person as president,” one of Milley’s mentors, the retired three-star general James Dubik, told me. That this assumption did not hold true during the Trump administration presented a “unique challenge” for Milley, Dubik said.
Milley was careful to refrain from commenting publicly on Trump’s cognitive unfitness and moral derangement. In interviews, he would say that it is not the place of the nation’s flag officers to discuss the performance of the nation’s civilian leaders.
But his views emerged in a number of books published after Trump left office, written by authors who had spoken with Milley, and many other civilian and military officials, on background. In The Divider, Peter Baker and Susan Glasser write that Milley believed that Trump was “shameful,” and “complicit” in the January 6 attack. They also reported that Milley feared that Trump’s “ ‘Hitler-like’ embrace of the big lie about the election would prompt the president to seek out a ‘Reichstag moment.’ ”
These views of Trump align with those of many officials who served in his administration. Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, considered Trump to be a “fucking moron.” John Kelly, the retired Marine general who served as Trump’s chief of staff in 2017 and 2018, has said that Trump is the “most flawed person” he’s ever met. James Mattis, who is also a retired Marine general and served as Trump’s first secretary of defense, has told friends and colleagues that the 45th president was “more dangerous than anyone could ever imagine.” It is widely known that Trump’s second secretary of defense, Mark Esper, believed that the president didn’t understand his own duties, much less the oath that officers swear to the Constitution, or military ethics, or the history of America.
Twenty men have served as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs since the position was created after World War II. Until Milley, none had been forced to confront the possibility that a president would try to foment or provoke a coup in order to illegally remain in office. A plain reading of the record shows that in the chaotic period before and after the 2020 election, Milley did as much as, or more than, any other American to defend the constitutional order, to prevent the military from being deployed against the American people, and to forestall the eruption of wars with America’s nuclear-armed adversaries. Along the way, Milley deflected Trump’s exhortations to have the U.S. military ignore, and even on occasion commit, war crimes. Milley and other military officers deserve praise for protecting democracy, but their actions should also cause deep unease. In the American system, it is the voters, the courts, and Congress that are meant to serve as checks on a president’s behavior, not the generals. Civilians provide direction, funding, and oversight; the military then follows lawful orders.
For the actions he took in the last months of the Trump presidency, Milley, whose four-year term as chairman, and 43-year career as an Army officer, will conclude at the end of September, has been condemned by elements of the far right. Kash Patel, whom Trump installed in a senior Pentagon role in the final days of his administration, refers to Milley as “the Kraken of the swamp.” Trump himself has accused Milley of treason. Sebastian Gorka, a former Trump White House official, has said that Milley deserves to be placed in “shackles and leg irons.” If a second Trump administration were to attempt this, however, the Trumpist faction would be opposed by the large group of ex-Trump-administration officials who believe that the former president continues to pose a unique threat to American democracy, and who believe that Milley is a hero for what he did to protect the country and the Constitution.
“Mark Milley had to contain the impulses of people who wanted to use the United States military in very dangerous ways,” Kelly told me. “Mark had a very, very difficult reality to deal with in his first two years as chairman, and he served honorably and well. The president couldn’t fathom people who served their nation honorably.” Kelly, along with other former administration officials, has argued that Trump has a contemptuous view of the military, and that this contempt made it extraordinarily difficult to explain to Trump such concepts as honor, sacrifice, and duty….
Joseph Dunford, the Marine general who preceded Milley as chairman of the Joint Chiefs, had also faced onerous and unusual challenges. But during the first two years of the Trump presidency, Dunford had been supported by officials such as Kelly, Mattis, Tillerson, and McMaster. These men attempted, with intermittent success, to keep the president’s most dangerous impulses in check. (According to the Associated Press, Kelly and Mattis made a pact with each other that one of them would remain in the country at all times, so the president would never be left unmonitored.) By the time Milley assumed the chairman’s role, all of those officials were gone—driven out or fired.
At the top of the list of worries for these officials was the management of America’s nuclear arsenal. Early in Trump’s term, when Milley was serving as chief of staff of the Army, Trump entered a cycle of rhetorical warfare with the North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. At certain points, Trump raised the possibility of attacking North Korea with nuclear weapons, according to the New York Times reporter Michael S. Schmidt’s book, Donald Trump v. The United States. Kelly, Dunford, and others tried to convince Trump that his rhetoric—publicly mocking Kim as “Little Rocket Man,” for instance—could trigger nuclear war. “If you keep pushing this clown, he could do something with nuclear weapons,” Kelly told him, explaining that Kim, though a dictator, could be pressured by his own military elites to attack American interests in response to Trump’s provocations. When that argument failed to work, Kelly spelled out for the president that a nuclear exchange could cost the lives of millions of Koreans and Japanese, as well as those of Americans throughout the Pacific. Guam, Kelly told him, falls within range of North Korean missiles. “Guam isn’t America,” Trump responded…
Shortly after the assault on the Capitol on January 6, Pelosi, who was then the speaker of the House, called Milley to ask if the nation’s nuclear weapons were secure. “He’s crazy,” she said of Trump. “You know he’s crazy. He’s been crazy for a long time. So don’t say you don’t know what his state of mind is.” According to Bob Woodward and Robert Costa, who recounted this conversation in their book, Peril, Milley replied, “Madam Speaker, I agree with you on everything.” He then said, according to the authors, “I want you to know this in your heart of hearts, I can guarantee you 110 percent that the military, use of military power, whether it’s nuclear or a strike in a foreign country of any kind, we’re not going to do anything illegal or crazy….”
At his welcome ceremony at Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall, across the Potomac River from the capital, Milley gained an early, and disturbing, insight into Trump’s attitude toward soldiers. Milley had chosen a severely wounded Army captain, Luis Avila, to sing “God Bless America.” Avila, who had completed five combat tours, had lost a leg in an IED attack in Afghanistan, and had suffered two heart attacks, two strokes, and brain damage as a result of his injuries. To Milley, and to four-star generals across the Army, Avila and his wife, Claudia, represented the heroism, sacrifice, and dignity of wounded soldiers.
It had rained that day, and the ground was soft; at one point Avila’s wheelchair threatened to topple over. Milley’s wife, Hollyanne, ran to help Avila, as did Vice President Mike Pence. After Avila’s performance, Trump walked over to congratulate him, but then said to Milley, within earshot of several witnesses, “Why do you bring people like that here? No one wants to see that, the wounded.” Never let Avila appear in public again, Trump told Milley. (Recently, Milley invited Avila to sing at his retirement ceremony.)
There is much more in the story about the lengths that top military brass went to protect the nation from a seriously ignorant and mentally unstable president.
I suggest that you read it in full. You won’t be sorry, but you will be very grateful that the top ranks of the military put the Constitution above their obedience to an unqualified President.

In Trump’s psychopathic brain is notion that Gen. Mark Milley is a traitor that deserves to die. It has also been reported that Trump casually discussed the potential hanging of ‘traitor,’ Mike Pence, who refused to be a pawn in his evil scheme to overthrow the government on January 6th.
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cx: the notion
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He and Espers both. Heroes. Real patriots.
We need to start naming airports and highways and parks after them. Seriously.
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There are two slightly different oaths in the military to defend the U.S. Constitution against all enemies both domestic and foreign.
The oath the troops take says to obey “the president and officers”
The oath the officers take does not say they have to obey the president. The word president isn’t even mentioned in the officers’ oath.
This link leads to the form military officers must sign. If you read that oath, you will not see the word president.
Click to access A71.pdf
Now, take into account the Military Times annual polls showing what the troops thought about Trump when he was president.
70% of the officers never approved of or supported Trump as voters in those annual polls.
A slight majority of the troops also did not approve of or support the traitor.
Still, if it came down to following Trump’s orders or their officers, what would the smaller number of troops who approved of Trump do when their officers countermanded an order from the traitor. If the officer is stupid they will not be ready. If they are smart ,and most of them are, they will make sure to have armed troops they can depend on ready to fight for the U.S. Constitution if Trump’s military loyalists decide to stick with the traitor.
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Lloyd, I took the same oath of office when I was sworn in as Assistant Secretary of Educatuon in 1991. Not to the president, but to defend the Constitution, against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
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Yes, officers take an oath to follow the orders of the President and enlisted take an oath to follow the orders of the President and officers appointed over them. But, it was just pointed out that the orders must be “lawful” as defined in Manuals of Court Martial and the Uniform Code of Military Conduct. Calley tried to use the defense that he was only following orders when he was court-martialed for the 22 murders in Viet Nam. That defense did not hold up.
Orders given by the President or military officers must be lawful. Just because the President of the United States gives an officer an order does not make it legal and defensible. Same was an officer given an enlisted an order. It must be lawful.
I took the subject as both an enlisted in 1968 (I was drafted) and as an officer in 1972. I fully understood that I just follow orders given me but at the same time we who took those oaths knew the orders had to be lawful based on the Constitution and laws of this country. There was not discussion.
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Well, we face an imminent shutdown. A rapist and seditionist, pathological liar and malignant narcissist under 91 indictments who plans to use the presidency to settle grudges is the leading candidate for President of the United States. War drags on in Ukraine, and war criminal Vladimir Putin remains at large. Senior Americans have no dental care. Millions still don’t have health insurance. Millions of American kids are still hungry. Climate change remains unchecked, leading to massive flooding, wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, interruptions of agriculture, habitat loss (maple syrup, fireflies, corals? forget about those).
But hey, the Senate just dealt with the really important thing: What John Fetterman was wearing.
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Thanking Milley the fake tv general, who sold us out? Feinstein now dead, here comes michael obama. Hobbs stepped down bye bye!!!!
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Here’s an education for you in a couple of sentences, you moron:
In the United States, unlike in the Fascist states that we fought during World War II, we have extremely important separations of powers. For example, the military does not carry out police functions AS A MATTER OF LAW, and the police do not act as an arm of the military. The police and the military are SEPARATE, and the police are not directed by the federal government. The power of the government to conduct military action AGAINST ITS OWN CITIZENS is limited, here, by the Posse Commitatus Act of 1878. The president cannot simply order the military or police to act against citizens.
This is an important limitation of presidential power and an important fundamental freedom enjoyed by Americans.
The Fascist Donald J. Trump, of course, is utterly ignorant of all that, as he is of everything else. And because he is a racist, he wanted to send in the military to attack protestors of the systemic racism in the United States–the BLM protests that occurred after the murder by police of George Floyd. And his toadying, sycophantic weasel of an Attorney General tacitly allowed him to do this by sending in what are known as “little green men”–soliders without insignia, to beat and arrest protestors exercising their constitutional rights to speech and assembly.
Well, when Trump the racist and Fascist turned to the military and asked it to send in troops against American citizens, General Mark Milley, head Joint Chiefs, and SEC DEF Mark Esper both stood up to him and acted in accordance with their sacred oath and said, “No.” For this, for preserving this essential freedom and not letting Trump take us down that road to Fascism, they deserve honor and respect and a hallowed place in our memories, forever. These are true heroes, and your ignorant comments to the contrary and inexcusable, bordering on traitorous.
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Curses upon you, you lowlife, for failing to honor these true patriots and heroes.
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Did you wear your country’s uniform?
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