The
military’s top general was so alarmed by the events of Jan. 6 that he ordered
his staff to immediately start collecting “boatloads” of relevant documents for
future investigations — even classifying some so that only certain people could
see them.
“I knew the significance, and I asked my staff, freeze all your
records,” Joint Chiefs Chair Gen. Mark Milley told members of the Jan. 6
committee.
The
general said he went to extraordinary lengths to classify the documents “at a
pretty high level” to ensure that only those “who appropriately needed to see
it” could access it.
The revelation was one of many that Milley made during a Nov.
17, 2021, interview with committee members.
The 300-page transcript of
the interview released this week is chock-full of wild anecdotes — not just
from the day of the Capitol assault, but from the two years he served as
then-President Donald Trump’s top military adviser.
From the very start, Milley makes clear that he is appalled by
the events of that day. The general spoke at length about the oath he took as
an officer and said he believes the insurrection was no less than an assault on
the Constitution.
“The events of January 6th, in my personal opinion, were a
horrific day, a tragic day in the history of America,” Milley said, according
to the transcript. “So what I saw unfold on the 6th was disturbing, to say the
least.”
'Nothing?’: Milley says he was surprised Trump didn’t call
military during Capitol attack.
The role of the committee is “critical” to preventing such
an event from ever happening again, Milley said.
Many aspects of the assault on the Capitol and the days
leading up to it have already been reported in news articles and books. Yet the
transcript provides fresh insights for the historical record from a top
official who was there for those key events. Here are some takeaways:
America’s enemies saw an opening
Leading up to Jan. 6, Milley and other top national
security officials worried that America’s adversaries would try to exploit the
domestic instability across the country.
There was “general concern overseas that adversaries of the
United States were going to try to exploit for their own advantage what they
perceive to be instability inside the domestic politics of the United States,”
Milley told investigators.
The general noted that he had multiple conversations on
this topic with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Vice President Mike Pence’s
national security adviser, retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg.
Milley was “constantly” trying to reassure allies during
the time period from the election to Jan. 6, he said. In addition to the widely-known phone calls to
a top Chinese general, he also made “50 or 60” calls to other counterparts,
including in France, Qatar, Japan, Russia and others.
The aim was to “calm waters, to make sure that people
understood that … this is a stable government, we’re not going to do something
crazy and all that. That took a degree of effort,” he said.
Norquist predicted the Capitol assault
During an interagency rehearsal of the vote to certify the
election in the days leading up to Jan. 6, then-Deputy Defense Secretary David
Norquist predicted that the greatest threat that day would be “a direct assault
on the Capitol,” Milley said.
“I only remember it in hindsight because he was almost like
clairvoyant,” Milley said. “He nailed it. He pegged that one. Incredible.”
The exercise was conducted at Milley’s insistence, and
involved laying out the entire city on the gym of Conmy Hall, in Fort Myer,
Virginia. The Secret Service, which officials tapped to be the lead federal
agency for the day, videotaped the rehearsal.
By contrast, then-national security adviser Robert O’Brien
said the greatest threat would come from “Antifa and Black Lives Matter
assaulting the protesters,” which struck Milley as interesting.
“Both are potentially legitimate views. But one guy who’s
hanging out in the White House, he says that during one of these calls,” Milley
said of O’Brien. “Was that the view of the President?”
“Protect my people”
On Jan. 3, the national security team assembled to brief
the president about Iran increasing the number of centrifuges it can use to
enrich uranium. At the very end of the meeting, Milley remembers, Trump turned
to acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller and asked him if he was “set” for Jan.
6.
“You’re set for the 6th and all that and you got a plan
and, you know, protect my people and all that. Right?” Milley said. “And I’m
silent. I’m just listening and I’m like, hmm.”
This struck Milley as “odd,” he said, because it was so out
of place at the meeting.
Loud words for Patel
Milley admits to mouthing off at Kash Patel, a Trump
loyalist who became chief of staff to the acting defense secretary at the end
of the administration. At the time, a number of media reports emerged that
Patel was about to be tapped for a top position, including potentially
replacing Gina Haspel as CIA director.
Milley recalls mocking the chief of staff in front of a
number of top DoD officials, including the Army secretary and superintendent of
West Point, at the Army-Navy game in December of 2020.
“I said in perhaps a voice that was louder than maybe I
should have, I said to Kash Patel, I said: So, Kash, which one are you going to
get, CIA or FBI?,” Milley told investigators. “And Patel’s face, you know, he
looks down and he comes back and says: Chairman, Chairman.”
Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, told Milley
to back down, noting “Hey, it’s none of your business. This is personnel.”
Milley backed off, he said.
Haspel later threatened to resign if the administration
made Patel her deputy, and the idea was dropped.
Loyalists at DoD
Days after the election, Trump set off alarm bells by
firing a number of top Pentagon officials, starting with Defense Secretary Mark
Esper, and installing loyalists on a temporary basis in the most critical
national security jobs.
In quick succession on Nov. 10, a day after Esper’s firing,
top officials overseeing policy, intelligence and the defense secretary’s staff
all resigned, replaced by political operatives who had trafficked in “deep
state” conspiracy theories, POLITICO reported at the time.
“There
was a general feeling of unease amongst [inaudible] in the Pentagon at the
time. And there was a feeling of unsteadiness in the building for a period of
time because of all these moves,” Milley said.
And the feeling wasn’t limited to inside the Pentagon. Allies
noticed the changes with concern, too.
“You’ve got a large organization like the Pentagon that’s
responsible for the U.S. military all over the world, and all of a sudden,
boom, you make these rapid-fire changes,” Milley said. “So, yeah, it’s a period
of personnel instability that creates organizational instability that creates
anxiety in countries overseas.”
The biggest concern was that most of the top national security
positions were filled by people in an acting capacity who were not
Senate-confirmed, he stressed.
“That should cause people pause right off the bat,” Milley said.
“It gets noticed by overseas, folks overseas, et cetera.”
Unlawful orders
No call from Trump
Court-martialing retirees
There were “indications” throughout the two years he served as
joint chiefs chair under Trump that the president was contemplating issuing
unlawful orders to the military, Milley said. While not specific to the
election or the Insurrection Act, there were “other discussions” that caused
him to worry, particularly about a crisis overseas.
“I was concerned that there could have been a serious overseas
crisis at a moment in time in combination with serious domestic violence that
could become the predicate for something that probably was extrajudicial or
unconstitutional,” Milley said.
Milley made and received dozens of phone calls on Jan. 6,
including with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Mike
Pence, but never got one from his boss. He stopped short of saying he was
frustrated with the president’s silence, he said “I noted it.”
“You’re the Commander in Chief. You’ve got an assault going on
on the Capitol of the United States of America, and there’s nothing? No call?
Nothing? Zero?” Milley said. “No attempt to call the Secretary of Defense? No
attempt to call the Vice President of the United States of America, who’s down
on the scene?”
Milley had to dissuade officials in the Trump administration who
discussed recalling and court-martialing retired military officers who wrote
editorials that were critical of the president, he said. His concern was that
such a move would further politicize the military.
“I advised them not to do that,” Milley told investigators. “And
I said: ‘please give me a chance to calm the waters a little bit.”
Lara Seligman is
an award-winning journalist who covers the Pentagon for POLITICO. Her reporting
on the military and the defense industry has taken her around the world, from
the Middle East to Mongolia to the backseat of an Air Force Thunderbird.
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