“Each of us swore an oath to support and defend the
Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. We did not swear it to
an individual or a party. American elections and the peaceful
transfers of power that result are hallmarks of our democracy.”
They wrote, before the events on January 6 took
place, that “this year should be no exception.” Of course, tragically, it was.
At the time the Post published their letter, all sorts of alarm bells were
already going off for anyone who was paying attention (unlike in FBI
headquarters). The former civilian leaders of our military were deeply
concerned, so much so that they went to press with it.
They referred to senior defense leaders who they quoted as
weighing in to say, “‘there’s no role for the U.S. military in determining the
outcome of a U.S. election.’ Efforts to involve the U.S. armed forces in
resolving election disputes would take us into dangerous, unlawful and
unconstitutional territory.”
They admonished Chris Miller, the acting secretary who
had assumed his post most unusually after Trump lost the election in 2020, with
his chief of staff, Kash Patel, at his side that “They must
also refrain from any political actions that undermine the results of the
election or hinder the success of the new team.” Just days later, the two were
in place as rioters overran the Capitol.
Our country has a proud tradition of a civilian-led military,
designed by the Founding Fathers to avoid the risk of a coup by the military.
The Secretary of Defense doesn’t come to the job from active duty, and waivers
have to be obtained from Congress for those out of uniform for less than seven
years, as President Biden did for Lloyd Austin and Donald Trump did for James Mattis.
The irony, then, was that in 2020 it was that same civilian
leadership of the military that in no small part was responsible for preventing
a president from being the one to insinuate the takeover.
Donald Trump has nominated Pete Hegseth to be the Secretary
of Defense. It's a nomination that should have been ended by allegations of financial mismanagement—Hegseth denies
them—of an organization whose budget ran into tens of millions, not the $783 billion dollar budget he would oversee at the Pentagon.
And, of course, there are the other criticisms that have been
leveled at Hegseth, of misogyny and sexual assault, which he also denies, and of excess drinking, of which he
says he won’t drink if he’s confirmed.
Politico reported on Thursday that a dozen
senators, both Democrats and Republicans, have taken the unusual step of asking
for his FBI background investigation. The report relates this interesting
detail, “Some Republicans, such as [Maine Republican Sen. Susan] Collins and
North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis, say the claims are serious enough to warrant
greater access to the findings.
While it’s unlikely the FBI findings would be made public,
they could still give Republican senators political cover to vote against
Hegseth or support his defense.” Hegseth has said he has nothing to hide and
welcomes the FBI background process, so if everyone’s in agreement, let’s get
that report into the senators’ hands!
You may recall from the whole affair with Justice Kavanaugh that the FBI does background investigations aren’t always as fulsome as the seriousness of confirmation proceedings suggest they should be.
As in that
case, there’s also the possibility that a report could whitewash serious issues
by, for instance, failing to speak with all of the witnesses who have
information to offer or neglecting leads so that the process can be completed
quickly. But the fact that even Republican senators are asking for the report
shows that this is a nomination that deserves far greater scrutiny than Donald
Trump and his followers want it to get.
As we saw in January of 2021, it’s one of the most important
jobs in government. It’s about leading the military, but it is also, in times
of great stress, about upholding the Constitution and the rule of law. The
secretary of defense is supposed to lead the military and serve the people, not
the president. Right now, it’s only the Senate, and let’s be blunt, Republican
senators, who can ensure that this next pick is up to the job.
Can you imagine Pete Hegseth signing on to a letter like the
one that was written by Ashton Carter, Dick Cheney, William Cohen, Mark Esper,
Robert Gates, Chuck Hagel, James Mattis, Leon Panetta, William Perry, and
Donald Rumsfeld? Can you imagine him heeding the kind of advice his
predecessors, if he’s confirmed, are likely to offer him?
It’s not often that you see a group that consists largely of
former politicians from both parties, including a Vice President (Cheney),
coming forward to make a definitive statement like the one in the Post that
January morning. It’s not that it was controversial; perhaps it’s that it
wasn’t, but that it desperately needed to be said, nonetheless, in that moment.
At his confirmation hearing, Pete Hegseth needs to be asked,
among many other things, if he agrees with the sentiment expressed by the men
who held the job he aspires to. If the answer isn’t an unequivocal yes (and
it’s unlikely it will be given the context), it’s just another reason he’s not
fit to serve.
We’re in this together,
-Joyce Vance
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