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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Was James Mattis the Last Check on Trump? Military sources say the recent strikes against Iran wouldn't have happened under the former secretary's watch. In January of 2017, while awaiting Senate confirmation as Donald Trumps secretary of defense, retired Marine General James Mattis was warned about the new president in a telephone call from Democratic Congressman Adam Smith. I called him and said, Trump has no idea what hes doing, but isnt afraid to do it, Smith recounted, then explained that he warned Mattis that Trumps closest advisers were likely to feed the new presidents worst instincts. Youre across the river, and theyre across the hall, Smith explained to Mattis. Your job is to make sure these morons dont get up in the morning and advance some lamebrained idea. Over the next months, Mattis had ample opportunity to heed Smiths warning. In April of 2017, the newly minted defense secretary received a call from Trump, who was enraged by Syrian dictator Bashar Assads chemical attack in Idlib. Trump had seen pictures gathered by U.S. intelligence agencies of the attacks civilian victims, and he was outraged. He wanted Assad dead: Lets f-cking kill him, Trump shouted in his telephone exchange with Mattis. Lets go in. Lets kill the f-cking lot of them. Mattis reassured Trump that he would come up with military response options, then ended the call. He turned to an aide: Were not going to do any of that, he announced. Were going to be much more measured. It wouldnt be the first time that Mattis ignored the president. Just weeks after the Syria incident, Mattis had a telephone conversation with then-National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, who pressed the Pentagon chief to provide military plans for countering Iranian threats to international shipping in the Persian Gulfincluding strikes on Iranian missile emplacements and the sinking of Iranian speedboats. Mattis refused. McMaster, according to a Pentagon official privy to the incident, could hardly believe what he was hearing, cleared his office of NSC aides, and went head-to-head with Mattis. The request for military plans against Iran, McMaster told Mattis, had come directly from the president. Saying no wasnt an option. Mattis dug in his heelsand the plans the president had requested never arrived. Mattiss handling of Trump has become a touchstone for senior Pentagon officials who fear that the presidents instincts are now leading the U.S. into an unnecessary and preventable warand one that Mattis was intent to prevent. Taking out Soleimani would not have happened under Mattis, a senior administration official told The Washington Post. Mattis was opposed to all of this. A senior Pentagon official who spoke to TAC within hours of the Soleimani killing was as outspokenand worried that a Mattis-like voice of caution was absent in any of the administrations deliberations. This is dangerous and reckless, he said. But this is what happens when there arent any adults left in the room. In fact, there are plenty of adults left in the room, theyre just not the kind of adults that either Adam Smith or James Mattis might have preferred. Two of the most important, South Carolina Senator Lindsay Graham and former Army vice chief of staff Jack Keane, dont serve in the administrationbut have an outsized influence on Trumps foreign policy decisions. Both weighed in on the Soleimani operation. The Soleimani killing has Graham and Keanes fingerprints all over it, a senior Pentagon official told TAC. Graham is the Trump whisperer, and Jack Keane is buddy-buds with Mike Pompeo. I wont say that killing Soleimani was their idea, because the idea has been out there for a long time, but theres no question their input was important, maybe even really important. They dont have a veto, but Pompeo and Trump listen to them. In fact, as Graham has claimed, he was briefed on the potential operation while visiting with Trump in Florida in the days prior to the killing (and endorsed it), while Keanes views were solicited by Pompeo during conversations that were described (by the Pentagon official with whom I spoke) as pretty regular. Surprisingly, while Grahams influence on Trump is widely known, Keane has been traditionally viewed as a Mattis-like check on Trumps off-the-cuff decisions as well as his lets kill the f cking lot of them eruptions. For instance, Keane single-handedly persuaded Trump to leave U.S. troops in Syria when the president wanted to withdraw them back in October and, the previous June, dissuaded Trump from responding to the downing of a U.S. drone by hitting major Iranian military installationscommunicating his opposition during an appearance on Fox News. But Keane did not say no this time and endorsed the Soleimani operation, primarily because he believes the Iranians crossed a red line when rockets launched by a militia under their control killed an American contractor at a U.S. base on December 27. Keane has since supported Trumps actions in public, which has solidified his standing as perhaps the single most important military voice in the administrationand perhaps the most influential out-of-uniform military officer since Maxwell Taylor advised John Kennedy more than half-a-century ago. But while Graham and Keanes views were important, the most crucial voice arguing that killing Soleimani be included in the Pentagons list of Iran response options belonged to Mike Pompeo. The increasingly high profile Pompeo is not only the the administrations most veteran anti-Iran crusader, but also the single most important foreign policy voice in the administrationas the senior Pentagon official with whom TAC spoke describes him. With Tillerson and Mattis and [national security adviser John] Bolton gone, this guy doesnt have any competitors, this official added. Pompeos emergence as a kind of deputy president (as this same official describes him) has chilled the views of those who had hoped that Mark Esper, Pompeos Pentagon counterpart and his West Point classmate (Class of 86), would emerge as someone who would make sure the morons dont get up in the morning and advance some lamebrained idea. For these Pentagon officials, the Soleimani decision shows that that has not turned out to be true. Pompeo drove this decision, a retired senior military officer notes, and you can be sure that if either Esper or [J.C.S. Chairman Mark] Milley had objected, they would have been overruled. Which is not to say that senior military officers disagree with Trumps decision to kill Qassem Soleimani. By all account, the vast proportion and most influential among them dont. This man was breathing air a good man could have been breathing and I shed no tears over his death, retired Colonel and West Point graduate Kevin Benson says. But this was a big step. I trust that folks on the Joint Staff and at Centcom really have an honest-to-God well-thought-out strategy in place to follow up on this tactical action. This is an opportunity for those folks from the West Point Class of 86 to step up. But while the vast portion of the military support the Soleimani decision, a number of them offer a cautionary note. They question whether the Trump administrations decision making process is, in fact, an actual processor whether the voices from across the hallor from Foggy Bottomare silencing the voices from across the river. Everyone always talks about how an administration needs to speak with one voice, and thats true when a decision is announced, the Pentagon official with whom TAC spoke notes. But before that happens there has to be someone in the room who says hey, wait a second. And right now, that voice isnt there. Mark Perry is a journalist, author, and contributing editor at The American Conservative. His latest book is The Pentagons Wars. He tweets @markperrydc. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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