89 former Defense officials: The military must never be used to violate constitutional rights
President Trump continues to use inflammatory language as many Americans protest the unlawful death of George Floyd and the unjust treatment of black Americans by our justice system. As the protests have grown, so has the intensity of the presidents rhetoric. He has gone so far as to make a shocking promise: to send active-duty members of the U.S. military to dominate protesters in cities throughout the country with or without the consent of local mayors or state governors.
On Monday, the president previewed his approach on the streets of Washington. He had 1,600 troops from around the country transported to the D.C. area, and placed them on alert, as an unnamed Pentagon official put it, to ensure faster employment if necessary. As part of the show of force that Trump demanded, military helicopters made low-level passes over peaceful protesters a military tactic sometimes used to disperse enemy combatants scattering debris and broken glass among the crowd. He also had a force, including members of the National Guard and federal officers, that used flash-bang grenades, pepper spray and, according to eyewitness accounts, rubber bullets to drive lawful protesters, as well as members of the media and clergy, away from the historic St. Johns Episcopal Church. All so he could hold a politically motivated photo op there with members of his team, including, inappropriately, Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper and Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Looting and violence are unacceptable acts, and perpetrators should be arrested and duly tried under the law. But as Mondays actions near the White House demonstrated, those committing such acts are largely on the margins of the vast majority of predominantly peaceful protests. While several past presidents have called on our armed services to provide additional aid to law enforcement in times of national crisis among them Ulysses S. Grant, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson these presidents used the military to protect the rights of Americans, not to violate them.
As former leaders in the Defense Department civilian and military, Republican, Democrat and independent we all took an oath upon assuming office to support and defend the Constitution of the United States, as did the president and all members of the military, a fact that Gen. Milley pointed out in a recent memorandum to members of the armed forces. We are alarmed at how the president is betraying this oath by threatening to order members of the U.S. military to violate the rights of their fellow Americans.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/06/05/89-former-defense-officials-military-must-never-be-used-violate-constitutional-rights/
mitch96
(13,925 posts)I just hope this gets to the ears of the military when dRumph "suggests" the use of the military to do his bidding in the US... I hope they respectfully refuse... Posse comitatus and all that...
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