
Swanton, Thomas
4.4K posts

Swanton, Thomas
@SwantonTP
Native-Lawng Islander, USMA, Armor/Cav, Cornell Law, RA & USAR JAG (retired), former AUSA-Dad of 4-teacher, nurse, USMA '20, '22 ROMCATH (per my dog tags)


@mikenelson586 @RadioFreeTom Yes and Gen George is doing a terrible job at that. It’s probably why he was fired.

I agree with some of this directionally, but my God the refusal to acknowledge that Trump has worked assiduously to poison the alliance and heap all the blame on Europe is just water-carrying hackery. Saying "NATO will never be the same, and Western European weakness and acquiescence is the cause" is like writing a movie review when you missed the first half of the movie.



JUST IN: You do not fire your Army Chief of Staff in the middle of a war for no reason. You fire him because of what comes next. Pete Hegseth called General Randy George on April 2 and told him to retire immediately. The Pentagon confirmed it within hours. No reason was given. Not publicly. Not privately. A senior Army official told Fox News that Hegseth offered George nothing: no misconduct, no operational failure, no policy disagreement on the record. Just a phone call and a career ending in the middle of the most significant American combat operation in two decades. George is the 24th general or admiral Hegseth has removed. But he is not the 24th. He is the one that matters. The Army Chief of Staff. The man whose signature sits between a president’s intent and the order that sends soldiers across a beach or into a tunnel complex. The 82nd Airborne is deploying right now. Marines from the 31st MEU are staged on the USS Tripoli. JSOC operators are at forward bases in Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. Kharg Island, 90 percent of Iranian oil exports, sits 16 kilometres off a coast that someone will have to decide whether to approach. And the four-star general whose job it was to advise whether that approach should happen was removed 48 hours after Trump told the nation the war would continue for two to three more weeks. The replacement is Vice Chief General Christopher LaNeve. He was Hegseth’s senior military aide before this appointment. The man who carried the Secretary’s briefcase now commands the Army the Secretary is reshaping. The chain of command did not break. It shortened. The distance between a television studio and a combat order just collapsed to zero intermediaries who were not personally selected by the man giving the order. No reason was given. That is the tell. When someone is removed without explanation during a crisis, the explanation is the crisis itself. George either objected to something or was about to. The ground option. The power plant strikes. The Kharg raid. The escalation that turned a highway bridge in Karaj into rubble on the same day he was told to leave. Something in the next two weeks requires a chief who will not push back, and the Pentagon solved that problem by installing one trained as Hegseth’s aide. A former Fox News weekend host just fired a four-star general with combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, replaced him with his own former assistant, and did it during a live war in which the next decision could put American soldiers on Iranian soil for the first time in history. No hearing was held. No misconduct cited. The Army woke up on April 3 with a new chief it did not choose, in a war it did not start, preparing for a phase the previous chief apparently could not be trusted to execute. The question is not why George was fired. Every general in the building knows why. The question is what order is coming in the next fourteen days that required removing the one man in the chain of command who might have said no. The war has no perimeter. The chain of command has no objectors. And the next phase has no one left to stop it. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…



Actually, this raises a good question: how would I define victory? For starters: 1. No nuclear weapons or even the capacity by the regime to restart a nuclear weapons program. Note that I said "and," not "or." To Trump's great credit (which I don't often give him, as you all know), he has been locked in to this point from the beginning, indeed long before he became POTUS. So has his current Secretary of State and National Security Advisor. 2. Regime leaders, IRG, and their military assets reduced to a smoking rubble. This has been pretty much already accomplished, although Iran is still lobbing missiles at civilian targets -- this is mostly mop-up work. 3. Achieving every significant precondition for a general revolt by the Iranian people. What they do with this opportunity is ultimately up to them. 4. And yes, restoring safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, or, putting this same objective in an even more fundamental way, ending the capacity of this psychopathic regime from attempting to extort or blackmail most of the rest of the world by threatening ships that need to pass through the strait.




General George is a Patriot who has served our nation honorably and bravely for decades. This is a huge loss for our Army & our country. Hegseth and Trump firing the highest ranking Army officer, in the middle of a war they started, shows you exactly where their priorities are.

Hegseth has asked US Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George to step down and take immediate retirement -CBS




Marco Rubio: “If Europe won’t allow us to use the bases we man and fund for their defense when we need them — we ought to close them down and remove our troops from Europe.” Europe’s response to being threatened: Spain: airspace closed. Italy: Sigonella denied. France: airspace closed. Switzerland: airspace closed. Poland: no missile batteries. UK: not our war. Canada: never. Germany: no. Japan: officially no. Australia: no. Rubio is threatening to pull troops from Europe. Europe already pulled the welcome mat.

















