April 25, 2024

Trump Names Retired Marine General Mattis as Defense Secretary

Trump Names Retired Marine General Mattis as Defense SecretaryPresident-elect Donald Trump announced his selection of retired Marine four-star General James Mattis to be his Secretary of Defense on Thursday. Trump, on a post-election “thank you tour,” told an audience in Cincinnati that Mattis is ā€œthe closest thing to General George Patton that we have.ā€

The comparison is apt: Mattis (shown) spent 43 years in the military service with much of it in front-line action. A voracious reader of military history, Mattis, referred to as a ā€œWarrior Monk,ā€ built a personal collection of more than 7,000 volumes before he gave many of them away to a library. It didnā€™t matter: by that time heā€™d read them all.

His opinions over the Iranian nuclear deal and his sharply-voiced disgust with President Obamaā€™s ā€œstrategy freeā€ approach to Middle East problems got him fired as Commander of the U.S. Central Command in 2013. As the [New York Times noted, that made Mattis ā€œan attractive choiceā€ for Trump.

As a one-star general in 2001 he led the first Marine force into Afghanistan one month after the September 11 attacks. In 2003, he led the 1st Marine Division during the invasion to topple Saddam Hussein and in 2004 commanded U.S. troops during the battle to retake Fallujah from Sunni insurgents.

Support for Trumpā€™s decision came from places expected, including former Marine Corps Lt. Colonel Oliver North. Surprisingly, support also came from the individual mostly like to have been named to the same position had Hillary Clinton won the election: Michele Flournoy. A Harvard and Oxford graduate, Flournoy was under secretary of defense for policy in the Obama administration for three years, at the time the highest-ranking woman in the Pentagon. Said Flournoy before Mattis was nominated: ā€œGeneral Mattis is a storied and much respected military thinker. He would be an outstanding candidate.ā€

Much like Rep. Mike Pompeo (Trumpā€™s nominee to be CIA director), Mattis is a hard-liner on Iran, openly stating that the principal threat to stability in the Middle East isnā€™t Al-Qaeda or ISIS, but Iran. As for the Iran nuclear deal, he is more pragmatic: It would be costly in many ways to tear it up unilaterally. He said: ā€œWe are just going to have to recognize that we have an imperfect arms control agreement…. What we have achieved is a nuclear pause, not a nuclear halt.ā€ The nuclear inspections, however, have a side benefit, said Mattis: ā€œIf nothing else, at least we will have better targeting data if it comes to a fight [with them] in the future.ā€

He supports the so-called two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian issue, calling the present situation ā€œunsustainable.ā€

He opposes water-boarding as a means to elicit information from an enemy, which came as a surprise to Trump. During an interview with Mattis last month, Trump asked him ā€œWhat do you think of waterboarding?ā€ Mattis responded: ā€œIā€™ve never found it to be useful. Iā€™ve always found: give me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers and I do better with that than I do with torture.ā€

Mattis is CFR-free, giving comfort to those concerned about the degree of influence that the world-government-promoting group may be able to exercise through its members in the new Trump administration. Mattis, at this point, looks like a good sparring partner for Trump, and a good fit with another four-star Marine general who currently chairs the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joseph Dunford. During the Iraq invasion, Dunford was a colonel who led a Marine regiment that reported to Mattis.

Before confirming him for the position Congress would need to grant Mattis a special waiver to current federal law that stipulates that he be out of uniform for at least seven years.

Photo of Gen. James Mattis in 2013: AP images

An Ivy League graduate and former investment advisor, Bob is a regular contributor to The New American magazine and blogs frequently at LightFromTheRight.com, primarily on economics and politics.

Source: The New American

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