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Trump Tells Generals the Military Will Be Used to Fight ‘Enemy Within’ President stresses that some U.S. cities will be used as training grounds for American troops

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1:54 1:48 / 1:54 Hundreds of commanders and senior officers from around the globe were summoned to the unprecedented gathering at Quantico, Va. Photo: Andrew Harnik/Reuters “San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, they’re very unsafe places and we’re gonna straighten them out one by one,” Trump told hundreds of senior U.S. military officers packed into a hall at the Marine Corps base at Quantico, Va.

“This is going to be a major part for some of the people in this room. That’s a war too. It’s a war from within,” Trump added.

Trump’s speech, which lasted well over an hour, followed an address by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who last week summoned generals and admirals from around the world to the meeting.

Much of Hegseth’s talk centered on his longstanding contention that U.S. military standards were relaxed during previous administrations in which diversity and inclusion were an important part of the Defense Department’s personnel policies.

Senior military leaders attend a gathering at Marine Corps Base Quantico. Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images Members of the military attend a meeting convened by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Senior military leaders were called to the meeting at the Marine Corps base in Quantico, Va.​, as the Pentagon revises the National Defense Strategy. Photo: kevin lamarque/Reuters “When it comes to any job that requires physical power to perform in combat, those physical standards must be high and gender neutral,” said Hegseth. “If that means no women qualify for some combat jobs, so be it.”

Hegseth, who has rebranded himself with Trump’s backing as a secretary of war, received a polite but muted response from the military officers, who have long prided themselves on being apolitical and are uneasy about the looming cuts Hegseth has said he will make in the ranks of top officers and past firings.

Trump praised Hegseth’s talk and doubled down on the role that he sees for the National Guard and active-duty military in stopping what the president described as disorder at home, preventing illegal immigration and targeting suspected drug smugglers in Latin America.

“I told Pete we should use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military—National Guard, but military—because we’re going into Chicago very soon,” Trump said.

Trump also underscored his policy of conducting airstrikes against suspect drug traffickers. Those strikes have been carried out against boats at sea, and Trump has previously suggested they might be conducted against targets on land, too.

“The military is now the knife’s edge in combating this sinister enemy,” said Trump. “We have to put the traffickers and cartels on notice.”

Hegseth on Sunday ordered 200 National Guard to be sent to Portland Ore., under federal authority to combat what the White House has described as rampant lawlessness in the Democratic-led city. The deployment is to “protect federal property” where protests are “occurring or likely to occur,” according to Hegseth.

President Donald Trump being greeted by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth before speaking ​at Tuesday​’s gathering. Photo: Evan Vucci/Associated Press Oregon’s governor, Tina Kotek, has charged that the deployment of the National Guard is unnecessary and an abuse of power. The state is suing to try to block it.

Around 2,000 National Guard troops were sent to Washington, D.C., in August, while Trump has repeatedly indicated that he wants to mobilize the troops in Chicago and Memphis. Tennessee’s governor, Bill Lee, has said that the National Guard could arrive in Memphis this week.

Trump previously sent the National Guard and U.S. Marines to Los Angeles, which he said were needed to protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations from protesters.

The Quantico meeting was attended by hundreds of commanders and other senior officers, who had been instructed to attend the meeting at short-notice, which was without recent precedent.

Hegseth didn’t initially explain the purpose of the session in directing the officers to be there, which added to the unease in the ranks. Trump, who wasn’t part of the Defense Department’s initially planning for the event, later decided to attend.

Trump joked at the start of his speech about the subdued response from the military officers, which was a far cry from the raucous crowds at his political rallies.

“I’ve never walked into a room so silent before,” said Trump, who also suggested that officers were free to ignore his comments. “If you don’t like what I’m saying, you can leave the room, of course, there goes your rank, there goes your future,” he jested.

He then spoke warmly about the military. “I am with you. I support you, and as president, I have your backs 100%,” he said.

Much of Trump’s speech involved familiar political attacks on “sleepy Joe Biden” and Democrats.

Donald Trump departs after addressing military officers, pointing forward as he walks past several military flags. President Trump departs after addressing senior military officers at the Marine Corps base in Quantico, Va.​ Photo: jim watson/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images The meeting comes as the Pentagon is revising the National Defense Strategy, a seminal document that establishes spending and operational priorities, which is issued every four years.

The emerging strategy, said current and former officials, underscores the priority of securing the Western Hemisphere, a requirement that reflects the Trump administration’s opposition to the Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro and the White House’s focus on stopping illegal immigration.

But the strategy is also being drafted as the U.S. military is trying to strengthen its capability to deter China from taking action against Taiwan in the Western Pacific and the Pentagon is encouraging European nations to assume the lead role in defending the continent against potential Russian aggression.

Even with defense spending running at about $1 trillion a year, there is a fierce competition for resources as the military services move to develop new weapons, improve the readiness of their current forces, fill diminished munitions stockpiles and take on new projects, including Trump’s costly “Golden Dome” initiative to try to develop a nationwide antimissile defense.

The military also faces other challenges about its role at home and abroad. The White House’s decision to deploy the National Guard in U.S. cities has raised fundamental questions about whether the military is overstepping the bedrock principle that it shouldn’t be drawn into domestic law enforcement.

The military is also being challenged by lawmakers and legal experts about its expanding role in the Caribbean, including airstrikes carried out against suspected drug smugglers at sea. That role is likely to expand in the coming months as the U.S. deploys more forces to Puerto Rico.

The White House says that the use of force is justified by Trump’s authority as the commander in chief to protect the country. Some former military lawyers and critics in Congress have said it isn’t supported by the Constitution and amounts to extrajudicial killings.

Much of Hegseth’s address focused on standards in the military, saying personnel would be judged on their fitness and appearance. Physical fitness tests would be set to male standards, he stressed. He also emphasized the importance of grooming among male personnel. “The era of unprofessional appearance is over,” Hegseth said. “No more beardos.”

Write to Michael R. Gordon at michael.gordon@wsj.com and Shelby Holliday at shelby.holliday@wsj.com

  • dhork@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I wouldn’t assume that yet. They still haven’t been given the illegal orders yet. We’ll see what happens when Trump orders the military (not the National Guard, the actual Army) into Chicago and New York.