Divide & conquer, but elsewhere: Democrats cheer Mattis, who advocated staying in Syria, after he likens Trump to Nazis
US President Donald Trump’s first defense secretary, General Jim Mattis, is the new hero of the Democrats, after he denounced Trump as a threat to the Constitution and compared him to the Nazis.
The US military instructed troops landing in Normandy that the Nazis sought to destroy America with the slogan “Divide and Conquer,” which was to be met with “In Union there is Strength,” Mattis wrote in a diatribe published by the Atlantic on Wednesday, adding that Trump is the first president in his lifetime “who does not try to unite the American people—does not even pretend to try. Instead, he tries to divide us.”
Denouncing Trump’s “abuse of executive authority that we witnessed in Lafayette Square,” – presumably referring to Monday’s clearing of the demonstrators before the president visited the church damaged in the riots the evening before – Mattis argued that the military violated the constitutional rights of Americans to “provide a bizarre photo op for the elected commander-in-chief, with military leadership standing alongside.”
Former Trump defense secretary Jim Mattis compares Trump to Nazis, urges Americans to unite in support of our Constitution. https://t.co/Z6WrkC6ff1 pic.twitter.com/W85owdi0dT
— Grant Wahl (@GrantWahl) June 3, 2020
Mattis insisted that the protests across America are “defined by tens of thousands of people of conscience who are insisting that we live up to our values” and that Americans “must not be distracted by a small number of lawbreakers.”
This full-throated endorsement of the Democrat narrative about the unrest earned Mattis accolades from the mainstream media, prominent Democrats and members of the online #Resistance.
It also drew derision from Trump sympathizers, who brought up the fact that he served Trump as defense secretary for two of the “three years without mature leadership” he writes of now, and resigned only because Trump ordered a withdrawal from Syria.
Jim Mattis resigned with a tantrum because @realDonaldTrump wouldn't let him keep killing minorities around the world for neoliberal, corporate interests.
— Raheem Kassam (@RaheemKassam) June 3, 2020
Thaaaat's not really the "ally" the progressive left, nor #BlackLivesMatter should want. pic.twitter.com/Uc9OcGmyGt
Mattis wants Americans to unite, but only around war in the Middle East
— Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec) June 3, 2020
“You see, it's only acceptable to use [the] military for unending Middle East wars or state-sponsored coups,” wrote journalist Amber Athey.
Mattis, who made a point to say he doesn't write about sitting presidents, is now accusing Trump of violating the Constitution by using military to ensure domestic tranquility. You see, it's only acceptable to use military for unending Middle East wars or state-sponsored coups
— Amber Athey (@amber_athey) June 3, 2020
Even leftist journalists and activists pointed out that Mattis – nicknamed ‘Mad Dog’ for his role in the destruction of the Iraqi city of Fallujah – hardly had a moral leg to stand on in this instance.
Mattis resigned in protest because Trump wanted to withdraw troops from Syria. He has no moral high ground https://t.co/5bsg4rxXpZ
— Michael Tracey (@mtracey) June 3, 2020
The Butcher of Fallujah has an opinion https://t.co/lH6QPIYRib
— Gracchus Babeuf (@GBabeuf) June 3, 2020
James “Mad Dog” Mattis...welcome to The Hague.
— Eric Levitz (@EricLevitz) June 3, 2020
Oh, and thanks for that anti-Trump op-ed you wrote back in 2020. Doesn’t quite make up for that time marines under your command shot up ambulances in Fallujah, but it was def a little helpful!
Retired Marine bomb tech Johnny Joey Jones, who served under Mattis, offered a more complex take on the general’s feud with Trump, noting that he admired both men for different reasons.
Mattis “ain’t listening” to criticism, Jones warned Trump supporters, because he has “a set of ideals and he’s adhering to them... to a fault.”
“Know what YOU believe and WHY, and don’t let any one person overshadow it or represent it for you. After all, they’re just people,” he said.
I hated seeing Trump tweet about irrelevant things and spew personal insults... I hate seeing Mattis take now to politics. What’s the lesson? Know what YOU believe and WHY, and don’t let any one person overshadow it or represent it for you. After all, they’re just people
— Johnny (Joey) Jones (@Johnny_Joey) June 3, 2020
Mattis’s denunciation of Trump comes a day after retired US Navy Admiral Mike Mullen – chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under George W. Bush and Barack Obama – also took to the pages of the Atlantic to object to involving the military in the riots.
“I am not convinced that the conditions on our streets, as bad as they are, have risen to the level that justifies a heavy reliance on military troops,” Mullen wrote. He also cited the Lafayette Square photo-op as what pushed him over the edge.
Mainstream media had reported that police and the guard used tear gas against entirely peaceful demonstrators so Trump could walk to St. John’s church for a photo opportunity. The US Park Police and the White House said that the security line was attacked with brick and frozen water bottles, and used pepper pellets - not gas – to move the demonstrators a block away, as per earlier instructions from Attorney General William Barr.
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Some 1,600 active duty troops were summoned to the capital on Monday and placed on high alert, but have not been deployed to the streets. Nor has Trump invoked the Insurrection Act, though his spokeswoman said on Wednesday he wanted to keep it as an option if unrest flares up again.
Tuesday’s demonstrations in Washington, DC were entirely peaceful, unlike in other cities – such as New York – where governors decided not to deploy the National Guard to help the police.
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June 03, 2020 at 04:20PM
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