ed note–an extremely important article in underscoring certain realities that have framed much of Trump’s moves over the last 2 years and why as of this moment certain ‘experts’ have been unable to discern the reasons behind many of Trump’s moves and maneuvers.

Mattis was indeed one in a long line of ‘establishment’ people Trump utilized, but then, who was he supposed to appoint? Alex Jones for Sec. of Defense? Jeff Rense for Secretary of Hair Design? David Duke for HUD? Jim Fetzer for HHS? Gordon Duff for Atty General?

The point is, you utilize who/what you have at your disposal in moving forward, including the likes of creatures such as Mattis, McMaster and yes, even Pompeo and Bolton, because an administration without functioning gears is doomed, and, just as Patton did following the defeat of Germany after WWII, he utilized competent officials from the former 3rd Reich in managing the smooth functioning of necessary ‘business’, because without them, there was no getting anything done.

And no, we are not comparing the creatures Trump has utilized up to this point with former Nazis, so all the usual screechers can just cool their jets.

The point is that Trump appointing certain individuals he deems competent within their particular sphere of expertise despite their obvious problematic intellectual and political deficiencies does not automatically and axiomatically mean that Trump has signed on with their particular world view, and therefore, all those who work themselves into frothing fits of political epilepsy everytime Trump appoints some nefarious figure to some post, perhaps what you should do instead of drowning in your own saliva is to just wait and see what happens a page or two later before writing an erroneous end to a story that was not your creation to begin with.

NY Times

With the angry departure of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, the United States and its shaken allies are about to discover the true meaning of “America First.”

Mr. Mattis, a retired four-star general, prided himself on spending four decades preparing for war while nurturing the alliances needed to prevent conflict. He was more than the competent grown-up in the Situation Room, quelling talk of unilateral strikes against North Korea. In fact, he was the last senior official in the administration deeply invested in the world order that the United States has led for the 73 years since World War II, and the global footprint needed to keep that order together.

The breaking point was Syria, where Mr. Trump decided over his defense secretary’s objections to pull all Americans troops, as well as those in Afghanistan, where the president seems determined to reduce the American presence by half in the next few months. By the time Mr. Trump made clear he would delay those actions no longer, Mr. Mattis was isolated.

He was not alone: Most of the advisers Mr. Trump once called “my generals’’ also believed in the system Mr. Trump has long rejected. And now, headed into his third year in office and more convinced than ever that his initial gut instincts about retreating from a complex world of civil wars and abstract threats was right, Mr. Trump has rid himself of the aides who feared the president was undercutting America’s long-term national interests.

Now the president appears determined to assemble a new team of advisers who will not tell him what he cannot do, but rather embrace his vision of a powerful America that will amass a military that will enforce national sovereignty and bolster American deal-making — but not spend time nurturing the alliance relationships that Mr. Mattis, in a remarkable resignation letter, makes clear are at the core of American power.

To Mr. Mattis, alliances were a force-multiplier. To Mr. Trump, they are mostly a burden.

“I think the question for any future secretary of defense — or any of those going onto the Trump team now — is whether they want to be like Jim Mattis and try to defend the principles he defended, starting with alliances, or get on board with the President’s approach,” Leon Panetta, who served as defense secretary, C.I.A. director and White House chief of staff during a long career, said by telephone Thursday night. “While the president tweeted, Mattis went around the world reassuring people that they could wink at the statements and know that America was going to be there to steady the ship.”

Mr. Panetta paused. “Until he couldn’t keep that going any more,” he said.

The national security adviser, John R. Bolton, made no secret of his deep suspicion of international institutions like the United Nations, NATO, and the European Union. After an initial, awkward meeting at the Pentagon with Mr. Mattis, the two men often steered clear of each other.

The secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, is more artful at straddling the line, talking up Mr. Trump’s view of America’s role in the world while quietly working to channel the president’s most extreme instincts. But while he objected to the Syria decision, he defended it, if weakly, on a series of friendly radio and TV interviews on Thursday.

In retrospect, the clash of world views between Mr. Trump and Mr. Mattis was inevitable. Mr. Trump made his views clear from the early days of the campaign, when he railed about the Iran nuclear deal as a “terrible” giveaway for the United States, criticized NATO as an alliance of freeloaders and described the presence of American troops in Asia as nonsensical, because the United States ran trade deficits with Japan and South Korea.

Mr. Mattis, in contrast, was an institutionalist — as were H.R. McMaster, the retired lieutenant general who served as national security adviser, and Rex Tillerson, the Exxon Mobil chief who never figured out how to run the State Department, but recently said he spent most of his time trying to talk Mr. Trump down from illegal acts on the world stage.

The three men never got along. But they all believed America’s strength lay in its role leading NATO, or the anti-Islamic State alliance, or keeping the peace in the Pacific by making it clear to North Korea and China that the Navy was just over the horizon.

Mr. Mattis and Mr. McMaster were authors of a national security strategy that Mr. Trump issued but never embraced, one that said dealing with the “revisionist” powers of Russia and China, not combating terrorism, was once against the primary objective of American national security policy.

But when Mr. Trump accepted Mr. Mattis’ resignation on Thursday afternoon, the most he could say about his defense secretary was that his greatest accomplishment was “the purchase of new fighting equipment” and getting allies to pay more of their share of the burden of the alliances. He never mentioned the strategic reorientation, contained in a document his former aides say he never read.

“We are moving back to an earlier conception of America’s role in the world, looking out for ourselves, hoping the two oceans protect us, and when necessary saying the rest of the world is full of freeloaders who can go to hell if they don’t get on board,’’ said Robert Kagan, a conservative foreign policy expert whose books, “The World America Made” and “The Jungle Grows Back,’’ chronicle the ebbs and flows of American influence.

“It may be an era more destructive of the world order than in the 1930s,’’ he said. “Back then, at least Britain and France were responsible for keeping part of the order. Now we are the responsible world power — and we are undermining it.”

Mr. Mattis almost never repeated the “America First” line that his boss found so attractive. But he also rarely openly contradicted the president. He was more subtle. When he received orders he believed destructive — for example, the presidential tweet that seemed to ban transgender soldiers from serving — he would slow-walk the process, forming a committee to study the issue, then issuing watered-down directives.

That technique infuriated Mr. Trump. And the relationship was finally breached over the order to pull out of Syria, a step so large that there was no way, Mr. Mattis concluded, to dilute it by quietly sending in Special Forces.

When he distributed his letter, which he had written and re-writtten in his head many times, it made clear the gulf between them.. By dwelling on the value of the NATO alliance, the coalition to fight the Islamic state, and the need to be cleareyed about Russia and China, he was aiming at the heart of his differences with Mr. Trump.

But the letter was notable for what it was missing: Any praise of the president’s work around the globe. In saying that the president deserved a secretary of defense whose views were “aligned” with his own, he was making clear he was no longer going to provide cover.

“Whenever I said ‘Trump is destroying the Atlantic alliance,’ ” Mr. Kagan said, “people would tell me, ‘At least there is Mattis.’ ” In fact, Mr. Mattis was the man who worked up the plans to circulate troops through Eastern Europe, as a signal to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia. It was Mr. Mattis who helped establish what was supposed to be a long-term presence in Afghanistan, to convince the Taliban they would have to negotiate a peace.

But Mr. Mattis was also a cautious player. He clashed with Mr. McMaster over the defense secretary’s refusal to order the military to hail and board North Korean ships suspected of carrying goods that violated the embargoes on the country. And whenever people talked about unilateral strikes against North Korea, it was Mr. Mattis who would warn, darkly, of the potential cost to millions of lives in Seoul.

Now the question is whether Mr. Trump will conclude that his experiment with the generals — he told an interviewer during the 2016 campaign that he liked them because they “represent power” — is truly over.

It turns out that long military careers usually create a different view of the way the world works than long careers in commercial real estate. And it is a view that Mr. Trump still rejects, even more vociferously than he did when he was running for office.

7 thoughts on “With the Generals gone, Trump’s ‘America First’ plans might now fully emerge”
  1. The establishment claims they do Not understand prez Trump’s maneuvers???,are you kidding me,er 20 trillion in debt,much of it to China,making America a supplicant country,also Not able to win wars against inferior powers,a guy like Donald Trump does Not win a election when times are good,it is always when a nation is in peril ,maybe to remind those p*ss away America’s wealth on military failure that the US power is or was based on economic Might,I won’t go into the gold standard vs fiat,but Trump has reminded those wasters that missiles and other weapons tech costs,I mean when the late John “jihadi” McCain was shown to a factory during his presidential bid against Obama, he became angry and confused,’asking why am I here?,he asked this question because he was retarded on the knowledge on where American power came from,to quote the Brad Pitt film, “killing them softly”,’America is not a country but a business”, and maybe no one understands this more than prez Trump..

  2. to catch the drift of the true truth, pay zero attention to jew media but total attention to JEW hate, fear and loathing, which JEW is unable to disguise, being one authentic emotion that gives the psychopath his psyche, the inverse soul.
    so, when at the end of the day, after all the fake screeching about the migrants’ rights and how much JEW cares for the non-white deplorables, iniquity of national borders (of course, ethnic cleansing of whites in south africa being perfectly fine), egalite/fratenite trotskyist-sludge, all of a sudden the real prospect of world peace among the goyim endangers JEW’s parasitical, war-mongering prosperity, then he shows his true face and the screeching starts in earnest, anguished howling from the very treetops.
    all of a sudden, after preaching brotherhood with the invading hordes, the ISISoids, the looters, vandals, pimps, how unfair is it to impose borderland restrictions on them, the notion of actually leaving them in peace in their own countries, to pursue their own affairs unmolested, un-killed, un-genocided and un-destroyed by the imperial judaic rapine becomes a terrifying prospect, because how is jew to live, to survive, absent goy misery?
    huh?
    tell the poor jew, he is sorely perplexed and agrieved by this existential threat.
    some of the quotes … when the agent orange moves, he doesn’t consult with anyone, knowing full well that he is the last true american in the entire bureaucratic apparatus, to telegraph his moves might prove personally lethal as JFK found to his sorrow and loss (xymphora:

    Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, himself, only received word of the decision just five minutes before it hit Twitter, DEBKAfile sources have learned, although he talked to the president and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo some days ago.

    personal favorite: trump coordinates with iran and hezbollah while keeping JEW in the maximum dark

    Israel is also discovering in the last few hours that Tehran and Hizballah stayed silent when Israel launched its operation to uncover Hizballah tunnels last week – not because they were taken aback, as some Israeli officials claimed – but because they had advance notice of the US withdrawal – either from Moscow or from Ankara – and saw it being totally eclipsed in importance by the sensation about to be landed by President Trump.

    what the above tells me is that when trump pitches his palestine solution, JEW will pay attention for a change.
    forget yinon, it is oy-veynon now.
    more JEW woe:

    The Washington Post published an editorial Friday titled “With Mattis leaving, be afraid.” It noted that the defense secretary’s departure “followed a pair of precipitous and reckless decisions by President Trump: the removal of all US forces from Syria and a 50 percent force reduction in Afghanistan,” and added that “Mr. Trump appears unhinged and heedless of the damage he might do to vital interests.”
    Similarly, the New York Times ’ editorial carried the scare headline: “Jim Mattis was right: Who will protect America now?” It condemned Trump for having “overruled” Mattis and other national security advisors by “ordering the rapid withdrawal of all 2,000 American ground troops from Syria.”
    Democratic Party leaders virtually wept over Mattis’ resignation and voiced virulent opposition to any end to the US wars in the Middle East and Central Asia.
    Senator Mark Warner, the ranking Democrat Jew on the Senate Intelligence Committee, tweeted, “as we’ve seen with the President’s haphazard approach to Syria, our national defense is too important to be subjected to the President’s erratic whims.”

    see what i mean? “OUR National Defense” … in middle east, not south of rio grande.
    square this with how they don’t want the southern wall and care so much about the illegal aliens’ human rights, freedom of unimpeded invasion and takeover of social benefits, welfare bonuses and assorted freebies, so long as JEW doesn’t pay for them but the already grossly underpaid, half-starving, homeless yankee goyim do.

  3. How do I read this? You approve of Mattis’ plans of having US troops circulate in Eastern Europe to send a message to Putin? Look, I see you as a Dual Citizen as Putin has zero interest in taking over Eastern Europe. This you also know, but as you are loyal to Israel, it is in Israel’s interest to have the US have bases in as many countries as possible, about 135 at present, with your Israel needing to occupy just one to make that possible. Russia has troops in Syria, but nowhere else, and those in Syria will be withdrawn as soon as Assad feels it safe enough to from predator entities like your ISIS, or a chameleon variant of it down the track. Your ISIS? Yes, Israel Secret Intelligence Service.
    ****
    I sent the above to Mr Kagan via the Brookings Institute where they claim that support may review it.

  4. I hope every idiot who still believes Trump is owned by the jews will read Lobro’s excellent post above. If they can’t understand that,they damn well don’t want to

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