Trump
Selects Retired Marine Gen."Mad-Dog" Mattis for
Secretary of Defense
By Dan Lamothe
December 01, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "WP"
- President-elect
Donald Trump has chosen retired
Marine Gen. James
N. Mattis
to be secretary of defense, according to people familiar
with the decision, nominating a former senior military
officer who led operations across the Middle East to run
the Pentagon less than four years after he hung up his
uniform.
To take the
job, Mattis will need Congress to pass new legislation
to bypass a federal law stating that defense secretaries
must not have been on active duty in the previous seven
years. Congress has granted a similar exception just
once, when Gen. George C. Marshall was appointed to the
job in 1950.
An announcement
is likely by early next week, according to the people
familiar with the choice.
Mattis, 66,
retired as the chief of U.S. Central Command in spring
2013 after serving more than four decades in the Marine
Corps. He is known as one of the most influential
military leaders of his generation, serving as a
strategic thinker while occasionally drawing rebukes for
his aggressive talk. Since retiring, he has served as a
consultant and as a visiting fellow with the Hoover
Institution, a think tank at Stanford University.
Like Trump,
Mattis favors a tougher stance against U.S. adversaries
abroad, especially Iran. The general, speaking at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies in April,
said that while security discussions often focus on
terrorist groups such as the Islamic State or al-Qaeda,
the Iranian regime is “the single most enduring threat
to stability and peace in the Middle East.”
Mattis said the
next president “is going to inherit a mess” and argued
that the nuclear deal signed by the Obama administration
last year may slow Iran’s ambitions to get a nuclear
weapon but won’t stop them.
“In terms of
strengthening America’s global standing among European
and Mideastern nations alike, the sense is that the
America has become somewhat irrelevant in the Middle
East, and we certainly have the least influence in 40
years,” Mattis said.
But Mattis may
break with Trump’s practice of calling out allies for
not doing enough to build stability. In the same event,
Mattis said he was troubled by President Obama’s remarks
in a March interview with The Atlantic that there were
“free riders” accepting U.S. help without reciprocating.
He added that he read the Atlantic story after printing
it out, and briefly thought he had accidentally mixed it
with a news clip that highlighted Trump’s views.
“The
President-elect is smart to think about putting someone
as respected as Jim Mattis in this role,” said a former
senior Pentagon official. “He’s a warrior, scholar, and
straight shooter — literally and figuratively. He speaks
truth to everyone, and would certainly speak truth to
this new commander in chief.”
But the
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss
Trump’s personnel choices, said, “If there’s any concern
at all, it’s the principle of civilian control over the
military. This role was never intended to be a kind of
Joint Chiefs of Staff on steroids, and that’s the
biggest single risk tied to Mattis. For Mattis, the
biggest risk for him personally is that he will have a
national security adviser in the form of Mike Flynn
whose management style and extreme views may arch Mattis’
eyebrows and cause conflict over time. It’s no fun to be
secretary of defense if you have to constantly feud with
the White House.”
Mattis served
from November 2007 to August 2010 as the supreme allied
commander of transformation for the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, in which he focused on improving
the military effectiveness of allies. Trump called NATO
“obsolete” earlier this year, before saying later that
he was “all for NATO,” but wanted all members to spend
at least 2 percent of their gross domestic product on
defense, a NATO goal.
Mattis will
join the Trump administration after calls by some
conservatives for him to join the presidential race in a
long-shot independent bid aimed at derailing Trump’s
ascent this spring. The general declined to do so,
saying he didn’t understand the speculation.
Mattis, whose
nicknames include “Mad Dog” and the “Warrior Monk,” has
had a leading hand in some of the U.S. military’s most
significant operations in the last 20 years. As a
one-star general, he led an amphibious task force of
Marines that carried out a November 2001 raid in
helicopters on Afghanistan’s Kandahar province, giving
the Pentagon a new foothold against the Taliban after
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Using the call sign
“Chaos,” he commanded a division of Marines during the
U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, and returned there the
following year to lead Marines in bloody street fighting
in the city of Fallujah.
Mattis
continued to rise through the ranks and establish his
credentials as a military thinker, co-authoring the U.S.
military’s new counterinsurgency manual with then-Army
Lt. Gen. David Petraeus while Mattis was a three-star
general at Quantico, Va.
He was
considered a leading contender to become commandant of
the Marine Corps in 2010, but was bypassed in favor of
Gen. James F. Amos. Instead, Mattis replaced Petraeus as
the chief of Central Command, overseeing U.S. military
operations across the Middle East.
Even though
Central Command didn’t encompass Israel, Gen. Mattis
made a concerted effort to reach out to his Israeli
military counterparts, according to Steven Simon, who
worked with Gen. Mattis when he served on Obama’s
National Security Council.
Simon, who now
teaches at Amherst College, said Mattis made frequent
stops in Israel during trips to the region, part of an
effort to encourage the Jewish State and its Arab
neighbors to work together to counter Iranian influence.
“They respected Mattis because they saw him as a
straight shooter and a good listener,” said Simon of the
Israelis and Arabs.
The general
retired from that position about five months earlier
than expected in 2013, prompting speculation that he was
forced out after clashing with some in the Obama
administration on Iran policy. U.S. officials denied
that was the case at the time, and Mattis declined to
comment.
Mattis
occasionally has come under scrutiny for impolitic
remarks. Most notably, he said in 2005 during a panel
discussion in San Diego that “it’s fun to shoot some
people” and “I like brawling,” drawing criticism from
then-Marine Commandant Gen. Michael Hagee. But Hagee
also later backed Mattis, saying the general often spoke
with candor to reflect the horrors of war. Other
supporters noted that he often stressed to his own
troops that it was important to treat civilians in a
combat zone with care.
It’s unclear
whether the legislation required to make Mattis Pentagon
chief will be difficult to obtain from Congress. The
1947 national security law said that any general must
wait 10 years from leaving active duty before becoming
defense secretary. An exception was granted on a
one-time basis for Marshall, with lawmakers saying in
special legislation at the time that it is “sense of the
Congress that after General Marshall leaves the office
of Secretary of Defense, no additional appointments of
military men to that office shall be approved.”
The 10-year
period was reduced to seven years in 2008 for several
senior civilian defense positions, including defense
secretary.
Philip Rucker,
Adam Entous and Missy Ryan contributed to this report.
Trump Picks
Retired Marine General "Mad-Dog" Mattis As Secretary Of
Defense
By Tyler
Durden
President-elect Donald Trump has chosen 66-year-old
retired Marine General James N. "Mad-Dog" Mattis to be
secretary of defense, according
to The Washington Post.
An announcement is likely by early next
week, according to the
people familiar with the decision. Mattis declined to
comment. Spokespersons for Trump's transition team did
not respond to requests for comment.
Mattis,
66, retired as the chief of U.S. Central Command in
spring 2013 after serving more than four decades
in the Marine Corps. He is known as one of the
most influential military leaders of his generation,
serving as a strategic thinker while occasionally
drawing rebukes for his aggressive talk. Since retiring,
he has served as a consultant and as a visiting fellow
with the Hoover Institution, a think tank at Stanford
University.
Mattis has also gotten cheers from
veterans and Trump supporters online,
in the form of celebratory memes dubbing him the Patron
Saint of Chaos (Chaos was Mattis’s call-sign in Iraq
and Afghanistan), praising his lethal “double
knife hands,” and saying that he “Puts the Laughter
in Manslaughter.”
Mattis
gets the nod ahead of a notable group who were up for
the top role..
- * David
Petraeus, former CIA director and retired Army
general
- * Tom
Cotton, Republican U.S. senator from Arkansas
- * Jon Kyl,
former Republican U.S. senator from Arizona
- * Duncan
Hunter, Republican U.S. representative from
California and early Trump supporter, member of the
House Armed Services Committee
- * Jim
Talent, former Republican U.S. senator from Missouri
who was on the Senate Armed Services Committee
- * Rick
Perry, former Republican Texas governor
- * Stephen
Hadley, former national security adviser under
President George W. Bush
His
bio - as one would expect - is impressive...(apart from
the Theranos aspect)
(via The Intercept)
Mattis is exactly what Trump is not, a
soldier-scholar who knows something of the wider
world.
Now 66
years old, Mattis was born in Walla Walla,
Washington. His lifelong bachelordom is the source
of one of his many nicknames: “warrior-monk.”
He served in every major U.S. Middle Eastern
conflict from the first Iraq War on. In
2001, as a one-star general, he led 4,000 Marines in
a search for Osama bin Laden near the
Afghanistan/Pakistan border. In 2004, as a two-star,
he led a Marine division into the second battle for
Fallujah. He went on to lead combatant commands at
the Pentagon and NATO, culminating in two years as
the head of Central Command under President Barack
Obama, reportedly leaving after disagreeing
with Obama’s policy on Iran.
Shortly
before his departure, Mattis appears to have
weighed in with the Pentagon on behalf of Theranos,
Elizabeth Holmes’s troubled biotech firm. He later
joined the company’s board. Should Trump
nominate Mattis, emails
between Mattis and Holmesare likely to come up
during his Senate confirmation hearing.
But here
are 16 quotes
(via FreeBeacon) to get a better feel for
"mad-dog"...
1. “I don’t lose any sleep at night
over the potential for failure. I cannot even spell the
word.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
AP
2. “The first time you blow someone
away is not an insignificant event. That said, there are
some assholes in the world that just need to be shot.”
(Business
Insider)
3. “I come in peace. I didn’t bring
artillery. But I’m pleading with you, with tears in my
eyes: If you fuck with me, I’ll kill you all.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
4. “Find the enemy that wants to end
this experiment (in American democracy) and kill every
one of them until they’re so sick of the killing that
they leave us and our freedoms intact.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
Flickr
5. “Marines don’t know how to spell
the word defeat.”
(Business
Insider)
6. “Be polite, be professional, but
have a plan to kill everybody you meet.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
7. “The most important six inches on
the battlefield is between your ears.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
8. “You are part of the world’s most
feared and trusted force. Engage your brain before you
engage your weapon.”
(Mattis’
Letter To 1st Marine Division)
Gen. Mattis in
2006 / Flickr
9. “There are hunters and there are
victims. By your discipline, cunning, obedience and
alertness, you will decide if you are a hunter or a
victim.”
(Business
Insider)
10. “No war is over until the enemy
says it’s over. We may think it over, we may declare it
over, but in fact, the enemy gets a vote.”
(Defense
News)
11. “There is nothing better than
getting shot at and missed. It’s really great.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
12. “You cannot allow any of your
people to avoid the brutal facts. If they start living
in a dream world, it’s going to be bad.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
Gen. Mattis
and Gen. Dempsey / Flickr
13. “You go into Afghanistan, you got
guys who slap women around for five years because they
didn’t wear a veil. You know, guys like that ain’t got
no manhood left anyway. So it’s a hell of a lot of fun
to shoot them. Actually it’s quite fun to fight them,
you know. It’s a hell of a hoot. It’s fun to shoot some
people. I’ll be right up there with you. I like
brawling.”
(CNN)
14. “I’m going to plead with you, do
not cross us. Because if you do, the survivors will
write about what we do here for 10,000 years.”
(San
Diego Union Tribune)
15. “Demonstrate to the world there
is ‘No Better Friend, No Worse Enemy’ than a U.S.
Marine.”
(Mattis’
Letter To 1st Marine Division)
16. “Fight with a happy heart and
strong spirit”
(Mattis’
Letter To 1st Marine Division)
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |