Saturday 23 January 2021

'The President threw us under the bus': Trump's intelligence chief blames him for failing to call up the National Guard - as Defense Secretary says the president told him 10,000 soldiers would be needed the night before, but then failed to activate them

 Donald Trump has been accused of throwing his top Pentagon officials 'under the bus' in the aftermath of the Capitol insurrection, as his Defense Secretary claimed that the president said 10,000 troops would be needed on January 6 - but failed to issue orders. 

Christopher Miller, who until Wednesday was the Defense Secretary, told Vanity Fair that when Trump made him head of the Pentagon, in November, 'the bar was pretty low.'

He told the magazine he had three goals: 'No military coup, no major war, and no troops in the street. The 'no troops in the street' thing changed dramatically about 14:30…. So that one's off [the list].'

Miller, 55, was named Secretary of Defense in November - against his family's wishes

Miller, 55, was named Secretary of Defense in November - against his family's wishes

Kash Patel, 40, was named Miller's chief of staff and defended the team's response to the riots

Kash Patel, 40, was named Miller's chief of staff and defended the team's response to the riots

Ezra Cohen, the 34-year-old head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, was critical of Trump

Ezra Cohen, the 34-year-old head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, was critical of Trump


Miller also said the Pentagon was in a terrible state.

'This f****ing place is rotten. It's rotten,' he said.

He told of his horror of watching the scenes on January 6 unfold, and said the root of the problem was Trump's decision to teargas protesters outside the White House over the summer. That led to the mayor of DC vowing that she did not want the National Guard to be present en masse for the Stop the Steal rally, which preceded the riot.

Ezra Cohen, the 34-year-old fiercely loyal Trump servant, appointed on November 10 to be Acting Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security, was even more blunt in his assessment.

'The president threw us under the bus,' he said.

'And when I say 'us,' I don't mean only us political appointees or only us Republicans. He threw America under the bus. He caused a lot of damage to the fabric of this country.

'Did he go and storm the Capitol himself? No. But he, I believe, had an opportunity to tamp things down and he chose not to. And that's really the fatal flaw. I mean, he's in charge. And when you're in charge, you're responsible for what goes wrong.'

Cohen said that Trump had 'thrown us under the bus' with his actions on January 6

Cohen said that Trump had 'thrown us under the bus' with his actions on January 6

The president incited a mob to storm the Capitol, in an insurrection that left five dead

The president incited a mob to storm the Capitol, in an insurrection that left five dead

Miller told how, on the eve of the riot, he spoke to Trump.

Trump asked about security for the rally the following day.

'We're like, 'We're going to provide any National Guard support that the District requests,' Miller responded.

'And [Trump] goes, 'You're going to need 10,000 people.' No, I'm not talking b******t. He said that.

'And we're like, 'Maybe. But you know, someone's going to have to ask for it.'

Miller said that, on the day of the riots, he had the sense that something dramatic was going to happen.

He said he was hopeful that the day would prove uneventful. But decades in special operations and intelligence had honed 'It was the first day I brought an overnight bag to work,' he told the magazine.

'My wife was like, 'What are you doing there?' I'm like, 'I don't know when I'm going to be home.'

Miller said that he and his team 'were monitoring' the situation as Trump held his provocative rally.

'And we're just like, Please, God, please, God.

'Then the damn TV pops up and everybody converges on my office.'

Miller said that his team was watching the events on January 6 and willing the riot away

Miller said that his team was watching the events on January 6 and willing the riot away

The mob overran the Capitol Police shortly after Trump urged them to 'fight' on his behalf

The mob overran the Capitol Police shortly after Trump urged them to 'fight' on his behalf

Capitol officer dragged from building ad beaten by MAGA mob
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Charges have been filed against around 150 people so far, with more expected

Charges have been filed against around 150 people so far, with more expected 

Miller said: 'We had already decided we're going to need to activate the National Guard, and that's where the fog and friction comes in.'

He denied that he had struggled to get hold of the president, or that Mike Pence was in charge, and his chief of staff, Kash Patel, said that they sent in the National Guard when the mayor of DC, Capitol Police and Secret Service finally asked for it.

Miller, asked about criticism that the Pentagon was slow to send in troops, replied: 'Oh, that is complete horses***. I gotta tell you, I cannot wait to go to the Hill and have those conversations with senators and representatives.'

He added: 'I know when something doesn't smell right, and I know when we're covering our asses. Been there.

'I know for an absolute fact that historians are going to look…at the actions that we did on that day and go, 'Those people had their game together.'

Miller, a 55-year-old Special Forces veteran, also pushed back at criticism that he was brought in to replace Mark Esper as a 'yes man' for Trump.

'I'll just be straight up. My family's not huge fans of the Trump administration,' he said.

'It's really bothered my daughters and my wife. My son, he'll be like, 'Holy cow, they called you a stuffed-shirt moron today.'

He said he was particularly angry at the ranks of retired military officers who questioned his suitability for the role, including some of those who had trained him and worked for him.

'You f****** a*******,' he said. 'If I fail, you failed.'

Miller is pictured (far right) with Kash Patel (second from right) in October 2019

Miller is pictured (far right) with Kash Patel (second from right) in October 2019

In the aftermath of the January 6 violence, and with Trump impeached and in legal peril, Miller was asked how he felt.

'Focused, obviously,' he said, speaking on January 12.

'Have to compartmentalize because it's like being in combat. When you take casualties, you're just like, it's horrible. But I'll think about that later over some drinks when I get home.

'I refuse to take the bait and get panicky. I have to portray that this is the Department of Defense. That's my Bill Belichick. Do your damn job. And I'm not going to go out and make some statement…. Right now the country just needs to take a quaalude.'

And, as he readied to leave the Pentagon, ending a career he began at the age of 18, he explained why he felt the 'f****** place' was 'rotten'.

He felt that too much power had been transferred from the civilian leaders to the military commanders.

'When the system is weighted towards the Joint Staff and the geographic combatant commanders against civilian control, you know, we've got to rethink this,' he said, criticizing members of Congress for 'idolizing and fetishizing' senior military leaders.

Cohen, head of the DIA, the military intelligence, told the magazine: 'We're in a crisis mode.'

He said he and others had discovered that the Joint Chiefs were creating their own 'security compartments' containing operational planning details 'for the express purpose of hiding key information from career civilian and political leaders in the Pentagon.'

Cohen said: 'That means that policymakers were basing their decisions on partial information. It's very dangerous and irresponsible, and that's something I've actually highlighted in my conversations with [Biden's] transition team.'

Miller said: 'The entire system, the intelligence community [included], is complicit in setting up all these compartments - so that only very select people actually have perspective and access to the entire picture. And then your question is, 'Well, who are these people that have the complete picture?'

'I felt like I finally did as acting SECDEF - to a point. I'm sure there's still some stuff that was being compartmented. But I don't know that for a fact.'

Miller was also asked about the $1.5 trillion F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, in an off-the-record conversation that someone in the Pentagon decided to post on the Defense Department's website.

The reporter asked what the 'costly, badly flawed aircraft, 27 years in the making' said about the Pentagon's spending priorities.

'Talk about a wicked problem! I wanted to take that one on. F-35 is the case study.

'That investment, for that capability that we're never supposed to use. I'm like, 'We have created a monster.'

Miller told the magazine: 'I cannot wait to leave this job, believe me.'

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