Two weeks ago, the military commander overseeing President Trump’s bombings of boats in the Caribbean Sea abruptly resigned. Admiral Alvin Holsey, the head of U.S. Southern Command, offered no explanation for the move. Neither did the Defense Department. He was less than one year into the job, making the departure even more inexplicable.
Since then, we’ve heard nothing about why Holsey stepped down. Yet in those two weeks, Trump’s campaign has only gotten more brazen and horrifically lawless. He ordered the bombing of four more boats this week, killing 14 more people, for a total of around 60 killed, even as the administration still refuses to share key intelligence or elaborate on its supposed legal rationale.
“I think we really need to hear from Holsey on this,” Smith told me.
Smith pointed out that there’s been a big public conversation about what military officials should do if they believe they’ve been given “illegal orders.” He noted that conventionally, they will sometimes “quit” their posts to signal this fear to the public.
“Holsey did in fact quit,” Smith said. “So we need to hear: Did he quit because he believed he was being given illegal orders?”
Smith said that Democratic staff communicated to GOP staff that Democrats want the committee—which is chaired by GOP Representative Mike Rogers—to seek Holsey’s testimony in a classified setting. GOP staff then asked the Pentagon for this testimony. “The Pentagon said no, and that was the end of it,” Smith said.
That’s deeply worrisome and should make lawmakers more determined to secure his testimony. But Republicans on the committee apparently are not pressing for it, even though lawmakers have the power to make it very clear that they want such testimony or even to compel it.
Smith allowed that military officials deserve some deference if they don’t want to testify—but said this isn’t a good reason to decline to press the point. In fact, given the circumstances, getting that testimony is plainly lawmakers’ responsibility to the country—at an absolute minimum.
“I think we’re in extraordinary times here,” Smith said. “So some of those normal rules should not apply anymore.”
Extraordinary times, indeed. This week, administration officials did brief senators on the bombings, which have now targeted 14 vessels, all under murky circumstances. But Democrats say this briefing was for GOP senators only, which may violate the legal requirement for bipartisan briefings. While the House Armed Services Committee did get a bipartisan briefing Thursday, Democrats told reporters that Pentagon lawyers scheduled to participate didn’t come and it was run only by a senior military officer who failed to answer their legal questions.
The administration has designated drug cartels as terrorist organizations while claiming Trump has inherent constitutional authority to order the strikes to defend the country against attacks. But as legal experts note, this gives Trump the power to unilaterally execute civilians who are not in any meaningful sense akin to terrorist groups or waging war against the United States, with zero due process. Meanwhile, lots of evidence casts doubt on whether some of these people were even trafficking drugs to the United States in the first place.
Smith said the official legal rationale—offered in this week’s Armed Services Committee briefing—has gotten even more troubling. He said administration officials claimed they now have the authority to bomb people who are merely “affiliated” with groups that Trump has designated as “narco-terrorists.” But under questioning, they refused to say what “affiliated” even means.
“They did not in any way, shape, manner, or form explain what the ceiling and floor are for ‘affiliated,’” Smith told me. “Theoretically, that could go beyond whether they’re in the actual action of moving drugs.”
On top of that, several people have survived the bombings, and they have all reportedly been repatriated to their home countries, rather than held as enemy combatants. So does this mean the administration lacks sufficient evidence to hold the people it is summarily executing?
"While the House Armed Services Committee did get a bipartisan briefing Thursday, Democrats told reporters that Pentagon lawyers scheduled to participate didn’t come and it was run only by a senior military officer who failed to answer their legal questions."
Was it worth sitting out the election?
What do you expect to solve with this comment? It's just an attack wrapped in smugness. You're not going to gain anyone you didn't already have on your side with this attack. Be part of the solution, not more of the problem.
Was it worth it trying to force a candidate on everyone that people liked even less than trump?
I mean, I still voted for her, but it's a fair question that the Democratic party should be asking themselves.
You couldn't tell the difference between a capitalist and actual nazis and you're just admitting it on the internet? I couldn't imagine just announcing that i was that stupid to the whole world.
Excuse me? The second sentence of my comment says I voted Democrat. Did you stop reading after the first sentence? It's only two sentences long.
And yet here you are, both sidesing.
Nope. Conservatives are evil assholes, full of malice and hate. They are so much worse than Democrats that I'm having trouble even coming up with the words.
I'm just placing the blame for Trump's election on the choice of the specific democratic candidate by Democratic leadership, rather than on the voters.
If the party had held a primary and / or picked someone more popular, we wouldn't be in this sickening position.
But Kamala was a good choice. Not necessarily for progressives, but for actually fighting back against the republicans. The blame for Trump's election goes to trump voters for being stupid and malicious enough to fall for it, and then to spoilers and non voters for not having the basic understanding of how our federal system functions. This is ignoring the literal nazi propaganda the republican owned media and party have been passing for forty years. The blame belongs with trump voters and non-voters. Maybe a primary would have energized the non-voters, but it sure fucking didn't in 16, so why would they try to spoil their own best shot? Most of the people that bitch about Dems fucking up don't vote in Dem primaries in the first place so they're the ones at fault. I guess it's all academic at this point since there's no going back. But we're getting what we deserve because there's maybe only twenty percent of Americans like us that actually care and are horrified at what's happening. The majority of Americans either want this or are totally ok with this or everyone wouldn't be pretending future elections will matter.
She would have been a fine president. I'm not disputing that. But that doesn't make her a good candidate. She LOST. To Trump. By definition, that makes her a bad choice as the candidate.
What's easier; changing the minds of millions of individual voters, or running with a better candidate?
That she lost to trump says more about the voter than the party. That's why I always come back to this is who Americans largely are, and we deserve it. Who would have been a better candidate? If you say Bernie I know you're not a serious person because he lost to Hillary. And this is all ignoring the election fraud that may be entirely responsible for Kamala losing. The numbers of purged voters and winning margins sure line up awfully conveniently. But I digress.