Gen. Chris Donahue was described as the latest casualty in the defense secretarys purge of the militarys senior ranks.
In the years that followed, the general took on other high-profile duties, becoming the head of Army forces in Europe and Africa. He was also widely seen as the next chief of staff of the Army. This week, however, Donahues career became notable for a very different reason. The Hill reported:
Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa, submitted his paperwork to retire after a little over a year in his position, a Pentagon official told The Hill.
The Pentagon official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal military deliberations.
An Army spokesperson soon after confirmed Donahues departure in an official statement, thanking the general f
or his leadership of U.S. Army Europe and Africa.
While military leaders retire with some regularity, theres reason to believe that Donahues decision announced after just 18 months in his position was not altogether voluntary. CBS News, citing multiple sources, reported that the general exited the military after a lengthy and decorated career because he had
earned the ire of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.....
In fact, the New York Times reported in November that
Hegseth had fired or sidelined dozens of officials with little explanation, creating an atmosphere of anxiety and mistrust within the department. Politico published a similar report the month before, noting that the secretarys firings have
injected a fresh wave of fear into the Pentagon over the cost of speaking up and who might be next.
Early last year, five former defense secretaries, including retired Gen. Jim Mattis, Donald Trumps first defense secretary, condemned the pattern of firings as reckless. In a joint letter, addressed to Congress, they asked the House and Senate to hold immediate hearings to assess the national security implications of the dismissals.
Hegseth and the administration appear to have ignored those concerns; the purge is still going on; and GOP leaders on Capitol Hill have scheduled no such hearings.
Democratic Rep. Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, who served as a Marine officer in Iraq and now serves on the House Armed Services Committee, spoke to Politico about Hegseths purges, which the congressman described as politically motivated.
Thats a recipe not just for a politicized military, but an authoritarian military, Moulton said.
Thats the way militaries work in Russia and China and North Korea.....
For his part, Hegseth recently defended the pattern during congressional testimony, telling lawmakers who asked about his personnel purge, Under Barack Obama, 197 general officers were removed. So this is not something specific to this administration.
We learned soon after that the statistic the secretary cited was entirely made up and had no basis in fact.