Sunday, June 28, 2026

The Purging of General Donahue Is a Breaking Point

 

 

David French

The Purging of General Donahue Is a Breaking Point

June 28, 2026

Gen. Christopher Donahue, seen in the green tint of a night-vision camera, on a tarmac and heading toward the camera.

In this handout photo from the U.S. Army, Gen. Christopher Donahue boards a cargo plane in Kabul, Afghanistan.Credit...Master Sgt. Alexander Burnett/U.S. Army, via

 

By David French

Opinion Columnist

It’s an iconic image of the war on terrorism.

A single grainy figure, bathed in the green light of night-vision goggles, steps toward the back of an Air Force transport — the last American soldier to leave Afghanistan, one minute before President Joe Biden’s Aug. 31, 2021, deadline.

That soldier was Gen. Christopher Donahue, then the commander of the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division. He and his men had been deployed to Kabul on an emergency basis to protect Americans and their allies during the withdrawal from Afghanistan.

He is also the latest casualty of Pete Hegseth’s purge of senior leaders.

Donahue arrived in Afghanistan in the chaotic final days of the war, after the Afghan government fell. Encountering nearly complete chaos, he aggressively brought a degree of order.

He told military officials who investigated the withdrawal that he was blunt with the Taliban. “We told them that we would control the gates and they would push people out,” Donahue said. “We expressed that they will comply, because if they fight us on this, we would be able to kill more of them than they would ever hope to kill of us. After that their tone changed.”

The evacuation from Afghanistan was an immense tragedy. While Donahue was there, a suicide bomber killed 13 service members and about 170 Afghan civilians at the Abbey Gate. (Despite what you might hear, the gate was outside Donahue’s area of responsibility at the time of the bombing.) Thousands of American allies, including people who’d risked their lives serving alongside American troops, were left behind, and the Afghan people were plunged back into the oppression of Taliban rule.

That photograph, in which the commander is the last person to leave, like a captain who is the last to abandon a sinking ship, elevated Donahue’s profile, but it might have made him a target for those who wanted someone held accountable for the defeat in Afghanistan. As a senator in 2024, Markwayne Mullin, now the secretary of homeland security, briefly held up Donahue’s nomination to lead Army forces in Europe for this reason.

Donahue, however, was the wrong person to scapegoat. He’d earned praise and respect from Republicans and Democrats for his conduct during the retreat.

Beyond his service in Kabul, Donahue had a sparkling résumé. He’d commanded Delta Force, arguably the most elite branch of the Army’s Special Forces, and was instrumental in the fight to destroy the ISIS caliphate in Syria and Iraq. He also helped Ukraine plan its 2022 counteroffensive against Russia. But almost every senior general has a glittering résumé. The reactions to Donahue’s departure make clear that he wasn’t just accomplished; he was deeply respected and admired.

Writing in The Atlantic, Adm. William McRaven, the former commander of the Joint Special Operations Command, who directed the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, said that Donahue is “one of the most brilliant officers I know” and that “he has the respect of every man and woman who ever served with him.”

Gen. Mark Hertling, one of my commanders in Iraq during the surge, wrote in The Bulwark that Donahue “is not simply another general officer,” and he used the same word as McRaven: “respect.” Donahue had “earned the trust and respect of soldiers.”

Rich McCormick, a Republican member of the House, told The Washington Examiner that Donahue’s departure was “unfortunate.”

“I have mad respect for that guy,” McCormick said. “I don’t know the details, so I’m not going to continue to talk about it, because I don’t know. I don’t know him personally, but I have mad respect for the guy. He’s earned that. Great leader.”

But there was one other part of Donahue’s résumé — something that would raise the hackles of an administration that believes it’s purging the woke corruption of the Biden military. In 2023 he contradicted Republican claims that wokeness had overtaken the military. He told an interviewer, “We’re focused on people, war fighting and making sure that we’re prepared for the next fight. There ain’t no ‘woke’ here.”

We don’t know precisely why Donahue is leaving. A technical explanation is that his command in Europe was downsizing to a three-star position and he, as a four-star general, had nowhere else to go. The problem, as The Washington Post reported, was that Hegseth “stonewalled” efforts to keep him. The message was clear: Hegseth wanted him gone.

Donahue is the latest in a long line of generals and admirals the Trump administration has removed, without explanation and without any evidence of misconduct. Some were obvious political targets, and the list is heavily weighted toward women and minorities.

President Trump, for example, fired Gen. Charles Brown Jr, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (and the second Black officer to hold that post) after Hegseth accused Brown of — you guessed it — being too “woke.”

Donahue’s departure, however, seems to have touched a particular nerve, and I think I know why. It’s a matter of both timing and principle.

Donahue is leaving just as the impact of Trump’s corruption and Hegseth’s partisanship and incompetence is becoming obvious to the American people, in matters both large and small. In scandal after scandal, incident after incident, the same message is sent: The morale, effectiveness and integrity of the American military are under siege.

Trump launched a war without public support, prosecuted it sporadically and incompetently and seems to be on the verge of handing Iran a strategic victory.

Even worse, it seems with every passing week we’re learning that the war was less one-sided than we were told. Last Thursday, The Wall Street Journal reported that there was extensive damage to an important American naval base in Bahrain, far more damage than the administration had said.

According to the Journal, the administration asked commercial satellite companies to limit access to imagery of the damaged bases. And it still hasn’t disclosed to Congress the total cost of the damage. In other words, while we inflicted enormous damage on Iran, the public still doesn’t know how much damage Iran inflicted on us.

A flu outbreak is less consequential than a war, but it’s symbolic nonetheless. In April, Hegseth made the vaccine optional for all units. The results were entirely predictable. After 275 people at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas fell ill with the flu, the Pentagon reinstated mandatory flu vaccines.

It’s hard to imagine any Pentagon leader scorning vaccines after experiencing the incredibly close quarters of military life. In the absence of robust public health measures, a military base can be a breeding ground for infectious disease.

And we cannot forget the ongoing war, also undeclared, against people suspected of trafficking drugs in the Caribbean. Increasingly, the evidence seems to point to American strikes costing innocent lives.

The man tasked to lead the American military — to advance its mission and its values — is putting considerable moral pressure on the United States military.

And we can’t forget that if there were any justice or real accountability, he wouldn’t be in the job. When he shared sensitive information about upcoming American military strikes against the Houthis in 2025, he not only risked the lives of American service members; he committed an act that would have destroyed the career of virtually any uniformed member of the military. Nevertheless, he survived.

It might seem basic to say this, but when Hegseth began his term as secretary of defense, he inherited a military that had already been shaped and formed by generations of training and moral formation. Even a person as powerful as a secretary of defense can’t transform an institution’s DNA overnight.

Think of the military as a big ship controlled by a small rudder. The ship responds to the rudder, but not immediately and not obviously. But given even a moderate amount of time, the direction of the turn is clear.

And that brings us to the principle of the matter. The administration’s treatment of Donahue removes any remaining doubt that in Hegseth’s version of a meritocracy, there is no level of excellence that can trump politics.

It is difficult to overstate how much that principle will cripple a military in a democracy. If the Trump administration is now punishing generals for following the orders of his predecessor (by, for example, executing orders to withdraw from Afghanistan or to place a greater emphasis on diversity in the ranks), regardless of the quality of their performance, over time you’ll create an atmosphere of institutional fear that can — and probably will — yield paralysis or serial cronyism.

Worst of all, politicizing the military will break its bond with the American people. The military is one of the last remaining institutions in the United States still holding on to the public’s respect, in part because of its commitment to professional excellence but also because it is seen as apolitical and fair. It’s arguably the most successful institution in American life that truly models the immense diversity of American life.

It isn’t a Praetorian Guard for the president and his party. It’s a citizen army that draws its members from across the whole of society.

The Trump administration owes the military and the public an explanation for its treatment of Donahue — and an explanation for its treatment of other senior officers it has fired or forced out. As commander in chief, the president has the right to fire an officer, but as a servant of the people, the president has a duty to tell us why.

In the meantime, Americans are right to be alarmed. A failed war. A purge of officers. Potential war crimes. Each of these things should be a stark warning that the Trump administration is in the process of breaking one of America’s most vital institutions.

That institution can hold. As I’ve seen firsthand, it’s not perfect, but its commitment to integrity runs deep. It cannot hold forever, however. In a previous column, I referred to an old remark about the allied armies in World War I. They were “lions led by donkeys.” The ordinary soldier’s extraordinary courage was squandered through futile tactics and foolish strategies.

Place the donkeys in charge long enough, and you start to change the character of the military itself. The donkey in chief is placing the effectiveness, morale and integrity of the American military under siege, and we’re watching exactly what happens when the lions are forced to leave.

It’s not an image I want to see.

EPSTEIN ISN'T GOING AWAY AND THE ORANGE MONSTER SHOULD GO TO JAIL

 






HOWARD TULLMAN JOINS LISA DENT ON WGN RADIO TO DISCUSS HIS LATEST INC. MAGAZINE COLUMN

 LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE


LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE

HOWARD TULLMAN JOINS LISA DENT ON WGN RADIO TO DISCUSS CUSTOMER SATISFACTION ISSUES

 LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE


LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE

Saturday, June 27, 2026

President Narcissus and the Fetid Reflecting Pool

 President Narcissus and the Fetid Reflecting Pool

Credit...Aaron Schwartz/Reuters
By 
Ms. Cottle writes about national politics for Opinion.
Public service announcement for anyone planning to visit Washington in the immediate term: Steer clear of President Trump’s hot mess of a reflecting pool. Don’t dip a digit in its emerald water. Don’t play with its “American flag blue” strips of peeling paint. Don’t get too close to the federal workers struggling to repair this refurbishment from hell. In fact, maybe skip the landmark altogether, lest you, too, get cuffed and hauled off by the park police for allegedly desecrating the president’s most half-baked vanity project to date.
Bungling the $14 million-plus redo of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, concocting batty stories about what really happened — Knife-wielding vandals? Corrosive chemicals “illegally” dumped in the water? — and harassing innocent bystanders to distract from his own incompetence: These are not the most outrageous things the president has done since his return to office. But that is part of what makes this saga so irresistible and resonant. It is Trumpism made laughable — farce rather than horror or tragedy.
As with the White House ballroom brouhaha, we see the power of vivid images and simple metaphors. Workers vacuuming algae out of the pool, oily green slime, a dead duckling floating in the muck — these visuals can capture the public imagination, even among Americans largely fed up with and tuned out of politics.
Trumpian moves such as going to war with Iran and slashing Medicaid upend more lives, but those policy failures take a lot of intellectual and emotional bandwidth to process. And learning about the American military accidentally bombing an elementary school in southern Iran will make plenty of people want to turn away.
Some guy wasting a pile of money on a shoddy remodel? Everyone gets how pathetic and hilarious that is. The memes practically generate themselves. My personal favorite is the image of Cousin Eddie from “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” standing in his shorty bathrobe, draining a chemical toilet into the reflecting pool.
With any screw-up, Mr. Trump ducks accountability by blaming nefarious enemies plotting against him. Only people mainlining the MAGA Kool-Aid will buy the idea that terrorist-vandals wielding magic blades (because please recall that Mr. Trump assured us last month that the pool’s fancy new coating was impervious to knives) sneaked past the surveillance cameras and security patrols around the National Mall to carve a 250-foot — Oops, make that 300-foot! No, better still, 350-foot! — gash in said coating. “WOW, who would do such a thing?” he raved in a Sunday social media post. “SICK, DERANGED PEOPLE.”
To review: First, the president made up stuff about his new pool being indestructible. Now he’s making up more stuff about the villains who supposedly destroyed it.
If the president had even a smidgen of evidence for his claims that the pool had been “seriously vandalized,” his people would be hawking it all over creation. Instead, we’re left with Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, blathering on Fox News about her commitment to prosecute anyone “in a position of vandalizing or attempting to vandalize” the pool.
For those in search of genuinely sketchy behavior, note how the administration awarded a piece of the reflecting pool job, specifically its water-purification system, through a no-bid contract to a company tied to John J. Cafaro, a Trump-supporting Mar-a-Lago neighbor. Everyone is claiming ignorance, of course. No matter, the results are what we’ve come to expect: The president’s allies get rich while the public gets shafted.
Clever Democrats will not waste this opening. This election cycle, the blue team’s candidates have tried to weave examples of government waste, dysfunction and economic failure into a larger Trump-era corruption story. The president overseeing the creation of a costly, green, swampy mess in the middle of the National Mall is … mwah! … chef’s kiss.
Finally — and I cannot stress this element enough — this whole sorry episode is blessedly clownish. I don’t mean clownish like that bloody spectacle of a cage match birthday party Mr. Trump threw himself on the White House lawn this month. I count that among the legion of things this president celebrates that appall his critics but appeal to key chunks of his base.
Mr. Trump’s reflecting pool face plant, by contrast, is more Three-Stooges-meet-Bozo-the-Clown-ish. Getting bested by an algae bloom then throwing a finger-pointing tantrum about it doesn’t make Mr. Trump seem scary or threatening so much as petulant and inept. People are laughing at him, and that laughter undermines his image as a take-charge master of the universe.
This is the true gift of the reflecting pool meltdown. Mr. Trump looks foolish, with relatively minimal damage done to the nation. The economy will not crater. The global order will not be upended. No one will be deported to a foreign gulag. No one is likely to die. Aside from, perhaps, some poor little ducklings.
That said, I still recommend that summer tourists forgo pool gawking for the duration. Maybe check out the National Zoo instead. The pandas will be more welcoming.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

A Malicious Chapter in the History of American Justice

 

A Malicious Chapter in the History of American Justice

June 21, 2026

 

 

By David French

Opinion Columnist

An unusual tweet caught my eye last week.

It was from Josh Gerstein, Politico’s senior legal affairs reporter, and it said this: “NEW: Trump admin takes rare step to quell controversy over prosecutorial misconduct in dropped criminal case against Chicago-area anti-ICE protesters. Feds won’t fight defense demand to pay bill for activists’ legal fees.”

Here’s why it’s so notable. In our legal system, prosecutors rarely pay a criminal defendant’s legal fees, even when the government loses its case. Defendants tend to be reimbursed only when they can prove serious prosecutorial misconduct. It’s even rarer for prosecutors to agree to pay those fees. Experienced lawyers will read that tweet and know a single, simple truth.

Something very bad went down in Illinois.

Why, you might wonder, would I write about a criminal case in Chicagoland when the world is convulsed by so many seismic events? Last week alone, Trump capitulated to Iran, the United States cut some of its defense commitments to Europe, and Ukraine hit Moscow with what appears to be its largest drone attack of the war.

We’re living in a moment when every week seems to bring a new development of global importance.

But the Chicago case is indicative of the fight for justice in the Trump administration. For every high-profile case that goes to the Supreme Court, there are dozens of other, smaller cases in federal courts across the country in which the Trump administration lies, bends the rules, slanders innocent citizens and otherwise abuses the legal system to persecute its political opponents.

And that brings us to the story of the Broadview Six.

On Oct. 23, 2025, a federal grand jury indicted a group of six protesters, including current and former Democratic public officials, charging them with conspiring to “injure” a federal officer “in his person or property.” The indictment claimed that they, among other things, “banged aggressively on the government vehicle’s side and back windows, hood and other vehicle body parts; crowded together in the front and side of the government vehicle and pushed against the vehicle to hinder and impede its movement.”

The indictment also claims the defendants scratched the word “PIG” on the government vehicle.

The indictment was important enough that Todd Blanche, then the deputy attorney general, announced the charges, and they fit perfectly with a MAGA narrative that the real problem on the streets wasn’t with rogue federal officers but with out-of-control leftist activists — the all-powerful antifa of right-wing fever dreams.

To put this indictment in context, it was announced around the same time that the administration was debating whether to invoke the Insurrection Act to use the military to crush anti-immigration protests.

In fact, the same day that Blanche announced the charges, Will Scharf, the White House staff secretary, wrote his boss, Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff, warning against using the Insurrection Act. And it was just a few months later, in January, that the vice president, JD Vance, urged invoking the Insurrection Act after federal agents shot and killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota.

But then, in March, the strangest thing happened in Illinois. The government dismissed its own case.

The government dropped charges against two of the defendants, and the Broadview Six became the Broadview Four. The government also dropped the felony charges against the remaining defendants.

Here’s where things get really interesting (and a little complicated). As Eric Columbus explained in an excellent rundown of the case in Lawfare, the defense attorneys filed a motion asking the court for permission to see the grand jury transcripts in the case, to make sure that the grand jury had been properly instructed about the law before it issued its indictment.

The prosecutors, it turns out, had already handed the judge a redacted copy of the transcripts. In other words, they had blacked out key portions of the proceedings. This prompted the federal judge in the case, April Perry, to require the government to produce unredacted copies and to require any prosecutor “who participated in the decision to redact portions of the grand jury transcripts” to appear before her in person.

The unredacted transcripts were damning. The judge found that federal prosecutors had behaved improperly in at least three ways. They’d engaged in the forbidden practice of “vouching,” in which prosecutors essentially tell grand jurors to trust them, that the case is stronger than it seems. Vouching implies the existence of secret proof. But grand juries are supposed to make decisions based on the evidence put before them, not their personal trust in prosecutors.

Prosecutors had also impermissibly spoken to grand jurors outside the jury room, an act that could place additional pressure on grand jurors to yield to the prosecution’s version of events.

And finally, prosecutors had dismissed from deliberations those grand jurors who had disagreed with the government’s case. Once again, the prosecution was improperly placing its thumb on the scales of justice.

To make matters worse, prosecutors had redacted all this evidence. There was an obvious cover-up. The judge declared herself “incredibly shocked” and said that she had “never seen the types of prosecutorial behavior before a grand jury that I saw in those transcripts.”

She then said words no lawyer wants to hear. She raised the possibility of “sanctions for prosecutorial misconduct and for potential ethical violations, including lack of candor to the court.”

Moments later, after a brief recess, the government moved to dismiss the case against the remaining defendants, with prejudice (meaning that the government can’t charge them again for the same offense). The court immediately granted the motion — and a malicious chapter in the history of American justice came to a righteous end.

Don’t think for a moment that the Trump administration’s corruption and incompetence were confined to that case alone.

The Chicago Sun-Times maintains a database of criminal charges related to Operation Midway Blitz, the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Chicago, and it’s astounding. Out of more than 30 cases filed so far, two resulted in guilty pleas, five resulted in deferred prosecution agreements (slaps on the wrist), and two are still pending. Twenty-four other cases have failed. Twenty were dismissed. Grand juries refused to indict in at least three, and one resulted in acquittal.

This is a terrible record in court, and the facts of the cases are sometimes egregious. In the most notorious case, a federal agent shot a woman five times, and the administration publicly accused her of being a domestic terrorist, then charged her with assault — only to dismiss the case after an overwhelming amount of evidence (including body camera footage) contradicted the government’s account.

The Chicago cases are collapsing just as the federal government is announcing a new round of criminal indictments, this time against protesters in Minnesota. Last Tuesday, for example, the Department of Justice announced that it had charged 15 members of a group called Direct Action Minnesota with, among other things, assaulting federal officers, interstate stalking and interstate threats.

We don’t yet know enough to evaluate those cases, but one thing is clear: The federal government has lost the benefit of the doubt. Or, as Judge Perry said in Chicago, “I do believe deeply in the presumption of regularity and that most government attorneys are doing the best they can to do the right thing. That trust has been broken.”

But there is a silver lining in the dark cloud. In Chicago, the Trump administration has blinked. It’s not just refusing to contest the payment of attorneys’ fees; U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros — the same person who presided over these corrupt prosecutions — has changed his tune.

In May, he announced a series of “sweeping reforms” to his office’s grand jury procedures as part of a “remediation plan” to prevent future misconduct.

When I’m in my more optimistic moments, I think we’ll look back at last year as the high-water mark of Trumpism, when the combination of arrogance after Trump’s victory and the inherent authoritarianism of the Trumpist project led to a unique period of state violence and legal corruption.

And now, my optimistic self says, the justice system is reasserting itself. The combination of personal courage, legal persistence and judicial independence is preserving due process and the American system of justice.

But optimism is no cause for complacency. Federal prosecutors in Illinois may be chastened, but Todd Blanche, the man who announced the bogus prosecution of the Broadview Six in the first place, is Trump’s nominee to replace Pam Bondi as the attorney general of the United States.

If he is confirmed, expect more vindictive prosecutions. Expect more prosecutorial misconduct. And expect more federal judges (and more American citizens) to say, along with Judge Perry in Illinois, that their trust is broken.

Why? Because the Trump administration is the nation’s chief threat to the rule of law.

 

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