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Joint Chiefs of Staff chair nominee John Caine promises to be 'apolitical' and candid

Joint Chiefs of Staff chair nominee John Caine promises to be 'apolitical' and candid

Yahoo01-04-2025

April 1 (UPI) -- Retired Lt. Gen. John "Dan" Caine promised to stay out of politics and only provide President Donald Trump with honest assessments if confirmed as general and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Members of the Senate Armed Forces Committee subjected Caine to a 2.5-hour confirmation hearing Tuesday morning at the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C.
During opening comments, ranking member Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said he was "deeply concerned" that the Trump administration fired former JCS chairman Gen. C.Q. Brown and several other JCS members with no reason cited.
Reed suggested the firings were politically motivated but said he is "encouraged" by Caine's qualifications as a former F-16 pilot with thousands of flight hours and multiple deployments followed by many years of experience in the Pentagon.
Honest assessments, even when unpopular
"If confirmed, you will serve as the principal military adviser to the president, the National Security Council and the secretary of Defense," Reed said. "I expect you to pledge to always provide your best military advice to the president and secretary of Defense, even if that advice is not what they want to hear."
He said the military has been dragged into political fights, public trust in the military is eroding, and military trust in civilian leadership has been shaken.
"I'd like to know how you would improve the civilian-military relationship," Reed said.
Caine said his father flew F-4 Phantom fighters in Vietnam, his mother was a pediatric critical care nurse, and he learned about service from his parents and other family members who served.
He said the nation faces a rising global threat and mentioned the then-current times in Beijing, Moscow, Pyongyang and Tehran.
"Our nation faces an unprecedented rising global risk," Caine said.
"Our adversaries are advancing, global nuclear threats are on the rise, and deterrence is paramount," he added. "Our national defense requires urgent action and reform across the board."
He said the nation's number-one job is to "create peace through overwhelming strength and if need be fight and win our nation's wars."
'Proper information' only in 'proper channels'
Reed asked if the Yemen strikes on Houthi positions should have been conducted using the unsecured Signal app.
Caine said he always has "conveyed the proper information in the proper channels" and the military always should preserve the element of surprise.
Reed also asked Caine if he ever said he "loved" Trump, would "kill" for him and wore a Make America Great Again hat.
Caine said he never said such things and never wore political merchandise.
He agreed with Reed that the military should stay "apolitical" and said he would keep the military non-partisan and "speak truth to power every day."
Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., asked Caine how he would improve the military's nuclear efficiencies and maintain the nuclear threat.
He said it would be an area of "emphasis" and supports adding options to the nation's nuclear arsenal to enhance the military's deterrence capabilities.
Caine told Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., he does not consider the Women Peace and Security legislation as a "DEI program" when asked if he does and said it helps the military understand the "full spectrum of challenges ahead of us."
Shaheen asked if the United States should continue to control NATO, to which Caine said he would defer to the president on policy but said it's important for U.S. forces to be commanded by U.S. leaders.
"I value our allies and partners," Caine said, adding that consulting with them regarding NATO-related decisions is a "significant portion of the job."
'Candid and best military advice' only
Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., described Caine as the kind of person who did not seek the nomination as chairman of the JCS and asked if Caine would provide his "candid and best military advice" even if it's not what the president of secretary of defense want to hear.
Caine said he attended the Virginia Military Institute and his barracks overlooked a statue of Gen. George C. Marshall.
"If I failed to provide my candid advice to the secretary [of Defense], the [National Security Council] or the president, I think Gen. Marshall would climb out of his grave and hunt me down."
The matter of the recent Signal app chat among members of the Trump administration continued to be raised, but Caine declined to comment further and noted that an inquiry into the matter is active.
Caine became a commissioned officer after completing the ROTC program at VMI in 1990 and earned a master's in Air Warfare from the American Military University, according to his U.S. Air Force biography.
He served as an F-16 pilot and logged more than 2,800 hours of flight time, including more than 150 combat hours.
Caine also was a part-time member of the National Guard, an entrepreneur and an investor from 2009 to 2016.
He has been a national security adviser and taught courses related to national security, military leadership and joint warfare.

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How K Street reacted to Musk's bombshell
How K Street reacted to Musk's bombshell

Politico

time34 minutes ago

  • Politico

How K Street reacted to Musk's bombshell

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Education Secretary Linda McMahon struggles with basic math when trying to add up proposed budget cuts
Education Secretary Linda McMahon struggles with basic math when trying to add up proposed budget cuts

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Education Secretary Linda McMahon struggles with basic math when trying to add up proposed budget cuts

Secretary of Education Linda McMahon was given a math lesson during a Senate hearing on Tuesday when Senator Jack Reed pointed out that $1.5 multiplied by 10 is not 'over a trillion dollars' but actually $15 billion. Sitting before the appropriations subcommittee that focuses on education, McMahon nodded her head along as Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana mistakenly claimed that the U.S. spends '$1,580,000' on federal grant programs, known as TRIO and GEAR UP, per year and that after 10 years, that adds up to be 'over a trillion dollars.' The U.S. actually spends $1.58 billion per year on the programs, which does not add up to more than a trillion after 10 years. But, McMahon did not correct Kennedy's math error. However, Reed, the senator from Rhode Island, did. 'I'm not a great mathematician, but I think you were talking about a trillion dollars? I believe $1.5 billion times 10 is $15 billion, that's a little bit off from a trillion dollars,' Reed said. McMahon responded, 'I think the budget cuts $1.2 billion for TRIO.' 'Well, $1.2 billion that would be $12 billion, not a trillion dollars,' Reed replied. 'Ok,' McMahon said. The math blunder was part of McMahon's testimony about President Donald Trump's 2026 budget proposal, which includes sweeping cuts to the Department of Education – drastically impacting education grants such as TRIO or GEAR UP. The Independent has asked the Department of Education for comment. TRIO, a federal program comprised of various grants, are some of the Education Department's largest investments aimed at assisting low-income or first-generation college students or individuals with disabilities to advance through the academic pipeline. In 2024, the Education Department provided $1.191 billion for the program. GEAR UP, a federal grant program, assists low-income students preparing to enter postsecondary education. In 2024, the Education Department provided $388 million for the program. But under Trump's proposed 'skinny budget,' essentially all of the TRIO and GEAR UP grants would be eliminated. It's part of his efforts to shutter the Education Department. During the hearing, Senator Susan Collins of Maine aired concerns about the cuts to TRIO, saying she had 'seen the lives of countless first-generation and low-income students, not only in Maine, but across the country… changed by the TRIO program.' Education advocacy groups such as the Council for Opportunity in Education and the Institute for College Access & Success have condemned the proposed budget, saying it would negatively impact millions of students – particularly those of low-income households.

For Pride Month, homophobe Hegseth orders Navy to strip Harvey Milk's name from ship
For Pride Month, homophobe Hegseth orders Navy to strip Harvey Milk's name from ship

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

For Pride Month, homophobe Hegseth orders Navy to strip Harvey Milk's name from ship

The Department of Defense is observing LGBTQ+ Pride Month by stripping the name of gay rights leader Harvey Milk from a Navy ship. Keep up with the latest in + news and politics. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered the name change, reports. The timing during Pride Month is intentional, an official with the department told the outlet. The official announcement is set for June 13, but obtained a memo from the Office of the Secretary of the Navy that outlined plans to rename the ship. The Defense Department source said Hegseth instructed Navy Secretary John Phelan to implement the renaming in keeping with the restoration of so-called warrior culture. The USNS Harvey Milk was launched in November 2021, when Joe Biden was president. It was the first military ship named after an out gay person. It is a replenishment oiler, bringing fuel to other ships at sea. It was the second in a group of oilers named after civil rights icons, the first being the late U.S. Rep. John Lewis. Milk's name was selected in 2016 by then-Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, and the oiler was built by General Dynamics. The Navy is also recommending the renaming of other ships in this group, CBS News reports. They include USNS Thurgood Marshall, USNS Ruth Bader Ginsburg, USNS Harriet Tubman, USNS Dolores Huerta, USNS Lucy Stone, USNS Cesar Chavez, and USNS Medgar Evers. Renaming of ships is rare, and the documents reviewed by the news outlets don't say what the new names will be. Milk, a gay man, was the first out member of the LGBTQ+ community to be elected to public office in California and one of the first in the nation. He was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977 and had an extensive career in activism, including a successful fight against a California ballot measure that would have barred gays and lesbians from teaching in the state's public schools. He and San Francisco Mayor George Moscone were assassinated in 1978 by a disgruntled former city supervisor, Dan White. Milk had joined the Navy in 1951 after graduating from college. He attended Officer Candidate School in Newport, Rhode Island, and later was a diving instructor in San Diego. In 1954, he was threatened with a court-martial for committing a 'homosexual act,' but he decided to resign rather than face trial. He received an 'other than honorable' discharge and left the Navy with the rank of lieutenant junior grade. In 2021, the Navy asked his nephew Stuart Milk, who has carried on his uncle's legacy as an LGBTQ+ rights activist, if he wanted the discharge upgraded, but Stuart Milk said it should stand as a reminder of the unfair treatment gay service members and others received. The renaming of the USNS Harvey Milk and other ships reflects the hostility of Hegseth and Donald Trump to the LGBTQ+ community and diversity in general. For instance, shortly after being confirmed as Defense secretary, Hegseth issued a directive banning staff from spending work time or resources on identity celebrations such as Pride Month, Black History Month, and Women's History Month. Plus the Defense Department is expelling transgender people from the military. "This is absolutely shameful. Harvey Milk was a hero. He was a veteran who served our country. He died for our community," gay California state Sen. Scott Weiner said on social media. "Brave LGBTQ veterans worked for years to achieve the naming of a ship for Harvey. Now Trump & Hegseth are wiping it away due to straight up bigotry. They're determined to erase LGBTQ people from all aspects of public life." U.S. Rep. and House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi issued a statement to CBS News denouncing the renaming plans. 'The reported decision by the Trump Administration to change the names of the USNS Harvey Milk and other ships in the John Lewis-class is a shameful, vindictive erasure of those who fought to break down barriers for all to chase the American Dream,' said Pelosi, who represents a San Francisco district. 'Our military is the most powerful in the world — but this spiteful move does not strengthen our national security or the 'warrior' ethos,' she continued. 'Instead, it is a surrender of a fundamental American value: to honor the legacy of those who worked to build a better country.' While the Navy may be erasing Milk, his legacy will endure elsewhere. The Harvey Milk Foundation, established by Stuart Milk, works for LGBTQ+ rights around the world. May 22, Harvey Milk's birthday, is observed as Harvey Milk Day in California. And there are plans to honor him and other LGBTQ+ leaders with improvements to Harvey Milk Plaza in San Francisco.

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