Mr. Trump, you would've been lucky to have Dan Davis on your team
The retired Army Lt. Colonel was reportedly up for a
top job with Tulsi but was the target of a smear campaign
Mar 12, 2025
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/daniel-davis/?
Earlier today the Jewish Insider magazine ran a story saying that the White House tapped retired Lt.
Col. Danny Davis for Deputy Director of National Intelligence, working under
the newly confirmed DNI Tulsi Gabbard. It was a hit piece by a pro-Israel
platform that primarily focused on Davis's critical views — published only in
articles and on his popular podcast — on Gaza and Iran.
Within hours, he was informed there would be no job,
Responsible Statecraft has confirmed. "Investigative journalist"
Laura Loomer celebrated. We are sure neoconservative radio jock Mark
Levin, who helped spread the Insider story to his 4.9 million followers on Wednesday,
celebrated. We should not. President Trump should not.
Danny is a friend whose astute, informed military
analysis has graced these pages over the last four years. I've had the pleasure
of interviewing him countless times since 2009 when on active duty he sent a
report to Congress and published an article excoriating the Afghanistan War generals—
including the much vaunted Stanley McChrystal — for essentially lying to the
American people.
In 2009 he had just returned from an inspection tour
of the country and was pretty much shocked when what he saw there didn't
line up with what the military was telling Congress and the mediahere.
"I did not need to witness dramatic improvements to be reassured, but
merely hoped to see evidence of positive trends, to see companies or battalions
produce even minimal but sustainable progress."
"Instead, I witnessed the absence of success on
virtually every level."
From his explosive Armed Forces Journal article, which
is well worth reading today:
When it comes to deciding what matters are worth
plunging our nation into war and which are not, our senior leaders owe it to
the nation and to the uniformed members to be candid — graphically, if
necessary — in telling them what’s at stake and how expensive potential success
is likely to be. U.S. citizens and their elected representatives can decide if
the risk to blood and treasure is worth it.
That is the very essence of civilian control of the
military. The American people deserve better than what they’ve gotten from
their senior uniformed leaders over the last number of years. Simply telling
the truth would be a good start.
Today, more than 20 years later, everything he said
about the war has been born out. The truth was out there and our military and
civilian leadership tried to keep it from us — until they
couldn't.
It may be obvious but that is exactly what Secretary
of Defense Pete Hegseth and DNI Gabbard said they wanted to bring to the table
— a refreshing, dramatic shift from the status quo, which had become sclerotic,
secretive, and punishing of dissent. Gabbard herself is an Iraq War-era veteran
who risked her career to tell uncomfortable truths about American foreign
policy and war. Her very public statements about bad Washington policies and
the special interests leading us unto unnecessary wars aligned well with
Danny's important work over the last several years.
So it is not surprising that the most strident voices
in the War Party, particularly pro-Israel hawks trying desperately to manage
the remembered history of the 9/11 wars, had it in for him. He is an anathema
to everything they have stood for over the last two decades: he is against the
U.S. trying to impose its interests and values on the world via foreign regime
change, he believes the military is overextended and needlessly placed in
harm's way overseas, and he has criticized the military industrial complex for risking troop readiness and basic
conventional warfighting capabilities by deferring to the war profiteers in the
industry. He has also echoed George Washington's warning about entangling
alliances in his own warnings about unconditional aid to Israel and Ukraine.
Just recently he told me that the entire current generation of generals
and admirals need to be replaced so that the military can reform itself, which
begins with promoting officers based on merit, not politics and risk aversion.
To me this is the kind of America First guy that the
administration needed. He is a Christian conservative with a stern moral
compass and had been hopeful for the new administration and its early foreign
policy moves. He risked his reputation in 2009, losing out on a typical
post-military career in some cushy sinecure mucking it up with other
establishmentarians planning the next war, or worse, a board seat at Lockheed
or Northrop Grumman. Instead, he has been toiling away at the truth. And this
is how the system rewards him. Shame.
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