HomeNewsOpinionIn a democracy, a military swears loyalty to the nation and flag, not leaders

In a democracy, a military swears loyalty to the nation and flag, not leaders

A purge of US military brass on ideological grounds by the Trump administration foregrounds the fundamental tenet of civil-military equation in a democracy. Civilian oversight along with military loyalty to the nation. In China, military is subordinate to the communist party and not the state, a radically different approach. Trump’s moves suggest an attempt to reorient civil-military relations in the world’s oldest democracy

February 26, 2025 / 11:46 IST
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Many democracies India included have had their own experiences of civil-military discord.

US President Donald Trump fired the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), Air Force General CQ Brown, along with five other admirals and generals on February 21 in an unprecedented shake-up of the top US military leadership.

This radical decision – what his critics in the US legislature have termed as being “deeply dangerous” for the country – was taken a day after the Trump team completed one month in office and has left the US military dazed even as hundreds of civilian employees in the US Department of Defense are being laid off.

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No specific reason was provided by the White House for this unceremonious sacking of America’s top military leaders – General Brown and Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the CNO (Chief of Naval Operations). Both of them are highly accomplished four star officers but the pattern is revealing of the Trump purge list: citizens of colour and women.

It has been reported that President Trump plans to appoint a retired three-star general to the post of JCS - Lieutenant General Dan Caine. This is also unprecedented and the JCS appointment, which needs US Senate approval, may face some hurdles.