Trump fires chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and two other military
officers
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[February 22, 2025]
By TARA COPP and LOLITA C. BALDOR
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump abruptly fired Air Force Gen.
CQ Brown Jr. as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Friday,
sidelining a history-making fighter pilot and respected officer as part
of a campaign led by his defense secretary to rid the military of
leaders who support diversity and equity in the ranks.
The ouster of Brown, only the second Black general to serve as chairman,
is sure to send shock waves through the Pentagon. His 16 months in the
job had been consumed with the war in Ukraine and the expanded conflict
in the Middle East.
“I want to thank General Charles ‘CQ’ Brown for his over 40 years of
service to our country, including as our current Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. He is a fine gentleman and an outstanding leader, and I
wish a great future for him and his family,” Trump posted on social
media.
Brown’s public support of Black Lives Matter after the police killing of
George Floyd had made him fodder for the administration's wars against
“wokeism” in the military. His ouster is the latest upheaval at the
Pentagon, which plans to cut 5,400 civilian probationary workers
starting next week and identify $50 billion in programs that could be
cut next year to redirect those savings to fund Trump’s priorities.
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Trump said he's nominating retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Dan “Razin” Caine
to be the next chairman. Caine is a career F-16 pilot who served on
active duty and in the National Guard, and was most recently the
associate director for military affairs at the CIA, according to his
military biography.
Caine’s military service includes combat roles in Iraq, special
operations postings and positions inside some of the Pentagon’s most
classified special access programs.
However, he has not had key assignments identified in law as
prerequisites for the job, including serving as either the vice
chairman, a combatant commander or a service chief. That requirement
could be waived if the “president determines such action is necessary in
the national interest.”
More Pentagon firings
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, in a statement praising both Caine and
Brown, announced the firings of two additional senior officers: Chief of
Naval Operations Adm. Lisa Franchetti and Vice Chief of Staff of the Air
Force Gen. Jim Slife.
Franchetti becomes the second top female military officer to be fired by
the Trump administration. Trump fired Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Linda
Fagan just a day after he was sworn in.
A surface warfare officer, Franchetti has commanded at all levels,
heading U.S. 6th Fleet and U.S. Naval Forces Korea. She was the second
woman ever to be promoted to four-star admiral, and she did multiple
deployments, including as commander of a naval destroyer and two stints
as aircraft carrier strike group commander.
Slife led Air Force Special Operations Command prior to becoming the
service's vice chief of staff and had deployed to the Middle East and
Afghanistan.
He told The Associated Press on Friday: “The President and Secretary of
Defense deserve to have generals they trust and the force deserves to
have generals who have credibility with our elected and appointed
officials. While I’m disappointed to leave under these circumstances, I
wouldn’t want the outcome to be any different."
Trump has asserted his executive authority in a much stronger way in his
second term, removing most officials from the Biden administration even
though many of those positions are meant to carry over from one
administration to the next.
The chairman role was established in 1949 as an adviser to the president
and secretary of defense, as a way to filter all of the views of the
service chiefs and more readily provide that information to the White
House without the president having to reach out to each individual
military branch, according to an Atlantic Council briefing written by
retired Maj. Gen. Arnold Punaro. The role has no actual command
authority.
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Trump acted despite support for Brown among key members of Congress and
a seemingly friendly meeting with him in mid-December, when the two were
seated next to each other for a time at the Army-Navy football game.
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This image provided by the U.S. Air Force shows Lt. Gen. Dan Caine.
(U.S. Air Force via AP)
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The firing follows days of speculation after a list of officers,
including Brown, to be fired was circulated on Capitol Hill — but
notably was not sent via any formal notification to either of the
Republican chairmen of the House or Senate armed services
committees.
Sen. Roger Wicker, GOP chairman of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, didn't mention Caine's name in a statement Friday.
“I thank Chairman Brown for his decades of honorable service to our
nation,” Wicker said. “I am confident Secretary Hegseth and
President Trump will select a qualified and capable successor for
the critical position of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.”
Congressional Democratic leaders called out the firings as a direct
attempt to politicize the military.
“A professional, apolitical military that is subordinate to the
civilian government and supportive of the Constitution rather than a
political party is essential to the survival of our democracy,"
Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, ranking member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, said in a statement late Friday. “For the sake
of our troops and the well-being of every American, elected leaders
— especially Senate Republicans — must defend that enduring
principle against corrosive attempts to remake the military into a
partisan force.”
Brown risked discussing race
Brown’s future was called into question during the confirmation
hearing for Hegseth last month. Asked if he would fire Brown,
Hegseth responded, “Every single senior officer will be reviewed
based on meritocracy, standards, lethality and commitment to lawful
orders they will be given.”
Hegseth had previously taken aim at Brown. “First of all, you gotta
fire, you know, you gotta fire the chairman of Joint Chiefs,” he
said flatly in a podcast in November. And in one of his books, he
questioned whether Brown got the job because he was Black.
“Was it because of his skin color? Or his skill? We’ll never know,
but always doubt — which on its face seems unfair to CQ. But since
he has made the race card one of his biggest calling cards, it
doesn’t really much matter,” Hegseth wrote.
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As he walked into the Pentagon on his first day as defense chief on
Jan. 27, Hegseth was asked directly if he planned to fire Brown.
“I’m standing with him right now,” said Hegseth, patting Brown on
the back. “Look forward to working with him.”
Brown, who spent Friday visiting troops at the U.S.-Mexico border,
drew attention to himself for speaking out about the death of George
Floyd in 2020. While he knew it was risky, he said, discussions with
his wife and sons about the killing convinced him he needed to say
something.
As protests roiled the nation, Brown posted a video message to the
Air Force titled, “Here’s What I’m Thinking About.” He described the
pressures that came with being one of the few Black men in his unit.
He recalled pushing himself “to perform error-free” as a pilot and
officer his whole life, but still facing bias. He said he’d been
questioned about his credentials, even when he wore the same flight
suit and wings as every other pilot.
Brown’s path to the chairmanship was troubled — he was among the
more than 260 senior military officers whose nominations were
stalled for months by Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama.
But when the Senate vote was finally taken in September 2023, Brown
easily was confirmed by a vote of 89-8.
It had been 30 years since Colin Powell became the first Black
chairman, serving from 1989 to 1993. But while African Americans
made up 17.2% of the 1.3 million active-duty service members, only
9% of officers were Black, according to a 2021 Defense Department
report.
Brown’s service as chairman made history in that this was the first
time that both the defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, and the Joint
Chiefs chairman were Black.
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