Trump to nominate retired marine Gen. James Mattis, as Secretary of defence
President-elect
Donald Trump will nominate retired Marine Gen. James Mattis as his
secretary of defense, he announced Thursday in Cincinnati at the
beginning of his post-election tour.
"We
are going to appoint 'Mad Dog' Mattis as our secretary of defense. But
we're not announcing it until Monday so don't tell anybody," Trump said
at his rally, adding later, "They say he's the closest thing to Gen.
George Patton that we have and it's about time."
Mattis,
66, would join a Trump national security team that already includes
retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn as national security adviser and
Rep. Mike Pompeo as CIA director.
The
retired four-star general, known as "Mad Dog," was lauded for his
leadership of Marines in the 2004 Battle of Falluja in Iraq -- one of
the bloodiest of the war.
But he attracted controversy in 2005 when he said "it's fun to shoot some people" while addressing service members in San Diego.
Mattis'
selection could put him in position to temper both Flynn and Joseph
Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and an appointee of
President Barack Obama -- whose generals Trump has said he distrusts.
Mattis has already proven to have the President-elect's ear. After meeting at Trump's New Jersey golf club last month, Trump said Mattis gave him a new perspective on waterboarding, a torture tool he has pledged to reinstate.
"General
Mattis is a strong, highly dignified man. I met with him at length and I
asked him that question. I said, 'What do you think of waterboarding?'"
Trump told The New York Times. "He said -- I was surprised -- he said,
'I've never found it to be useful.' He said,
'I've always found, give me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers and I do better with that than I do with torture.'"
"I'm
not saying it changed my mind. Look, we have people that are chopping
off heads and drowning people in steel cages and we're not allowed to
waterboard," Trump said. But I'll tell you what, I was impressed by that
answer."
Mattis would also need a
waiver from Congress in order to be confirmed. A decades-old legal
statute bars service members from quickly entering civilian positions,
which would otherwise prevent Mattis from being eligible for the job.
Rep.
Adam Schiff, a ranking member of the House Intelligence Commmittee,
told CNN's Jim Sciutto Wednesday, however, that the regulation would
pose as more of an inconvenience for Mattis's confirmation, rather than
barring him from the job.
"It will
certainly be an issue. I don't ultimately think it will be a bar
because I think he is so well thought of that he can overcome peoples'
reservations of that," Schiff said. "My guess is because his reputation
is so strong and, frankly, because there's enough concern among
Democrats about some of the President-elect's other choices, they'll be a
desire to amend the statute if that's what' necessary and I believe it
would be necessary.
In Mattis,
Trump has a nominee who was held in high regard throughout the ranks of
the Marine Corps during his 44 years of service. A seasoned combat
commander, he led a task force into southern Afghanistan in 2001 and a
Marine division at the time of the Iraq invasion in 2003. He was later
promoted to run US Central Command in 2010 -- a post that gave him
command responsibility for all US forces in the Middle East. He also was
an outspoken critic of the Iran nuclear deal. He also has served as a
commander of a major NATO strategic command, Allied Command
Transformation, in Norfolk, Virginia.
Mattis
butted heads with the Obama administration as head of US Central
Command from 2010 to 2013 over the need to prepare for potential
conflict with Iran.
He was a critic
of the Iran nuclear deal and said at the Aspen Security Forum in 2013,
when asked about his top concerns as head of US Central Command, "Iran,
Iran, Iran."
Why is Mattis called "Mad Dog"?
Mattis
earned the nickname "Mad Dog" after leading combat troops into the
Persian Gulf War in 1991, as well as Afghanistan and Iraq in the early
2000s.
He was called "Mad Dog"
after the 2004 battle of Fallujah in Iraq, where he led British and
American troops against Iraqi insurgents. He has backed up the nickname
with off-color remarks, such as his 2005 declaration in a panel
discussion about the Taliban that "it's fun to shoot people."
He is also a bachelor and an avid reader and student of military history, earning a second nickname: "The Warrior Monk."
CNN
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