The president is also being greeted at West Point by a backlash from hundreds of former cadets who issued an unusual public rebuke on Thursday of their fellow graduates who are serving the president, including Esper and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The two are among a number of members of the class of 1986 in high levels of the administration.
“When leaders betray public faith through deceitful rhetoric, quibbling, or the appearance of unethical behavior, it erodes public trust,” the Concerned Members of the Long Gray Line wrote in a post on Medium. “When fellow graduates acquiesce to bullying, and fail to defend honorable subordinates, it harms the nation and the Long Gray Line.”
They also urged their fellow West Point graduates to resist the president’s impulse to use the military as a political prop. “Politicization of the Armed Forces puts at risk the bond of trust between the American military and American society. Should this trust be ruptured, the damage to the nation would be incalculable,” they wrote.
Some see the West Point visit as a perfect opportunity to change the tone of the conversation, starting with the military.
“It does seem the relationship between the White House and the Pentagon — the leadership in the Pentagon — is worsening,” said Chris Jenks, a retired Army officer who worked for the Defense Department’s general counsel under Trump and now teaches law at Southern Methodist University. “It’s now even public.”
Others said the setting offers a unique backdrop for easing tensions in a nation buffeted by historic challenges, ranging from economic hardship to disease and lingering racial inequality that has led to the recent nationwide protests.
The West Point Class of 2020 is one of the most diverse in the academy’s history. Of the 1,105 graduates, 12 are international cadets, 229 are women, 132 are African American, 103 are Asian/Pacific Islander, 101 are Hispanic and 10 are Native American, the academy says.