An investigation into the machinery of Donald Trump's second administration reveals how a core group of advisors—Stephen Miller, Pete Hegseth, Susie Wiles, Dan Scavino, Karoline Leavitt, James Blair, and Vince Haley—are translating presidential authority into concrete policy through immigration enforcement, military operations, personnel control, and institutional reorganization. Miller's documented influence has produced more than 200 executive orders targeting immigration, while Hegseth faces bipartisan congressional scrutiny over a Pentagon Inspector General report finding he violated protocols by sharing classified information on Signal and over controversial Caribbean military strikes. Scavino now controls "almost all positions in government" through the Presidential Personnel Office. This examination of Trump's first eleven months back in office documents how loyalty-based staffing, agency reorganizations, and centralized decision-making are reshaping federal institutions in ways that may outlast this administration.
Tag: Department of Defense
Examining the Implications of Mass Leadership Dismissals Under the Trump Administration
Between January and November 2025, the Trump administration dismissed or forced into retirement more than a dozen senior military officers in what represents the most extensive peacetime purge of military leadership in modern American history. The dismissals included the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff—removed less than 17 months into his statutory four-year term—the first woman to serve on the Joint Chiefs, the commanders of the Coast Guard, Navy SEALs, Navy Reserve, U.S. Cyber Command, and the National Security Agency, as well as all three service judge advocates general simultaneously.
Five former secretaries of defense, representing both Republican and Democratic administrations, issued an extraordinary joint letter calling for congressional hearings, warning that the dismissals raised "troubling questions about the administration's desire to politicize the military" and removed legal constraints on presidential power. The scale and manner of these actions—combined with the administration's explicit emphasis on personal loyalty and the firing of officers who provided intelligence assessments contradicting presidential claims—threaten the apolitical character of the U.S. military that has been a cornerstone of American democracy for more than two centuries.
This analysis examines the documented facts of these dismissals, their implications for civil-military relations, national security effectiveness, and constitutional governance, and what these unprecedented actions reveal about the evolving relationship between civilian and military authority in the United States. The article draws on official government statements, news reports from multiple sources, congressional testimony, and analysis from former defense officials to provide a comprehensive assessment of a critical juncture in American military history.