Navigation
Join our brand new verified AMN Telegram channel and get important news uncensored!
  •  

Acting SECDEF Miller says ‘time to come home’ from ‘perpetual war’ in midnight memo

Marines and sailors load onto a KC-130 aircraft, at Camp Bastion, Afghanistan.(Photo by Staff Sgt. John Jackson/Released)
November 14, 2020

On Saturday, acting Secretary of Defense Chris Miller, in his first message to U.S. troops and Department of Defense employees, said “We are not a people of perpetual war” and “Now, it’s time to come home.”

Miller addressed his memo to all Department of Defense employees when the Pentagon released it at around 12 a.m. ET on Saturday.

“As we prepare for the future, we remain committed to finishing the war that Al Qaida brought to our shores in 2001,” Miller wrote. “This war isn’t over. We are on the verge of defeating Al Qaida and its associates, but we must avoid our past strategic error of failing to see the fight through to the finish. Indeed, this fight has been long, our sacrifices have been enormous and many are weary of war – I’m one of them – but this is the critical phase in which we transition our efforts from a leadership to supporting role. We are not a people of perpetual war – it is the antithesis of everything for which we stand and for which our ancestors fought. All wars must end.”

Miller took on the acting defense secretary position on Monday as Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper.

“Ending wars requires compromise and partnership. We met the challenge; we gave it our all,” Miller’s remarks continued. “Now, it’s time to come home.”

The Pentagon shake-up and Miller’s comments Saturday come as Trump has pushed in recent months to bring U.S. troops back from Afghanistan. In October, Trump tweeted his support for having U.S. troops in Afghanistan “home by Christmas.”

The Washington Post reported Saturday, based on unnamed sources, that Esper sent a memo to the White House this month, warning against further reducing U.S. troops in Afghanistan, citing concerns about ongoing violence and potential damage to alliances in the region if the U.S. were to move forward with a rapid pullout.

Miller first served as one of Trump’s National Security Council aides and Senior Director for Counterterrorism and Transnational Threats.

In January 2020, Miller assumed the Department of Defense role as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict.

In August, Miller received Senate confirmation to become Director of the National Counterterrorism Center in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

Here is Miller’s full memo:

MEMORANDUM FOR ALL DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EMPLOYEES

SUBJECT: Initial Message to the Department

Apart from leading fighting men and women in combat in Afghanistan and Iraq earlier in my career, serving as your Acting Secretary of Defense is the greatest privilege of my professional life.

Our mission at the Department of Defense has been – and remains – serving the people of the United States with honor and integrity so that they may continue to enjoy the blessings of freedom and liberty. To do this, we must take care of each other, focus on outcomes. and remain the most dynamic and innovative organization and fighting force in the world.

With a foundation built upon respect, professionalism, competence, and honesty, we will continue to transform our Department to compete in a new strategic environment. This requires changes in organizations, skills, and decision-making processes. But we know how to do this. We have done it before – and no one on earth does it better. We will continue to aggressively challenge established paradigms, maintain and modify those that have value. and courageously discard those that have run their course.

Today, with enormous gratitude to those who came before us. we face the future with confidence and humility. We are the inheritors of the genius of our founders and generations of successors who created an organization ruthlessly committed to excellence, non-partisanship, and servant leadership. This motivates me enormously and allows me to face the daily challenges of our chosen calling.

The opportunity to again work with all of you and serve as your leader is something that could only happen in America. After all, I still see myself as a kid from Iowa who enlisted to serve his Nation, be challenged, and do something that matters – which is what each of you do every day. I am a better person thanks to the opportunities that the Army and the Department of Defense provided me, and my story, while not distinctive, is emblematic of the boundless opportunities that are available in this ongoing experiment of democracy. To each of you, I offer my utmost gratitude and respect for your willingness to sacrifice so much to our vital mission.

My thoughts. hopes, dreams, and prayers are with all of you and your loved ones as we resolutely lean into the future and update our processes and structures to guarantee that our Armed Forces remain preeminent and the beacon of justice and goodness in the world.

As we prepare for the future. we remain committed to finishing the war that Al Qaida brought to our shores in 2001. This war isn’t over. We are on the verge of defeating Al Qaida and its associates, but we must avoid our past strategic error of failing to see the fight through to the finish. Indeed, this fight has been long, our sacrifices have been enormous. and many are weary of war – I’m one of them – but this is the critical phase in which we transition our efforts from a leadership to supporting role. We are not a people of perpetual war – it is the antithesis of everything for which we stand and for which our ancestors fought. All wars must end.

Ending wars requires compromise and partnership. We met the challenge; we gave it our all. Now, it’s time to come home. As I consider the scarring but ennobling experience many of us have undergone during this war, the words of Abraham Lincoln during his second Inaugural Address bring me strength, perspective, and confidence:

“With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan – to do all which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.”

To all of our Soldiers, Sailors. Airmen, Marines, Coast Guardsmen, Space Professionals, and civilians: Continue to be bold. Continue to be courageous. Continue to set the example of selfless service that is the envy of the world and an example for our citizens. Our tasks are not easy. The burden is great. But together we will take our Nation to new heights. What a magnificent time to be a part of the Department of Defense and the United States Armed Forces. Our Nation needs you, and I’m enormously proud of you. I am humbled and honored to be on your team.

Christopher C. Miller

Acting