Trump is turning the US military into a political prop
US military
Trump is turning the US military into a political prop
Jan-Werner Müller
The military has been recast in a partisan, performative mold all according to the presidents logic of impunity
Mon 17 Nov 2025 06.00 EST
Of all the reasons Americans have been losing sleep recently hunger, canceled flights, Democrats betraying them the most ominous has to do with an institution usually absent from discussions about the fate of our democracy: the military. No need to be starry-eyed about US imperialism and what has long been criticized as an ever-expanding national security state; one can still appreciate that it is a good thing if generals do not take sides in politics just ask anyone from the many countries around the world where they do. But
a pattern is becoming clear: Donald Trump is purging the higher ranks based on his prejudices and demands for loyalty; the military is being turned into a partisan instrument and a political prop; more dangerous still, the president is instilling the logic of impunity that has come to characterize his entire approach to governance.
Figures deemed too close to Trump critics, such as general Mark Milley, have seen promotions delayed or canceled; those targeted by far-right influencers might face professional backlash. Trump used Maga-fied soldiers as background to a Fort Bragg speech, violating longstanding norms against instrumentalizing state institutions for partisan purposes.
Every violation becomes a test of who will be loyal: critics the potentially disloyal will identify themselves.
With every illegal order, such as attacking boats in the Caribbean, he manages to have those who carry them out compromise themselves morally and potentially render themselves liable for criminal prosecution, thereby generating an incentive for members of the military to make sure Trumpists stay in power.
At the same time, prominent pardons most recently of those trying to steal the 2020 election establish the promise of impunity. As plenty of observers have pointed out,
under Trump, law will protect the Maga faithful but will not bind them; those declared the presidents enemies will be bound by the law, but not be protected by it. It is not an accident that Pete Hegseths first 15 minutes of fame consisted of passionate pleas on Fox to let those accused of war crimes go unpunished.
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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/nov/17/trump-politics-military-pentagon-hegseth