Earlier, Trump accused General Mile of betrayal for the phone calls he spent with his Chinese counterpart during the last weeks of his first Trump presidency, including the riots in the US Capitol building in 2021.
General Milli was reportedly using one of the calls to assure China that the US would not launch a nuclear strike. On social networks, the president called these calls “the act is so outrageous that in times, the punishment would be death!”
General Mill, however, testified that the calls were agreed with other defense secretaries.
It was in the book war of Bob Woodward, published last year that General Mill quotes, calling Trump “fascist to the main” and “the most dangerous man for this country.”
And in 2023, when speaking with the last speech as the chairman of the headquarters, General Mill said that the military did not take the oath to the “dictator”.
Many comment were considered as a reference to Trump, a man who first of all allocated him to work.
Speaking to the alleged undermining of Trump General Mile, the new Chief of Staff of Defense said on Wednesday: “The undermining of the command chain is aggressive for our national security.
“And the recovery of accountability is a priority for the Ministry of Defense under the leadership of President Trump.”
On the eve of Trump’s return to the White House last week, the president who left, Joe Biden released General Mill – and several others, including Fusy – about the pardon in the event that they face retaliation from Trump.
The Biden’s statement said that the sides should “be mistaken as recognition”, that any of those who cover “interaction in any violations”.
General Mill thanked Biden for moving and said he did not want to spend the rest of his life, “fighting those who could unfairly seek retribution for perceived reasons.”
“I do not want to put my family, my friends and those with whom I served as a result of distraction, costs and anxiety,” he said.
The news that General Milli was deprived of his security and security details was confirmed in a statement by a BBC CBS News partner.
The Ministry of Defense of the General Inspector also said “to conduct an investigation into the facts and circumstances of General Mile’s behavior so that the secretary could determine whether it is appropriate to restore the definition of his military class,” the statement said.
The new Trump administration also withdrew the security protection for its former Secretary of State Mike Pump, his former national security adviser John Bolton and his former Iranian Messenger Brian Huke.
In the hours after Trump’s second inauguration, Trump officials also removed a portrait from the Pentagon, which reflects General Mill as the chairman of the joint chiefs of the staff.