Highlights:
A former quarterback at the University of Connecticut, he achieved short-lived internet fame in 2011 when a video of him throwing trick passes went viral. Trump liked having him around and soon made him his personal assistant, taking him along whenever he traveled. As the campaign ramped up, he became Trumpās ābody guy,ā carrying the candidateās bags and relaying messages.
he was also named director of the Presidential Personnel Office, which is responsible for the vetting, hiring, and firing of the four thousand political appointees who serve in the executive branch. McEntee may have never hired or fired anybody before in his life, but he was fiercely loyalāand for Trump, that made him the perfect choice for the job.
McEnteeās team reached the apex of its power after Trump lost the election in 2020. Within days, they orchestrated sweeping changes to the civilian leadership at the Pentagon that resulted in Defense Secretary Mark Esper and other top officials being fired. In preparing for Esperās ouster, McEntee and his team created a memo listing the Pentagon chiefās sins against Trump, arguing he āconsistently breaks from POTUSā direction, and has failed to see through his policies.ā
Trump fired Esper and replaced him with McEnteeās preferred successor, National Counterterrorism Center director and Army Special Forces veteran Christopher Miller. To serve as Millerās senior advisor, McEntee recruited a retired Army colonel named Douglas Macgregor, whose regular appearances on Fox News had caught the White Houseās attention. Chief among his qualifications was his penchant for praising Trumpās approach to US military involvement and calling for martial law along the US-Mexico border.
Three days after Macgregor arrived at the Pentagon, he called McEntee and told him he couldnāt accomplish any of the items on their handwritten to-do list without a signed order from the president. āHey, theyāre not going to do anything we want, or the president wants, without a directive,ā Macgregor told him, emphasizing the need for an official White House order signed by Trump. The Pentagonās stonewalling made sense, of course: You donāt make major changes to Americaās global defense posture based on a glorified Post-it note from the presidentās body guy. The order, Macgregor added, should focus on the top priority from McEnteeās listāAfghanistanāand it had to include a specific date for the complete withdrawal of all uniformed military personnel from the country. He suggested January 31, 2021.
McEntee and an assistant quickly typed up the directive, but they moved the Afghanistan withdrawal timeline up to January 15ājust five days before Trump was set to leave officeāand added a second mandate: a complete withdrawal of US troops from Somalia by December 31, 2020. McEntee, of course, didnāt know the first thing about drafting a presidential directiveālet alone one instructing the movement of thousands of servicemen and -women. He had two jobs in the White Houseāonly one of which he was qualified forāand neither one had anything to do with national security or the military. An order even 10 percent as consequential as the one McEntee was drafting would typically go through the National Security Council with input from the civilian leadership at the Pentagon, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the military commanders in the region. Instead, the guy who usually carried Trumpās bags was hammering it out on his computer, consulting with nobody but the retired colonel the president had just hired because he had seen him on cable TV.
Easy enough. The duo wrote up the order, had the president sign it, and sent it over to Kash Patel, the new acting defense secretaryās chief of staff. Chaos ensued. Upon receiving the order from his chief of staff, Christopher Miller called Joint Chiefs chairman Mark Milley to his office to discuss next steps. After reading the order, Milley told the January 6 Committee, he looked at Patel, who had just started working at the Pentagon three days earlier. āWho gave the president the military advice for this?ā Milley asked him. āDid you do this?ā āNo,ā Patel answered. āI had nothing to do with it.ā
Milley turned to the acting defense secretary. āDid you give the President military advice on this?ā he asked.
āNo. Not me,ā Miller answered. āOkay, well, weāve got to go over and see the president,ā Milley said, noting his job required him to provide military advice to the commander in chief. āIāve got duties to do here, constitutional duties. Iāve got to make sure heās properly advised.ā And with that, Miller and Milley went to the White House to see Robert OāBrien, Trumpās national security advisor. āRobert, whereās this coming from?ā Milley asked OāBrien. āIs this true?ā āIāve never seen it before,ā OāBrien told him.
They were joined in the meeting by retired lieutenant general Keith Kellogg, the national security advisor to Vice President Pence. āSomething is really wrong here,ā Kellogg said, reading through the order. āThis doesnāt look right.ā āYouāre telling me that thing is forged?ā Milley responded in disbelief. āThatās a forged piece of paper directing a military operation by the president of the United States? Thatās forged, Keith?ā Despite McEnteeās best effortsāwhich included not only the advice from Macgregor but several minutes of searching the internetāthe only part of the document that looked anything like an official presidential order was Trumpās signature at the bottom. But even that, Kellogg thought, could have been the work of an autopen used to mimic the presidentās autograph on thousands of unofficial letters sent out by the White House.
They found him where he spent most of his time after the November electionāin his private dining room next to the Oval Office, where the television on the wall was almost always on. Once the president confirmed he had indeed signed the document, OāBrien and Cipollone explained to him that such an order should go through some sort of process, and that an abrupt movement of so many US troops would be dangerous and unwise without proper planning. At the very least, they told him, such an order should be reviewed by White House lawyers.
āI said this would be very bad,ā OāBrien recalled telling Trump. āOur position is that because it didnāt go through any proper processāthe lawyers hadnāt cleared it, the staff [secretary] hadnāt cleared it, NSC [National Security Council] hadnāt cleared itāthat itās our position that the order is null and void.ā
All the seriously messed up stuff aside, this line made me giggle.