I worked at the National Security Council for 2 yrs and want to explain why yesterday’s decision to cut nearly everyone is dangerous. This purge will sacrifice our nation’s security so a handful of people can exert more political control. Here’s who wins and who loses. THREAD
WHY IT MATTERS: NSC doesn’t have armies/embassies; its power comes from controlling the Situation Room, meaning it’s the only entity that can force others to coordinate/debate. 2/13
I remember when DOD was hesitant to take action to stop a massacre on Sinjar Mountain but an NSC meeting in the SitRoom got everyone to support a plan that saved thousands of lives. 3/13
Global crises aren’t solved with one department or agency. They need a place to coordinate, deconflict, and put together the best recommendations possible for the President to make decisions. This is what a fully-staffed and well-oiled NSC does. 4/13
WHO WINS: By removing the mechanisms to coordinate, those who can seize the greatest amount of power will have the biggest voice in the room. Quietly, Tulsi Gabbard has taken steps this week to take over the “President’s Daily Brief.” This is a big deal. 5/13
The PDB is a daily exercise in determining what are the most important pieces of information for the President/Cabinet to see. Gabbard is taking this power from the CIA to reduce “dissent” of the MAGA worldview. 6/13 nytimes.com/2025/05/14/us/…
The NSC is the only other entity that has full access to the PDB and on a daily basis provides context and assessment on what’s written. Without the NSC staff and with the CIA’s role reduced, Tulsi grows stronger and can more directly shape what the President knows. 7/13
Vance has successfully maneuvered to get his own National Security Advisor to be the Deputy under Rubio. With Rubio often busy with his day job at State and absent from the White House, Vance’s guy will be in a strong place to drive. 8/13
It’s not just national security officials looking to seize the agenda who win, it’s conspiracy theorists like Laura Loomer who have set the tone that the only qualification to work in these critical jobs is fealty to an agenda. 9/13
WHO LOSES: First and foremost, the President and the country. Without staff, most of the coordination needed to inform good decision making will disappear. That empowers the two biggest departments: Defense and State, and other actors who elbow their way in with their own agendas. 10/13
There won’t be daily transparency of actions and decisions. There won’t be follow up to make sure actions are completed. When disputes arise between Departments, which happens constantly, there will be less ability to deliberate. Rubio and Hegseth can do what they want. 11/13
The NSC is meant to monitor potential crises across the globe and be quickly able to consider what our response should be. Without NSC professional, non-partisan staff, we increase blind spots, and we lose expertise and coordination that we have to keep our country safe. 12/13
National security is the last place where politics and power struggles belong, but that’s exactly what this move does. These cuts don’t make you safer, they just make a few people more powerful and less accountable. That’s the core of almost every decision made by this President, and sadly, we all have to pay the consequences. END
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Stephen Miller said White House was “actively looking at” options to suspend Habeas Corpus/due process in times of invasion/rebellion. Just hours later Miller posts these lies…but look at how he’s lying - saying that Members of Congress “riotously stormed and invaded.” MORE 1/9
First, the Members of Congress were at the facility conducting an oversight inspection. They are permitted by law to do so (DHS Appropriations Act, 2020, Sec. 532)
Here is ICE guidance that acknowledges that Members can visit for oversight. Unannounced visits happen regularly. 2/9
The Members who showed up yesterday were given entry to the facility by ICE. They were already lawfully on the premises when the Mayor was arrested. They didn’t break in or invade. They in fact did conduct an official oversight tour of the facility. 3/9
This is the most telling photo I’ve seen — Trump/Vance berating a wartime leader fighting against invasion directly in front of a bust of Churchill. It looks like Churchill is seated in the back, watching Trump kill the very US-Europe alliance that Churchill helped forge. THREAD
Why was the Oval Office exchange so humiliating to watch? It’s because every American alive today was born after the Greatest Generation led America’s rise to global leadership. What we saw yesterday was a surrender that could very well lead to American decline. 2/10
What we saw was a retreat from three basic pillars of American leadership: reliability, values, and impact. These are pillars that have been built over generations - from Americans landing on the beaches of Normandy onwards. 3/10
As Trump and Musk gut USAID today, I think back to my first day ever working for the US gov, showing up at the Reagan Building to start at USAID. Shame on them for demonizing Americans who are serving our nation, often in difficult and dangerous places. THREAD
We can have a policy debate about how much to spend internationally or what programs to fund, but their hate and paranoia towards other Americans go much deeper. I’m proud I worked at USAID. 2/8
I worked in USAID/Africa bureau where we helped rehabilitate former child soldiers in Uganda, helped with an emerging famine in Malawi. Trump admin complains about China’s growing influence in Africa but then shuts down one of our best tools to fight this. 3/8
I just talked to the family of Officer Brian Sicknick, who was killed on Jan 6. He grew up in NJ, served his nation, but was assaulted and killed. His assailants sentenced to prison until pardoned by Trump. Let us lift up Sicknick’s name and memory: THREAD
Officer Sicknick’s family’s pain today was so deep. That Trump used his first hours in office pardoning so many involved in that attack on the Capitol including the two of the assailants that attacked Officer Sicknick. It was a betrayal. 2/7
Let’s lift up Officer Sicknick’s name. Let’s remind everyone that an officer was attacked and killed that day. Sicknick laid in state in the Capitol Rotunda, honored by our nation as lawmakers from BOTH sides of the aisle, and now those who killed him are free. 3/7
I’ve been asked what it means to be 1st Korean American Senator. On this Korean American day, I want to share a photo of the home where my mom grew up during Korean War. America opened its doors and helped her become a nurse. Last week she stood with me as I was sworn in. THREAD
And it isn’t just my mom’s story. Over 120 yrs since the first Koreans came to America. Now there are 2 million Korean Americans. 24 million Asian Americans. Asian Americans are not monolithic.
I of course do not speak for all, nor is my story and experience reflective of all. 2/10
In fact I’ve struggled with my identity over my life. At times I resisted the label Korean/Asian American and snapped back with “I’m just American.”
I never would have imagined that Korean culture would become hugely popular between BTS, Squid Game, Korean BBQ, K-dramas etc. 3/10