The Logoff is a daily newsletter that helps you stay informed about the Trump administration without letting political news take over your life. Subscribe here. Welcome to The Logoff. Today my colleague Joshua Keating and I are focusing on Donald Trump’s firi…

Published 10 months ago on Feb 28th 2025, 12:00 pm
By Web Desk

The Logoff is a daily newsletter that helps you stay informed about the Trump administration without letting political news take over your life. Subscribe here.
Welcome to The Logoff. Today my colleague Joshua Keating and I are focusing on Donald Trump’s firing of high-ranking military officials, a move that cements the military’s new anti-DEI mandate now — and could have even bigger consequences later.
What’s the latest? Trump on Friday night fired Charles Q. Brown Jr. — the chair of the joint chiefs of staff — and nominated retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Dan Caine to replace him. Also fired were the chief of naval operations, the vice chief staff of the Air Force, and three of the military’s top legal officials.
Can Trump do this? Yes. The president is the commander in chief and has the authority to pick leadership. Caine will require Senate confirmation to the new position. Legally, only four-star generals are eligible for the position, and Caine is a three-star, but the president has the legal right to waive that requirement in certain circumstances.
Why did Trump make the personnel changes? Brown had counted diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts as critical to the military’s ability to function, whereas Trump and new Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have criticized such efforts as a distraction.
Hegseth said on Fox News on Sunday that he wanted legal officials who give “sound constitutional advice and don’t exist to attempt to be roadblocks to anything — anything that happens in their spots.” He also said the current lawyers were chosen by an insider pool and that their replacements would shake up the status quo.
What’s the big picture? Trump’s first-term chair of the joint chiefs, Gen. Mark Milley, said he feared Trump would deploy US troops domestically in an illegal manner. Were Trump to try that now, senior military leaders would face the choice of carrying out his orders or being “roadblocks.”
After Friday night’s firings, Trump has the ability to install a handpicked group of officers to lead the world’s most powerful fighting force. Those people will be tasked with fulfilling their oaths to the Constitution, even if that means going against Trump.
And with that, it’s time to log off ...
Did you know that the reason our fingerprints are unique is the same reason that no two leopards have the same pattern of spots and no two zebras have identical stripes? It’s all related to something called a “Turing pattern.” This was all new to me, and I learned it from this fascinating video from my colleague Coleman Lowndes. Hope you enjoy it. See you back here tomorrow.
AI boom seen lifting chipmaking equipment sales 9pc to $126bn in 2026
- 7 hours ago
Bollywood studio Bhansali Productions to sell future film music to Saregama India
- 10 hours ago
Pakistan qualify for semi-final of under 19 Asia Cup cricket
- 7 hours ago
Former Punjab CM Manzoor Wattoo passes away at 86
- 10 hours ago

Assailants kill cop, brother in gun attack in KP’s Lakki Marwat
- 7 hours ago

Young Leaders Conference 2025 highlights social stewardship on day two
- 7 hours ago
Tagic Army Public School (APS) Peshawar incident completes 11 painful years
- 6 hours ago
Sabalenka named WTA Player of the Year for second straight season
- 10 hours ago
Bondi gunman’s Indian family had no knowledge of his radicalisation, Indian police say
- 10 hours ago

Zillow’s short-sighted move to overlook climate risk
- 13 hours ago

Gold prices dip per tola in Pakistan, global markets
- 10 hours ago

Why Republicans in Congress are turning against Trump
- a day ago
You May Like
Trending




