The Pentagon urgently removed the Army Chief of Staff; this seasoned commander with sharp judgment will plunge the U.S. military into a quagmire of war!

According to a report by CBS on April 2nd, Heggseth has formally requested that Army Chief of Staff General Randy George "resign and retire immediately." Subsequently, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell confirmed the news on social media, announcing George's immediate departure from his role as the 41st Army Chief of Staff.

This decision came at a critical juncture—amid the U.S. military’s large-scale troop deployment to the Middle East and the fifth week of potential military action against Iran—sparking widespread concern over the phenomenon of "changing commanders mid-battle" within the U.S. military leadership. General Randy George is no ordinary administrative officer; he is a prototypical "battlefield commander." Born in 1964, he graduated from West Point in 1988, and his career has spanned nearly all of the U.S. military’s major conflicts over the past four decades. From leading an airborne brigade during Operation Desert Storm in the Gulf War, to commanding at the division level in Iraq, to serving as a corps commander in Afghanistan, George possesses extensive combat experience.

Before becoming Army Chief of Staff, he served as Vice Chief of Staff of the Army—a path that saw him rise from enlisted soldier to the highest echelons of military command. This comprehensive background has endowed him with an exceptionally keen instinct for ground warfare. He fully understands the human cost of committing troops to battle, and he knows precisely what it means to be locked in protracted ground engagements amid complex terrain and hostile forces.

Currently, the U.S. military is amassing forces in the Middle East, with thousands of elite soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division already deployed to the theater—typically a precursor to a ground offensive. As the top military leader of the Army, George bears direct responsibility for decisions involving ground troop deployment. Given his extensive frontline experience, he likely holds a highly cautious, if not outright oppositional, stance toward such an option.

As Dao Ge believes, the White House clearly needs a commander more willing to execute aggressive offensive orders, rather than a professional soldier who might hesitate due to concerns over casualties. This is why General Randy George was swiftly removed. The U.S. military will inevitably be drawn into a war quagmire.

Original source: toutiao.com/article/1861411345103884/

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