The Secretary’s Rebuke by Fred Kaplan - Slate
President Trump has left us so numbed by his deceit and dishonor that it’s hard for anything said by or about him to shock us. Even so, the remarks this past weekend by two of his top Cabinet officers should sound the alarm bells louder than usual.
On Fox News on Sunday, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was asked about a U.N. committee’s recent warning about racism in America, which criticized Trump’s wavering attitude toward the neo-Nazi marchers in Charlottesville, Virginia. Tillerson replied, “I don’t think anyone doubts the American people’s values,” including those touting “equal treatment of people the world over.” But when asked whether Trump shared those values, he replied, “The president speaks for himself.”
Around the same time, a recent video emerged on Facebook of Secretary of Defense James Mattis telling a small group of American troops, “You’re a great example of our country right now.” He went on, “Our country, right now, it’s got problems that we don’t have in the military. You just hold the line until our country gets back to understanding and respecting each other and showing it.”
Mattis added that the United States has “two powers” in facing the rest of the world: inspiration and intimidation. “The power of inspiration—we’ll get the power of inspiration back. We’ve got the power of intimidation, and that’s you, if someone wants to screw with our families, our country and our allies.”
Tillerson’s statement, though a direct rebuke of Trump, was the less concerning of the two. It’s hard to recall a more dispirited Cabinet secretary than Tillerson right now. Isolated from the White House, bereft of staff (because Trump has refused to nominate any under- or assistant secretaries), and either incompetent or uninterested in the tasks at hand, he shuffles through his petty pace, day to day, until his inevitable departure.
Mattis’ remarks were far more damning and, because of that, disturbing. His statement was neither rehearsed nor meant to be public…