With all the news surrounding the border crisis, Bidenâs crashing approval, and Hunter Bidenâs corruption, another story flew under the radar over the last couple of days involving Gen. Mark Milley.
Youâll recall that Milley called the Chinese up to promise to commit treason (as defined by the statute) in order to undermine then President Donald Trump. It was an astonishing revelation that showed just how far our military leadership has fallen. Milley was, of course, at the head of pushing critical race theory to servicemembers and the disastrous evacuation from Afghanistan that left 13 Americans dead.
Now, the details of the phone call to a PLA general are emerging, and the timeline is invalidating the excuses lodged by those who ran to defend Milley.
Here is the section from Peril on Milleyâs call on 10/30/20 with the PLA's Li Zuocheng: âYou & I have known each other for now five years. If weâre going to attack, Iâm going to call you ahead of time. Itâs not going to be a surprise. Itâs not going to be a bolt out of the blue.â pic.twitter.com/OmoDsKm2Ld
— Jerry Dunleavy đșđž (@JerryDunleavy) September 22, 2021
When this story initially broke, much of the media, including some on the right, rushed to suggest that Milley was justified in breaking the chain of command and promising to commit treason because he was âdoing his jobâ to âavoid warâ during an âunprecedentedâ time following January 6th. According to the narrative, things were so up in the air regarding the future of our Republic after the trespassing event at the Capitol (a hysterical contention on its own) that Milley had no choice but to effectively declare himself a military dictator and take control of the government.
Except, according to the above excerpts, the call most in question didnât occur after January 6th. Rather, it occurred on October 30th, 2020. If you arenât good with calendars, that was before the election even took place. Thus, all the ridiculous contentions that Milley was allowed to call up a PLA general to extend an offer of aid, one that could put American servicemembers and interests in harmâs way, simply donât wash. Milley was lashing out and undermining the elected president of the United States long before January 6th became an issue. Though, to be clear, even if this call had taken place after January 6th, it still wouldnât have been justified.
To this point, weâve yet to see any evidence to back up Milleyâs concern regarding the Chinese either, which again undermines the defenses offered regarding his actions. There is nothing to suggest Donald Trump was going to attack China prior to the election or after. Rather, this appears to be another example of Milley being subservient to the CCP in a way that raises a lot of questions about his entanglements with the communists. What does China have on Milley?