U.S. top general secretly called China over fears Trump could spark war
-report
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[September 15, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top U.S.
general secretly called his Chinese counterpart twice over concerns
then-President Donald Trump could spark a war with China as his
potential election loss loomed and in its aftermath, the Washington Post
reported on Tuesday.
U.S. General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called
General Li Zuocheng of the People’s Liberation Army on Oct. 30, 2020 -
four days before the election - and again on Jan. 8, two days after
Trump supporters led a deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol, the newspaper
reported.
In the calls, Milley sought to assure Li the United States was stable
and not going to attack and, if there were to be an attack, he would
alert his counterpart ahead of time, the report said.
The report was based on "Peril," a new book by journalists Bob Woodward
and Robert Costa, which they said relied on interviews with 200 sources
and is due to be released next week.
Trump, in a statement, cast doubt in the story, calling it "fabricated."
He said if the story was true Milley should be tried for treason. "For
the record, I never even thought of attacking China," Trump said.
Milley's office declined to comment.
Republican Senator Marco Rubio called on President Joe Biden, a
Democrat, to immediately fire Milley.
"I do not need to tell of you the dangers posed by senior military
officers leaking classified information on U.S. military operations, but
I will underscore that such subversion undermines the President’s
ability to negotiate and leverage one of this nation’s instruments of
national power in his interactions with foreign nations," Rubio said in
a letter to Biden.
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Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Army General Mark Milley holds a news
briefing at Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., August 18, 2021.
REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
Asked about the Washington Post report, White House
spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre declined to comment and referred
questions to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Defense Department.
Trump, a Republican, named Milley to the top military post in 2018
but began criticizing him, as well as other appointees and former
staffers, after losing the presidential election to Biden in
November 2020.
The Washington Post reported that Milley was motivated to contact
Beijing the second time in part due to a Jan. 8 call with U.S. House
of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who had asked the general
what safeguards were in place to prevent an "unstable president"
from launching a nuclear strike.
"He's crazy. You know he's crazy," Pelosi told Milley, the newspaper
reported, citing a transcript of the call.
According to the cited call transcript, the general replied, "I
agree with you on everything."
(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Susan Heavey; Editing by Bill Berkrot,
Howard Goller and Grant McCool)
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