National Guard documents show public 'fear,' veterans' 'shame' over D.C. presence
Internal documents reviewed by The Post show how domestic missions rooted in politics risk damaging Americans trust in the military.
National Guard documents show public âfear,â veteransâ âshameâ over D.C. presence
Internal documents reviewed by The Post show how domestic missions rooted in politics risk damaging Americansâ trust in the military.
www.washingtonpost.com/national-sec...
— H. Walter Muchow (@hwm777.bsky.social) 2025-09-10T18:37:23.025Z
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/09/10/national-guard-trump-dc
The National Guard, in measuring public sentiment about President Donald Trumps federal takeover of Washington, D.C., has assessed that its mission is perceived as leveraging fear, driving a wedge between citizens and the military, and promoting a sense of shame among some troops and veterans, according to internal documents reviewed by The Washington Post.
The assessments, which have not been previously reported, underscore how domestic mobilizations that are rooted in politics risk damaging Americans confidence in the men and women who serve their communities in times of crisis. The documents reveal, too, with a rare candor in some cases, that military officials have been kept apprised that their mission is viewed by a segment of society as wasteful, counterproductive and a threat to long-standing precedent stipulating that U.S. soldiers with rare exception are to be kept out of domestic law enforcement matters.
Trump has said the activation of more than 2,300 National Guard troops was necessary to reduce crime in the nations capital, though data maintained by the D.C. police indicates an appreciable decline was underway long before his August declaration of an emergency. In the weeks since, the Guard has spotlighted troops work assisting the police and beautifying the city by laying mulch and picking up trash, part of a daily disclosure to the news media generated by Joint Task Force D.C., the military command overseeing the deployment......
Those statistics may be among the most consequential takeaways of Trumps use of the military in D.C., Dempsey said, and should prompt scrutiny of whether this mission was ever necessary in the first place.
That is such a suboptimal use of military training that we should all be asking, Why are they here? Dempsey said. If theyre picking up trash, theyre not here for a security emergency. Theres no clearer metric than that.