... an intel professional to recognize that National Security Adviser Waltz is a neocon and not very good at national security advising. WSJ (this other neocon globalist central) laments:
Americans are trying to absorb President Trump’s tariff assault on world trade, so few may notice this week’s White House firings at the National Security Council. The impetus appears to be fear of disloyalty, but the bigger worry should be the risk that Mr. Trump surrounds himself with yes-men.
It has to be noted that if there is a "yes-men" phenomenon in the so-called national security circles than it is certainly not people like this dude, who was removed among others.
Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), who sits on both the Senate Armed Services and Intelligence committees, said it “raises eyebrows” when “there is a firing of people on the National Security Council or their staff, particularly people that we have respect for, who were part of the Intel community to begin with here in the Senate,” according to The Associated Press. Particularly strong criticism has been aired over the firing of Haugh, who had led the NSA and U.S. Cyber Command since 2023. Haugh oversaw the agencies’ significant roles in U.S. cybersecurity — the NSA collects and analyzes huge amounts of information to support the military and other federal national security agencies, while U.S. Cyber Command plans offensive operations against enemies and defends U.S. networks.
US presstitudes blame those firings on the activity of the "far-right activist" Laura Loomer, and that even may be so, if not for, indeed, interesting background of Haugh who increasingly looks like a globalist (a euphemism for DNC) asset from his appointment by Mark Milley (a real yes-man for Biden) and then such details about this NSA guy as this quip from WaPo:
He ran Cyber Command’s half of the “Russia Small Group,” a joint effort with the NSA to defend the 2018 midterm elections from Russian interference. The NSA portion was led by Anne Neuberger, who went on to serve in the Biden administration as a deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technologies. During the election defense effort in 2018, Haugh led offensive operations against Russian trolls and launched initiatives to disclose publicly Russian spy agency malware and to conduct “Hunt Forward” missions to boot Russian intelligence from Eastern European government networks, recalled Jason Kikta, who was at the time lead defensive cyber operations planner for Cyber Command.
Ah, you see--he "fought" those proverbial Russian trolls, who, as we all know, are the "real threat" to the American democracy. Well, I guess if I were Trump, I also would have had serious questions to this cabal's (Sullivan's leftovers) loyalty and actual work in defending the US against real threats. The removal of DNC assets continues. Russian trolls exhale in relief.