David French: Trump has put the military in an impossible situation

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Imagine, for a moment, that you’re an American pilot flying an F-16 over Iraq. The troops on the ground have been pursuing a small group of Iraqi insurgents. They report that they’ve cornered the insurgents in a small farmhouse. Rather than take the risk of assaulting the house on the ground, the commander has called you in to make a precision strike from the air — to blow up the entire building.

But you have concerns. You’ve been briefed over and over again about the law of war, and you’re worried that there might be civilians in the house. You can’t see any, but you don’t know for sure. A legal principle called “distinction” requires you to discriminate between military and civilian targets, and you’re worried about who might be behind those walls.

In fact, since you were called in after the insurgents reportedly entered the house, you’ve never seen them. You’re being asked to trust that the commander on the ground has identified the proper target.

So you make a quick inquiry. “Are civilians present?”

The response is immediate. “We’ve got the JAG (military lawyer) in the TOC (tactical operations center), and you’re cleared to engage.” That response tells you that a legal analysis has been done, and the lawyer thinks the strike is acceptable.

What do you do?

Now, switch gears and imagine that you’re on the ground, the leader of an infantry platoon. You capture a man you believe to be the mastermind of a series of suicide bombings, including an explosion at a wedding last week that killed dozens of women and children.

Just when you’re about to load your prisoner into a vehicle to take him to your forward operating base, the company commander arrives. He takes one look at your prisoner, turns to you, and says, “I’ve seen what that man did. I picked up the body parts of babies. Kill him. He doesn’t deserve to live.”

What do you do?

On Tuesday, six Democratic lawmakers released a video message to members of the military. The group was organized by Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., a former CIA analyst who served in Iraq during the height of the war there. The group included Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., a former fighter pilot and astronaut, and Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., a former Army Ranger. All six lawmakers were veterans of either the military or the intelligence services.

The message of the video was simple: Soldiers do not have to follow illegal orders.

There is nothing radical about that statement. Members of the military are trained on the basics of the law of war. Over the course of my JAG career, I briefed thousands of soldiers, and in each of those briefings I told them that if they were ordered to violate any of the clear requirements of the law, they didn’t just have the right to refuse; they had an obligation to refuse.

President Donald Trump’s reaction to the video was unhinged. On social media, he posted, “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!” Another post he shared said, “HANG THEM GEORGE WASHINGTON WOULD !!”

Those statements are ridiculous. It is not “seditious” to repeat a simple legal truth to the U.S. troops. And Slotkin said that she’d been getting questions from active duty soldiers about their legal obligations.

But Trump’s statements aren’t just unhinged; they are putting the lawmakers at risk. Slotkin said that her office was flooded with threats after Trump’s posts. Also, as we’ve seen, Trump is not above ordering his Department of Justice to file frivolous criminal charges against his perceived political foes.

I had a different issue with the lawmakers’ message, though. While there is certainly some value in assuring service members that members of the House and Senate would support them in the event that they properly defied unlawful orders, the video didn’t provide any clarity. Soldiers already know that they must not obey illegal orders. But the video doesn’t shed light on a separate and equally important question: Which orders are illegal?

Let’s go back to the hypothetical situations above, which are, in fact, not hypothetical at all. The first scenario was extremely common when I served in Iraq. In fact, I was frequently the JAG officer in the TOC who evaluated and legally approved airstrikes, artillery strikes and other uses of deadly force. As a result, I know better than most what tough judgment calls these can be. But once a good faith judgment is made and the order is given, it must be executed.

You can’t fight a war — especially a counterinsurgency like the one we faced in Iraq — if every soldier acts as an independent legal check on every order he or she receives. Individual service members don’t have sufficient knowledge or information to make those kinds of judgments. When time is of the essence and lives are on the line, your first impulse must be to do as you’re told.

But not always. In the two scenarios above, the pilot should drop his bomb, but the platoon leader should refuse the order to shoot the prisoner.

The legal difference between those two scenarios can be explained in a case called United States v. Calley, the best-known case to emerge from the Vietnam War, a conflict that also contained both conventional and counterinsurgency elements. First Lt. William Calley Jr. was facing charges related to the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, and he presented a classic military defense — that he was following orders to clear the village.

In response, the Court of Military Review said, “The acts of a subordinate done in compliance with an unlawful order given him by his superior are excused and impose no criminal liability upon him unless the superior’s order is one which a man of ordinary sense and understanding would, under the circumstances, know to be unlawful, or if the order in question is actually known to the accused to be unlawful.”

As Maj. Keith Petty, then an Army judge advocate, explained in an excellent summary of the law in a 2016 piece in Just Security, this is called the “manifestly unlawful” test, and — as Petty described it — the rule means that “the legal duty to disobey is strongest when the superior’s order is unlawful on its face.”

Shooting a prisoner, for example, is unambiguously illegal. Bombing a home that is thought to contain insurgents is not.

When I was in Iraq, though, we were fighting under a clear congressional authorization in a combat environment in which individual airstrikes and other uses of deadly force were routinely subject to legal review.

What if you’re a service member ordered to strike a suspected drug boat off the coast of Venezuela or Colombia, and you know that Congress has not been consulted and has not authorized your mission?

As Petty writes, the answer comes from the Nuremberg Trials — the trials of Nazi leaders after World War II. In the High Command Trial, the court put it well, “Somewhere between the dictator and supreme commander of the military forces of the nation and the common soldier is the boundary between the criminal and the excusable participation in the waging of an aggressive war by an individual engaged in it.”

Affirming this principle, the International Criminal Court has said that the crime of aggression applies to a “person in a position effectively to exercise control over or to direct the political or military action of a State.”

This means that when it comes to the decision to initiate hostilities, the responsibility rests with the senior leaders of the nation (in this case, ultimately, with Trump). At the same time, however, members of the military bear responsibility for how they conduct those operations.

These distinctions make a lot of sense. A military can’t function if individual members get to decide — according to their own legal analyses — if the war they’re fighting is legal. We can’t reasonably share with all members of the military the often highly classified intelligence that presidents and senior leaders review when they issue orders to strike.

Even if the facts are clear, the law is often complex. Do we really expect individual pilots or sailors to know that the statutes Trump is relying on to designate various narcotics gangs as international terrorist organizations do not also contain an authorization to use military force?

Do we expect them to know the differences between these strikes and strikes in other conflicts where Congress didn’t authorize military action? (Such as the Korean War, for example, or President Bill Clinton’s intervention in the Balkan States, or President Barack Obama’s intervention in Libya.)

Do we expect individual pilots and sailors to know when criminal activity rises to the level of a true military threat under international law?

No, we do not.

In reality, junior officers and enlisted soldiers are often like the proverbial blind man feeling the elephant. We are given only partial information when we’re ordered to war. Our military couldn’t function if individual members adjudicated these questions themselves based on information gleaned from news reports or from their own incomplete review of the relevant intelligence.

But we do expect our most senior leaders to know these distinctions. And it is quite telling that the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, Adm. Alvin Holsey, decided to step down in October, shortly after the administration started targeting suspected drug boats in the Caribbean. Holsey had reportedly raised concerns about the strikes.

It is also telling that the most senior military lawyer in the Southern Command, which is responsible for military operations in South America, apparently disapproved of the strikes but was “ultimately overruled by more senior government officials, including officials at the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.”

Trump’s Justice Department has drafted a classified legal memorandum justifying its strikes. As a practical matter, this memo — as Jack Goldsmith, a Harvard Law School professor and a former senior Justice Department official, explained last month — acts as a “golden shield” from legal prosecution for subordinates who operate within the scope of the legal guidance.

The memo, however, cannot repeal the laws of armed conflict, which are binding on members of the military through the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Presidents have no power to repeal statutes. Pilots and sailors still can’t kill prisoners, for example, or open fire on known civilians when there is no conceivable military justification.

That means if the evidence of their eyes contradicts the intelligence from above (for example, if they see a clear indication that the boat they’re targeting isn’t carrying drugs or they see children on board), there may be an obligation to hold their fire. And even if the command to open fire is binding, no legal opinion can remove the moral discomfort from service members who are under orders to fight in a war that is almost certainly illegal.

Trump has put the military in an impossible situation. He’s making its most senior leaders complicit in his unlawful acts, and he’s burdening the consciences of soldiers who serve under his command. One of the great moral values of congressional declarations of war is that they provide soldiers with the assurance that the conflict has been debated and that their deployment is a matter of national will.

When the decision rests with the president alone, it puts members of the military in the position of trusting the judgment of a person who may not deserve that trust. I have heard from several anguished members of the active duty military. They feel real moral doubt and are experiencing profound legal confusion.

So here’s the bottom line: No legal opinion can compel any member of the military to commit “manifestly unlawful” acts during a war. But when it comes to the decision to begin an armed conflict, the responsibility doesn’t rest with individual soldiers, sailors, airmen or Marines; it rests with Trump and his most senior military and political advisers — the men and women who ordered them to fight.

David French writes a column for the New York Times.

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Today in History: November 25, Elian Gonzalez rescued

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Today is Tuesday, Nov. 25, the 329th day of 2025. There are 36 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Nov. 25, 1999, Elian Gonzalez, a 5-year-old Cuban boy, was rescued by two sport fishermen off the coast of Florida, setting off an international custody battle that eventually saw him repatriated to his father in Cuba.

Also on this date:

In 1783, following the conclusion of the Revolutionary War, the last remaining British troops in the United States were evacuated from New York City.

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In 1961, the USS Enterprise was commissioned; it was the first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and remains the longest naval vessel ever built, at 1,123 feet.

In 1963, the body of President John F. Kennedy was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery after a funeral procession through Washington, D.C. An estimated 1 million people lined the somber procession route.

In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair erupted as President Ronald Reagan and Attorney General Edwin Meese revealed that profits from secret arms sales to Iran had been diverted to Nicaraguan rebels.

In 2001, as the war in Afghanistan entered its eighth week, CIA officer Johnny “Mike” Spann was killed during a prison uprising in Mazar-e-Sharif that erupted while he was interviewing detainees, becoming the first American combat casualty of the conflict.

In 2016, Fidel Castro, who led his rebels to a victorious revolution in 1959, embraced Soviet-style communism and defied the power of 10 U.S. presidents during his half-century of authoritarian rule in Cuba, died at age 90.

In 2020, Argentine soccer great Diego Maradona died of a heart attack at age 60. Maradona led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title before later struggling with cocaine use and obesity.

Today’s Birthdays:

Football Hall of Fame coach Joe Gibbs is 85.
Actor John Larroquette is 78.
Dance judge Bruno Tonioli (TV: “Dancing with the Stars”) is 70.
Musician Amy Grant is 65.
Football Hall of Famer Cris Carter is 60.
Rapper-producer Erick Sermon is 57.
Actor Jill Hennessy is 57.
Actor Christina Applegate is 54.
Former NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb is 49.
Television personality Jenna Bush Hager and twin sister Barbara Pierce Bush, daughters of former President George W. Bush, are 44.
Soccer manager and former player Xabi Alonso is 44.
Actor Stephanie Hsu is 35.

Volleyball: Tommies reach Summit Final via 5-set semi thriller. One win from NCAA ticket

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The Tommies volleyball team is one win away from the school’s first-ever Division I NCAA tournament berth.

St. Thomas knocked off second-seeded South Dakota in the Summit League Tournament semifinals Monday via a thrilling five-set victory in which the third-seeded Tommies rallied from a 2-1 deficit to win 25-22, 22-25, 16-25, 25-19, 15-9 in Brookings, South Dakota.

St. Thomas will meet top-seeded South Dakota State in the title match at 6 p.m. Tuesday with the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament on the line. The Jackrabbits swept the two regular season meetings between the two teams, winning both in four sets.

Anya Schmidt paced the Tommies with 19 kills, while Tezra Rudzitis added 17. Ella Voegele had a team-high 25 digs.

The semifinal marked the first match to go the distance for St. Thomas this season since the team’s season opener against Ball State.

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Not again: Timberwolves blow 10 point lead in final minutes, lose in OT to Kings

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Well, it’s Groundhog’s Day … Again.

After the Wolves squandered an eight-point lead in the final minute in Friday’s loss in Phoenix, Minnesota held a 10-point advantage over the Kings in Sacramento on Monday after Anthony Edwards tallied an and-1 with three minutes to play.

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) reacts during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Sacramento Kings in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, Nov. 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Randall Benton)

Surely that would be good enough to seal the deal this time around.

Or not.

Yes, it happened again.

Sacramento went on a 10-0 run over an 81-second span to knot the game and force overtime, where the Kings beat Minnesota, 117-112.

The Wolves committed four turnovers in the extra session to offset the easy offense Edwards generated with the ball in his hands — offense Minnesota could’ve used at the end of regulation.

The Timberwolves led by 12 with nearly 10 minutes to play in the fourth frame after Mike Conley drilled a triple. From that point forward, Minnesota went 2 for 19 from the field to close the quarter.

“We’re struggling right now to find a good rhythm offensively all around,” Wolves coach Chris Finch told reporters. “We’ve got to get back to the way we were playing about a week ago when it comes to offense. And a lot of things we were doing then are missing now.”

And yet Minnesota still led by 10 late until that fateful minute-plus that played out like this:

-Malik Monk jumper to cut the lead to eight

-Anthony Edwards missed shot

-Malik Monk made 3-pointer to cut the lead to five

-Anthony Edwards missed shot

-Malik Monk layup to cut the lead to three

-Jaden McDaniels missed shot

-DeMar DeRozan bucket plus the foul, with a made free throw to tie the game.

“They made some plays,” Wolves center Rudy Gobert told reporters of the Kings. “They made some hustle plays, they made some big shots, big plays down the stretch and they got back in the game.”

There were still 89 seconds remaining in regulation at that point. Julius Randle made free throws to put Minnesota back on top with a minute to play, but DeRozan did the same on the other end to re-knot the contest.

Edwards and DeRozan then traded misses to send the game to overtime.

Neither team was close to clean in the extra session, but DeRozan and Keegan Murray made enough shots to help the Kings (5-13) fend off Edwards and the mistake-plagued Wolves (10-7).

In an ode to Friday, the game effectively ended when Randle turned the ball over while trying to inbound the ball with Minnesota down four and 18 seconds to play. At which point, four Wolves players stood and watched, seemingly contest to let the Kings dribble the clock out before Mike Conley finally raced over to commit a foul.

“Yeah, just some really rough plays from our team,” said Gobert, who finished with 11 points and 13 boards, but also had a costly giveaway in overtime. “Seems like (mental lapses). We didn’t play super connected. And then I feel like we let the frustration get to us, and we can’t do that if we want to be a championship team. … No matter what happened before, we’ve got to find a way to have our spirit high and the spirit of a champion to try to always believe. Things are not always going to go our way, but until the buzzer sounds, we still have an opportunity. … Tonight, it felt like we didn’t have our spirit.”

The loss is Minnesota’s second straight, but first this season against a team with a losing record after opening the campaign with 10-straight wins against such foes.

Edwards finished with 43 points, seven rebounds and three steals. He’s scored 41-plus in each of the Wolves’ last two losses. But Minnesota lost his 40 minutes by 12 points, the same plus-minus recorded by Randle, who committed five turnovers — including two in overtime.

Minnesota tallied just 21 assists. Wolves not named Edwards combined to shoot 35% from the floor on a night where Minnesota committed 16 turnovers.

“I think we got a little stagnant offensively,” Gobert said. “The ball stopped moving.”

DeRozan finished with 33 points, while Murray added 26 and Monk had 22, 13 of which came in the fourth quarter.

Monday’s loss may be more infuriating for Minnesota than even Friday’s defeat, given the quality of opponent. Minnesota never trailed in regulation and seemingly had control throughout the contest. But every time it looked as though the Wolves would runaway with the game — as they’ve done so many times against cellar dwellers already this season — a costly mistake or a couple minutes of porous defense would bring Sacramento right back into the equation.

Now Minnesota will try again to right the ship Wednesday in Oklahoma City against the defending champion and league-leading Thunder in a game the Timberwolves have to have to advance to the NBA Cup knockout round.

Such a win would require 48 minutes of effort and execution. The lack of the latter continues to bite the Wolves when games matter most.

“Talking is great, but let’s see if we care,” Gobert said. “Let’s see if we actually care about doing the things that we need to do to win and putting our teammates before ourselves. It’s what it’s about, at the end of the day. Hopefully, we learn. We’ve still got an amazing opportunity ahead of us, but we’ve got to decide who we want to be.”