February 8, 2020
Trump dismisses Alexander Vindman, Yevgeny Vindman, and Gordon Sondland
By Andrea Widburg
ABBA's song "The Winner Takes It All" seems peculiarly appropriate for today's news: "The winner takes it all, The loser's standing small, Beside the victory, That's [his] destiny."
In this case, the winner was President Donald Trump, who emerged victorious from the Democrats' ill begotten impeachment debacle. The losers left standing small — and destined to be removed from their positions — were Alexander Vindman and his twin brother Yevgeny, both of whom are out at the National Security Council, and ambassador (now former ambassador) to the European Union Gordon Sondland.
In normal times, dismissing these men from their positions would make perfect sense. All three serve at the president's pleasure. Under the Constitution, Trump is responsible for foreign policy and is commander in chief. In the former role, he has wide latitude to choose and dismiss ambassadors. In the latter role, thousands of years of military tradition hold that officers can be dismissed — or worse — for insubordination.
Sondland came across as merely weak, but Alexander Vindman is a genuine piece of work. The fact that his commanding officer has a constitutional right (and duty) to set foreign policy did not weigh at all with him. He felt that, as a decorated bureaucrat, his opinion matter more.
When the president ignored Vindman's opinion, the latter violated national security to complain about Trump's chosen policy approach. (And note, please, that he did not protect himself by being an official whistleblower. Instead, he whined to someone else.) Then, when called before Congress, the man who wears a suit to work showed up in his uniform, evidently trying to put the military's imprimatur on his personal mutiny.
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https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2020/02/trump_dismisses_alexander_vindman_yevgeny_vindman_and_gordon_sondland.html