Lucian Truscott IV
Celebrated as a novelist and screenwriter, and most recently as a Salon.com and Substack commentator, Lucian Truscott is the grandson of legendary World War II general and CIA deputy director Lucian K. Truscott Jr. In the 1970s, Truscott, a young man of his generation, both attended West Point and rebelled against its strictures, abandoning his pre-ordained path in life to write for the Village Voice, Esquire, The Nation, and many others.
This week, Truscott published the most important column you will read, and most of it is not his writing. It is an email from his former West Point history professor that clearly outlines exactly where the United States is on the trajectory to authoritarianism.
The email quoted below was sent to me last night by my old friend, Terrence Goggin. He was my history professor at West Point and was one of two volunteer legal advisors who helped us when I and three of my classmates filed formal complaints with the Secretary of the Army seeking to end the regulation that required compulsory attendance at church at West Point and the other service academies.
Goggin served as an aide to Daniel Patrick Moynihan in the Nixon White House and was a fellow at the Kennedy School of government at Harvard University and went on to serve as a representative in the California Assembly from 1974 to 1984. He had a private legal practice in California from 1990 to 2014 and recently informed me that while he provided legal advice under the radar at West Point, I and my classmates were his first private clients as an attorney.
I decided to share Goggin’s e-mail because I think it gives a good summary of the impending crisis in Washington and what might happen if push comes to shove in the courts, especially if Trump decides to start defying court orders.
Terrence Goggin’s email to me:
Early Sunday morning, Politico summarized the state of play as Trump steamrolls through Washington: “Courts flex their power to slow him down…Supreme Court Showdowns Loom.”
1.) the execution of the laws,
2.) the law-making power, and
3.) the appropriating power.
The last two are specifically reserved to Congress in Article I. of the Constitution. Musk’s mission would be achieved. No further action is required because the administration can cut funding to whatever and whoever they want. They have the total control of totalitarianism.
Goggin’s point about the United States military and what General Milley did on January 6 is well taken. Trump has not yet begun a wholesale firing of general officers in the Pentagon. If Goggin’s scenario is correct, it would appear that we have a lot riding on whether there are any of what we might call Constitutional generals left in the Pentagon when Trump and Hegseth are done with it.
General Charles Quinton Brown Jr., Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
"First of all you gotta fire the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs," U.S. Secretary of Defense Hegseth said in November. "Any general that was involved, general, admiral, whatever, that was involved in any of the DEI woke s***, has got to go. Either you're in for warfighting and that's it. That's the only litmus test we care about."
General Charles Brown Jr. entered the Air Force in 1984 and served as a fighter pilot, where he has logged over 3,000 flight hours, including 130 hours in combat. He commanded the Pacific Air Forces, U.S. Air Forces Central Command, 31st Fighter Wing, 8th Fighter Wing, U.S. Air Force Weapons School, and 78th Fighter Squadron. He has also served as deputy commander of the U.S. Central Command.
Trump was reportedly "rethinking" Hegseth's idea after the he chatted with Brown in a luxury box at the Army-Navy football game.
Trump has become enamored of military men before, but these relationships didn't end well.
Stay tuned.
Lucian Truscott during his shit-disturbing Village Voice days. Truscott's grandfather, General Lucian K. Truscott Jr., commanded the 3rd Infantry Division, the 6th Corps, the 7th Army and the 5th Army during World War II, during which time he took the first step to integrating the army. His grandson is not just the chronicler of history. As the sixth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson, he invited the great-grandchildren of Jefferson and Sally Hemings to Monticello for a reunion, changing the way history is written. Subscribe to his newsletter on Substack. Start with his take on the U.S. abandonment of Ukraine and 75 years of peace in Europe.