The military is commanded by a civilian politician. It's one of those pesky constitutional things. The founding fathers insisted on that for a reason. There was great insight in Franklin's response to the lady " ... if you can keep it."
No I meant that as a response to "The US military can no longer deal with its own bad actors.". The transfer of power is from the military commanders to the military court martial judges, and only for those certain special crimes, not for the original topic of espionage. The military is still dealing with it's own, and no one is taking it over, except itself which is impossible because it already has control of itself. And yes, politicians overall have control of it as warren says, but that level of control remains unchanged with this new order.Layers of politicized confusification, then.
(also, did you mean to type "the politicians are not taking over the military" for that last line?)
In any event, to mess with a complex construct that evolved over centuries is not a good idea as a categorical thing.
Also, I think you have a misconception about the UCMJ. It's not some established unchanged flawless code from centuries ago. It's been changed many times, even within the past decade. We've always messed with it, to make it better and update it. If we don't mess with it it becomes antiquated, ineffective, and eventually useless.
I can see why you would think that. Your suspicions are not unfounded, but that effect is more influenced by other policies and instructions, not the UCMJ. Check out the first DOD policy on "extremism" that came out after Jan 6, there's some... off... stuff in there, seemingly intentionally vague. Policies like that use the UCMJ as a vehicle to punitively enforce. Every policy that is signed by a commissioned officer is enforceable under article 92 at a minimum as a failure to obey an order or regulation. That can get pretty smelly when the policies are being influenced by certain people, things, and events.This is getting bogged down in definitions, I'm afraid.
I never said---or thought---the UCMJ was an "established unchanged flawless code from centuries ago", I said it had evolved into what it is today. And evolution means change. It is change.
As for civilians running the military, the Secretary of Defense sits at the top and always has (of course), but that's not relevant to the day-to-day operations of running a military unit.
What I suspect is happening---but only suspect... meaning it's what it "smells like" given the past few years in this country---is certain civilians have forceably taken over the military's internal disciplinary system to impose and enforce laws that THEY think are important, but the military never WILL.
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I can see why you would think that. Your suspicions are not unfounded, but that effect is more influenced by other policies and instructions, not the UCMJ. Check out the first DOD policy on "extremism" that came out after Jan 6, there's some... off... stuff in there, seemingly intentionally vague. Policies like that use the UCMJ as a vehicle to punitively enforce. Every policy that is signed by a commissioned officer is enforceable under article 92 at a minimum as a failure to obey an order or regulation. That can get pretty smelly when the policies are being influenced by certain people, things, and events.
Normally I prefer to receive this sort of content on FOX "News" or Liberty Radio. Happily, most of what appears in this forum is on a much higher plane, especially when we confine our discussion to Pipes and Pipe Smoking.@georged with all the sh#t going on there. . . wiccan chapel at the Air Force Academy, training for nursing moms in uniform and sensitivity training for others who have no tits, transvestite cross dresser surgeries paid for by US tax dollars from us, and likely lots of sensitivity training to prepare our troops for fixed bayonet attacks, jiminey cricket--who's got time for spies! Long as they're cross dressers like that old geezer/Dr. in the medical corps--give 'em a walk. Wouldn't want to hurt their feelings.
Can you post a link to the information that led you to this conclusion?The US military can no longer deal with its own bad actors. The UCMJ---Uniform Code of Military Justice---was de-activated (for lack of a better term) by presidential order just last week. Military crimes are now the purvue of federal employees OUTSIDE the military.
Don't know whether to laugh or cry. The purpose couldn't be more transparent.
I truly didn't think I'd ever live long enough to see something like this.
One mans traitor is in another universe a principled man of conscious! It is interesting that Capital Hanging was paused in the U.K in 1965 and abolished in 1969 with the exceptions of 'Mutiny in time of war, treason, attempting to kill the sovereign and burning of the Royal Docks'. Interesting these last provisions were abolished by Tony Blair probably as an act of self preservation. I must admit to often wishing that grinning hyena Tony Blair would exit the world with a bag over his head and disappear permanently through the trap door of Wormwood Scrubs gallows like some stage villain!