Published by TrenBuzz.com | July 4, 2026 | BREAKING
Key Points at a Glance – Charles Q. Brown Jr. Fires Back on America’s 250th Birthday
- Retired General Charles Q. Brown Jr., fired as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in February 2025, co-authored a stinging essay in Foreign Affairs on July 3 warning against the politicization of the US military.
- Brown wrote: “When presidents use the armed forces for more politically contentious missions, such as addressing domestic crime in cities, the work of the military becomes more fraught.”
- Brown co-authored the piece with Duke University political science professor Peter Feaver and North Carolina lawyer Andrew Kragie on the day of America’s 250th anniversary celebrations.
- At the Aspen Ideas Festival last week, Brown said of Trump’s firings: “What’s starting to happen now is not about merit.”
- Brown, born March 2, 1962, was the first African American to lead a branch of the US Armed Forces and logged over 3,000 flight hours including 130 combat hours.
- Hegseth had questioned in 2024 whether Brown’s career rise was due to the color of his skin, setting the stage for his removal weeks into Trump’s second term.
Charles Q. Brown Jr. Foreign Affairs Essay: What He Wrote and Why It Matters Today
Charles Q. Brown Jr. was one of three authors of an essay in the journal Foreign Affairs, published Friday, that called out the politicization of the military without directly naming Trump or Hegseth.
The article pointed to the Trump administration’s deployment of troops to clamp down on crime in major cities, writing: “Resorting to a military solution rather than fixing the underlying incapacity or dysfunction in civilian institutions diverts the military from focusing on its primary mission.”
The Firing That Started It All: What Hegseth Said About Brown in 2024
In an appearance on the Shawn Ryan Show in November 2024, Hegseth said: “First of all, you’ve got to fire the chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Any general that was involved in any of that DEI woke s–t has got to go.”
In February 2025, just weeks into MAGA’s return to power, Brown was fired. The move sparked concern among lawmakers and former military leaders who feared political interference in an institution traditionally defined by its nonpartisan role.
Brown’s Message on America’s 250th Anniversary
Brown and his co-authors wrote: “The military must protect the respect that it has earned from American society by scrupulously following all lawful orders and by demonstrating every day that it is nonpartisan. In so doing, service members honor the oath they swear not to a particular party or political leader but to the Constitution itself.”
The essay also addressed the 250th anniversary: “Patriotism means recognizing the promise of America’s founding, the progress of its past, and the potential of a shared future.”
What Brown Said at Aspen That Drew National Attention
At the Aspen Ideas Festival last week, Brown expressed concerns over the administration’s firings of Pentagon officials, saying: “Are they going to have a fair opportunity to advance in their career going forth?”
Brown chose the Fourth of July to deliver his most public message since his removal. It landed harder than anyone expected, because it was not a political attack. It was a warning, carefully worded, historically grounded, and published in one of the world’s most respected foreign policy journals, by the first Black person ever to lead a branch of the US military.
🔗 [Also Read: “Pete Hegseth Face the Nation: D-Day Normandy Family Trip Controversy” | TrenBuzz.com]
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and news reporting purposes only. All quotes and essay details are sourced directly from CNN, Newsweek, Foreign Affairs, The Daily Beast, Yahoo News, The Seattle Medium, and Wikipedia as of July 3-4, 2026. TrenBuzz.com does not represent any military or government body. Readers are encouraged to follow credible news sources and the official Foreign Affairs publication for the full essay text.