Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley defends calls to China
ABC News
Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley on Tuesday defended his calls to China, saying he did not insert himself into nuclear launch chain of command.
Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, pushed back strongly Tuesday on recent characterizations of his phone calls to China's top military official and denied that he had placed himself in the chain of command for nuclear launch protocols following a phone call from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
"My loyalty to this nation, its people, and the Constitution hasn’t changed and will never change as long as I have a breath to give, My loyalty is absolute, and I will not turn my back on the fallen," Milley told the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing about the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan.
"The calls on 30 October and 8 January were coordinated before and after with Secretary Esper and Acting Secretary Miller’s staffs and the interagency," he told the committee. "The specific purpose of the October and January calls was generated by concerning intelligence which caused us to believe the Chinese were worried about an attack on them by the U.S.
Milley's phone calls were first made public in the new book "Peril" by the Washington Post's Bob Woodward and Robert Costa.