How Roger Wicker Enabled the Dismantling of the U.S. Military
Stuart Stevens
I know Roger Wicker. I worked for him when he ran for the Senate. Our fathers were both prominent in the Mississippi legal establishment his dad a circuit judge, mine a founding partner of what became the states largest law firm. We both served as congressional pages for Democratic Mississippi congressmen. Were fanatical Ole Miss fans.
The last time I saw him in person, before all this, was at the Mississippi Book Festival in the summer of 2016. Trump had just been nominated, which we both found alarming, and Roger pulled me aside and quoted Yeats. Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold. He said it with the troubled sadness of a man who meant it.
Roger Wicker has spent his career preparing to be Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Now that hes accomplished that goal, hes on track to be the most disastrous Chairman in modern history. Its tempting to call this a Shakespearean tragedy but any cast with Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth is doomed to farce.
There is a particular kind of Washington failure that doesnt announce itself. It doesnt come with a dramatic moment of cowardice you can point to and say, There, thats when it happened. It accumulates slowly, through small accommodations, through the quiet calculation that staying in the room is what matters, that proximity to power is a form of power itself. Roger Wicker has spent the last year and a half demonstrating what that kind of failure looks like when it reaches its logical conclusion.
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