The last time the U.S. military had a parade in Washington, armed servicemen and women had just come back from the Gulf War in
1991
President Trump has allegedly asked his staff to plan a military parade later this year, according to a
report
"It's insecurity, it has totalitarian tendencies, it's boredom, it's deflection from the Mueller [investigation], it's all the above," she said.
Both
Republican and Democratic legislators
"A military parade costs millions," said Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), on Twitter. "Let's fix military housing, hire more VA doctors, fund telehealth, DOD schools, support the commissaries, daycare for families, or give more flight training time."
A military parade costs millions. Let's fix military housing, hire more VA doctors, fund telehealth, DOD schools, support the commissaries, daycare for families, or give more flight training time. Our highest defense priority must be the service members, not the politicians.— Brian Schatz (@brianschatz) February 7, 2018
Kayyem opposes the parade for additional reasons.
"Totalitarians generally are weak leaders, because obviously they don't have public support," she said. "They often use military parades like this, not as a display of strength to the outside world, but as a display of intimidation to the inside world — and that's what makes me nervous."
Kayyem said the President's
suggestion
"I do think that he views dissent of him as a reflection of treason," said Kayyem.
Juliette Kayyem is the CEO of ZEMCAR, host of
the SCIF