⏱ 9 minute read
Last November, I argued in these pages that Senator Mark Kelly had crossed a structural threshold that earlier American history identified with one name, Benedict Arnold. The comparison was not designed for shock. It was designed to isolate a pattern. A decorated warrior earns public trust, then spends that trust against the lawful authority of the nation that conferred it. Kelly had recorded a vertical TikTok video, in coordination with five colleagues, instructing junior enlisted troops that the commander in chief was issuing illegal orders and that disobedience was a duty. I called that an opening move in a domestic color revolution. Many readers thought the framing was too strong.
Yesterday on “Face the Nation” with Margaret Brennan, Senator Kelly removed any remaining doubt. Asked about American posture toward a delicate negotiated settlement involving a major foreign adversary, the Senator volunteered specific operational details he had received in a classified Pentagon briefing about U.S. munition stockpiles. He told a national television audience, and by extension every foreign intelligence service that records American Sunday programming, that we are running low on the precision strike inventory that underwrites our deterrent. Within hours, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth responded with characteristic directness. “Captain Mark Kelly strikes again. Now he’s blabbing on TV (falsely & dumbly) about a CLASSIFIED Pentagon briefing he received. Did he violate his oath, again? Dept of War legal counsel will review.”
To understand why this matters, set aside the partisan temperature for a moment and consider the situation in its simplest form. Imagine a sitting Senator and former military officer receives an alarming classified briefing that shows the country is approaching the bottom of a critical munition stockpile. Now imagine that same country is on the brink of a negotiated settlement with an enemy that has every reason to keep fighting if the United States can be persuaded that its position is weaker than it appears. Now imagine the Senator walks onto a Sunday morning broadcast and tells the world that we are nearly out of ammunition. What follows is not speculation. It is logic. The adversary, hearing this from an Armed Services Committee member with combat credentials, gains the single piece of information that would justify scuttling the deal and waiting the United States out. That is the practical effect of what Senator Kelly did. He did it, by his own implicit admission, with intelligence he was entrusted with under conditions of confidentiality.
Some readers will object that operational secrets are leaked all the time, that the press routinely traffics in classified material, and that holding one Senator to a higher standard is selective outrage. The objection misunderstands the office. A member of the Senate is not a journalist, and an Armed Services Committee member is not an ordinary member of the Senate. The classification system is the legal and administrative spine of American intelligence sharing with the legislative branch. The 100 Senators receive briefings the public does not receive precisely because the country has decided that civilian oversight requires informed legislators. That arrangement collapses the moment a Senator decides that his briefings are content for a cable hit. If the deal between the executive and the legislature is that secrets stay secret in exchange for access, and one side breaks the deal whenever the partisan moment is favorable, the deal ends. The intelligence community will narrow what it tells Congress, oversight will weaken, and the constitutional design will erode. Kelly’s behavior, in other words, is not merely an individual indiscretion. It is an attack on the institution that gives Senators standing to oversee the executive at all.
A second objection is that the Senator’s intent was honorable. He wanted, perhaps, to pressure the administration into faster production decisions, or to signal to allies that American resources are constrained. This is a polite reading. It is also irrelevant to the analysis. The duty to protect classified information does not bend to motive. A safe driver who runs a red light because he is rushing a friend to the hospital still ran the red light. A Senator who discloses sensitive stockpile data because he is annoyed with the President’s foreign policy still disclosed sensitive stockpile data. The legal standard, codified in 18 USC 798 and related statutes, attaches to the act, not the rationale. The political standard, which is what the public weighs when it considers fitness for office, also attaches to the act. A man who cannot keep a secret on Sunday morning cannot be trusted with the briefings he will receive on Monday.
There is a deeper point here, and it returns us to the original Arnold analogy. The pattern that links the TikTok video of last fall with the “Face the Nation” appearance of this weekend is the pattern of using personal prestige earned in service to weaken the position of the United States vis a vis its adversaries. The TikTok video used Kelly’s status as a Navy combat veteran and astronaut to encourage uniformed Americans to view the commander in chief’s lawful orders as presumptively suspect. The “Face the Nation” appearance used his status as an Armed Services Committee member to tell adversaries something they could not otherwise know with confidence. Both acts cash in the same currency. Both spend that currency against the same nation. A reader who accepted the original Arnold framing as too strong should now reconsider, because the Senator has, in two distinct domains, executed the same maneuver. He has used the trust that flowed to him from his service to weaken the country that conferred the trust.
Defenders of the Senator will reach, predictably, for the language of accountability. They will say that the president’s strategy is reckless, that the public has a right to know, and that whistleblowing serves democracy. None of these claims, even granted, justifies what happened. There is a difference between disclosing classified information to authorized oversight bodies, which is lawful and protected, and disclosing it on broadcast television, which is neither. The Inspector General system exists. The Gang of Eight exists. The classified annex process exists. These channels are not theoretical. They are the mechanisms a Senator with a real concern uses. A Senator who skips all of them in favor of Margaret Brennan’s couch has not chosen whistleblowing. He has chosen broadcasting. The two are not synonyms, however much partisan analysts wish to merge them.
The strategic stakes deserve their own paragraph. The United States is approximately 80% through the largest sustained drawdown of precision munitions in the post Cold War era, a drawdown driven by transfers to allies, by operational tempo against narco terror networks, and by the ongoing pressure of multiple regional theaters. Conservative analysts at the Heritage Foundation and the Center for Strategic and International Studies have warned for years that production lines for items like the Stinger, the Javelin, and certain naval interceptors have not kept pace with consumption. Those warnings live in unclassified studies precisely so that responsible legislators can discuss the problem without disclosing specifics. Kelly’s contribution, on national television, was not to acknowledge the general challenge, which is permissible, but to anchor the discussion to numbers he had been shown in a classified setting. That anchoring is the value an adversary cannot otherwise obtain. He gave it away.
There is one final wrinkle worth naming, because it cuts directly against the Senator’s strongest line of defense. A former Navy combat aviator understands operational security as a matter of personal survival. Pilots do not broadcast their loadouts. Carrier strike groups do not announce their bunker depths to open channels. A man who launched from the deck of a carrier during Desert Storm knows, at the level of muscle memory, what disclosing magazine levels means in a time of pressure. That training is precisely what makes the Sunday broadcast harder to forgive, not easier. Ignorance might excuse the act. Decades of experience do not.
What follows from all of this is not complicated. The Senator should resign. The Department of War’s legal counsel should complete its review without political interference and refer findings to the Department of Justice if the facts support referral. The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence should immediately reconsider his clearances and his committee assignments, beginning with Armed Services. None of these steps are vindictive. Each is the routine institutional response a serious country applies when an officeholder treats the nation’s secrets as currency to be spent on a Sunday show. A republic that fails to respond at the level of office and clearance is a republic that has decided its secrets are negotiable. Adversaries notice such decisions. They plan around them.
I want to close on the point I made in November, because it has aged into something more than a warning. The hero’s obligation, once the heroism is past, is to preserve the institutions that allowed the heroism to be honored. Mark Kelly flew the missions, made the carrier landings, and rode the rocket. Those acts were real and they were brave. They are not, however, a license. They are a debt. The discharge of that debt looks like discretion, prudence, and fidelity to the rules that bind every other officer who took the same oath. The opposite of that discharge looks like a TikTok video telling young troops to doubt their orders, and like a Sunday broadcast disclosing the bottom of our magazine to the very governments hoping to test it. Two acts, one pattern, one conclusion. He should go.
If you enjoy my work, please subscribe: https://x.com/amuse.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
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Last November, I argued in these pages that Senator Mark Kelly had crossed a structural threshold that earlier American history identified with one name, Benedict Arnold. The comparison was not designed for shock. It was designed to isolate a pattern. A decorated warrior earns public trust, then spends that trust against the lawful authority of the nation that conferred it. Kelly had recorded a vertical TikTok video, in coordination with five colleagues, instructing junior enlisted troops that the commander in chief was issuing illegal orders and that disobedience was a duty. I called that an opening move in a domestic color revolution. Many readers thought the framing was too strong.
Yesterday on “Face the Nation” with Margaret Brennan, Senator Kelly removed any remaining doubt. Asked about American posture toward a delicate negotiated settlement involving a major foreign adversary, the Senator volunteered specific operational details he had received in a classified Pentagon briefing about U.S. munition stockpiles. He told a national television audience, and by extension every foreign intelligence service that records American Sunday programming, that we are running low on the precision strike inventory that underwrites our deterrent. Within hours, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth responded with characteristic directness. “Captain Mark Kelly strikes again. Now he’s blabbing on TV (falsely & dumbly) about a CLASSIFIED Pentagon briefing he received. Did he violate his oath, again? Dept of War legal counsel will review.”
To understand why this matters, set aside the partisan temperature for a moment and consider the situation in its simplest form. Imagine a sitting Senator and former military officer receives an alarming classified briefing that shows the country is approaching the bottom of a critical munition stockpile. Now imagine that same country is on the brink of a negotiated settlement with an enemy that has every reason to keep fighting if the United States can be persuaded that its position is weaker than it appears. Now imagine the Senator walks onto a Sunday morning broadcast and tells the world that we are nearly out of ammunition. What follows is not speculation. It is logic. The adversary, hearing this from an Armed Services Committee member with combat credentials, gains the single piece of information that would justify scuttling the deal and waiting the United States out. That is the practical effect of what Senator Kelly did. He did it, by his own implicit admission, with intelligence he was entrusted with under conditions of confidentiality.
Some readers will object that operational secrets are leaked all the time, that the press routinely traffics in classified material, and that holding one Senator to a higher standard is selective outrage. The objection misunderstands the office. A member of the Senate is not a journalist, and an Armed Services Committee member is not an ordinary member of the Senate. The classification system is the legal and administrative spine of American intelligence sharing with the legislative branch. The 100 Senators receive briefings the public does not receive precisely because the country has decided that civilian oversight requires informed legislators. That arrangement collapses the moment a Senator decides that his briefings are content for a cable hit. If the deal between the executive and the legislature is that secrets stay secret in exchange for access, and one side breaks the deal whenever the partisan moment is favorable, the deal ends. The intelligence community will narrow what it tells Congress, oversight will weaken, and the constitutional design will erode. Kelly’s behavior, in other words, is not merely an individual indiscretion. It is an attack on the institution that gives Senators standing to oversee the executive at all.
A second objection is that the Senator’s intent was honorable. He wanted, perhaps, to pressure the administration into faster production decisions, or to signal to allies that American resources are constrained. This is a polite reading. It is also irrelevant to the analysis. The duty to protect classified information does not bend to motive. A safe driver who runs a red light because he is rushing a friend to the hospital still ran the red light. A Senator who discloses sensitive stockpile data because he is annoyed with the President’s foreign policy still disclosed sensitive stockpile data. The legal standard, codified in 18 USC 798 and related statutes, attaches to the act, not the rationale. The political standard, which is what the public weighs when it considers fitness for office, also attaches to the act. A man who cannot keep a secret on Sunday morning cannot be trusted with the briefings he will receive on Monday.
There is a deeper point here, and it returns us to the original Arnold analogy. The pattern that links the TikTok video of last fall with the “Face the Nation” appearance of this weekend is the pattern of using personal prestige earned in service to weaken the position of the United States vis a vis its adversaries. The TikTok video used Kelly’s status as a Navy combat veteran and astronaut to encourage uniformed Americans to view the commander in chief’s lawful orders as presumptively suspect. The “Face the Nation” appearance used his status as an Armed Services Committee member to tell adversaries something they could not otherwise know with confidence. Both acts cash in the same currency. Both spend that currency against the same nation. A reader who accepted the original Arnold framing as too strong should now reconsider, because the Senator has, in two distinct domains, executed the same maneuver. He has used the trust that flowed to him from his service to weaken the country that conferred the trust.
Defenders of the Senator will reach, predictably, for the language of accountability. They will say that the president’s strategy is reckless, that the public has a right to know, and that whistleblowing serves democracy. None of these claims, even granted, justifies what happened. There is a difference between disclosing classified information to authorized oversight bodies, which is lawful and protected, and disclosing it on broadcast television, which is neither. The Inspector General system exists. The Gang of Eight exists. The classified annex process exists. These channels are not theoretical. They are the mechanisms a Senator with a real concern uses. A Senator who skips all of them in favor of Margaret Brennan’s couch has not chosen whistleblowing. He has chosen broadcasting. The two are not synonyms, however much partisan analysts wish to merge them.
The strategic stakes deserve their own paragraph. The United States is approximately 80% through the largest sustained drawdown of precision munitions in the post Cold War era, a drawdown driven by transfers to allies, by operational tempo against narco terror networks, and by the ongoing pressure of multiple regional theaters. Conservative analysts at the Heritage Foundation and the Center for Strategic and International Studies have warned for years that production lines for items like the Stinger, the Javelin, and certain naval interceptors have not kept pace with consumption. Those warnings live in unclassified studies precisely so that responsible legislators can discuss the problem without disclosing specifics. Kelly’s contribution, on national television, was not to acknowledge the general challenge, which is permissible, but to anchor the discussion to numbers he had been shown in a classified setting. That anchoring is the value an adversary cannot otherwise obtain. He gave it away.
There is one final wrinkle worth naming, because it cuts directly against the Senator’s strongest line of defense. A former Navy combat aviator understands operational security as a matter of personal survival. Pilots do not broadcast their loadouts. Carrier strike groups do not announce their bunker depths to open channels. A man who launched from the deck of a carrier during Desert Storm knows, at the level of muscle memory, what disclosing magazine levels means in a time of pressure. That training is precisely what makes the Sunday broadcast harder to forgive, not easier. Ignorance might excuse the act. Decades of experience do not.
What follows from all of this is not complicated. The Senator should resign. The Department of War’s legal counsel should complete its review without political interference and refer findings to the Department of Justice if the facts support referral. The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence should immediately reconsider his clearances and his committee assignments, beginning with Armed Services. None of these steps are vindictive. Each is the routine institutional response a serious country applies when an officeholder treats the nation’s secrets as currency to be spent on a Sunday show. A republic that fails to respond at the level of office and clearance is a republic that has decided its secrets are negotiable. Adversaries notice such decisions. They plan around them.
I want to close on the point I made in November, because it has aged into something more than a warning. The hero’s obligation, once the heroism is past, is to preserve the institutions that allowed the heroism to be honored. Mark Kelly flew the missions, made the carrier landings, and rode the rocket. Those acts were real and they were brave. They are not, however, a license. They are a debt. The discharge of that debt looks like discretion, prudence, and fidelity to the rules that bind every other officer who took the same oath. The opposite of that discharge looks like a TikTok video telling young troops to doubt their orders, and like a Sunday broadcast disclosing the bottom of our magazine to the very governments hoping to test it. Two acts, one pattern, one conclusion. He should go.
If you enjoy my work, please subscribe: https://x.com/amuse.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
READ NEXT: America’s ‘Supergun’ Is Back After Years Of Silence
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