The National Guard‘s response to the January 6 Capitol riots was delayed, in large part, over concerns about the optics and the media backlash to its deployment to protect federal property during the Black Lives Matter (BLM) riots in the summer of 2020. Top military officials pushed back on calls for deploying National Guard troops during a 2:30 PM call on January 6, in a stunning admission by the New York Times:
“…the military had adopted a particularly cautious approach to deploying the Guard, with several top commanders openly worried about the “optics” of such a mobilization in part because of concerns that President Donald J. Trump could misuse the Guard, and they approached the situation as akin to sending troops into an overseas war zone.”
“I’m not sure why we’re concerned about optics when it comes to, you know, saving lives and preventing damage and loss of property, but OK,” said Brig. Gen. Aaron R. Dean II, the then National Guard adjutant general, in Congressional testimony regarding the phone call between top Pentagon officials. A House Republican investigation into federal government actions on January 6 has shed further light on a series of missteps by U.S. military leaders during the riots, including a preoccupation with public and media perception.
Several officials have testified that career military leaders were too hesitant to take action in the early hours of chaos at the Capitol, fearing media backlash. In the summer of 2020, the corporate media blasted former President Donald Trump and the Pentagon over the use of National Guard assets to defend federal government buildings after several had been damaged or attacked by BLM rioters.
PARALYZED BY CAREERISM.
Additionally, Pentagon and National Guard officials were paralyzed by concerns over their own careers. “If I could send them right now without being fired, I would send them right now,” D.C. National Guard commander General William J. Walker told Dean as the situation at the Capitol deteriorated.
The National Pulse has previously reported that Rep. Clay Higgins (R-LA) uncovered new evidence regarding the involvement of federal enforcement in the January 6 riots. According to Higgins, federal agents were involved in pushing veterans groups and others into engaging in violence during the protest outside the Capitol.
President Trump had authorized the use of the National Guard days prior to the event, over concerns that AntiFa and other far-left actors would hijack the peaceful protests for nefarious ends. This, in fact, did happen. and was even pre-planned.