Space Force Woke Agenda

Space Force Commander in Greenland Sent Out Email Breaking with Vice President Vance After His Visit

Related to our recent Town Hall which discussed the problem of military personnel opening opposing the administration:

By Thomas Novelly | Military.com

Just days after Vice President JD Vance’s March visit to Pituffik Space Base in Greenland, the installation commander sent out an email to the base distancing it from Vance’s criticism of Denmark and its oversight of the territory, Military.com has learned.

Col. Susan Meyers, the commander of the 821st Space Base Group who also oversees the Pentagon’s northernmost military base, sent a March 31 message to all personnel at Pituffik seemingly aimed at generating unity among the airmen and Guardians, as well as the Canadians, Danes and Greenlanders who work there, following Vance’s appearance.

She wrote that she “spent the weekend thinking about Friday’s visit — the actions taken, the words spoken, and how it must have affected each of you.”

“I do not presume to understand current politics, but what I do know is the concerns of the U.S. administration discussed by Vice President Vance on Friday are not reflective of Pituffik Space Base,” Meyers wrote in the email, which was communicated to Military.com.

The emailed remarks, confirmed as accurate to Military.com by the Space Force, mark a rare pushback within the ranks of the Trump administration’s repeated criticism and critiques of NATO members and longtime allies.

A source familiar with the email said it was sent to all base personnel, including those from Denmark and Greenland on the installation.

Meyers became the commander of Pituffik’s 821st Space Base Group in July, according to a Facebook post about the change of command ceremony.

“I commit that, for as long as I am lucky enough to lead this base, all of our flags will fly proudly — together,” Meyers’ email message to the base read. [STARRS Note: is she the commander of an American base or a globalist base? Who pays for it?]

Vance traveled to Greenland and spoke at the space base on March 28. . . .

. . . The Space Force did not respond to Military.com questions sent Wednesday morning asking about additional context for Meyers’ email. It was not immediately clear whether Meyers was still serving as commander of the 821st Space Base Group following her email.

Department of Defense Chief of Staff Joe Kasper told Military.com in an emailed statement that

“civilian control of the military is a bedrock principle of our armed forces. Actions to undermine the chain of command or to subvert President Trump’s agenda will not be tolerated at the Defense Department.”

The Trump administration has gone on a widespread purge of high-ranking military officers and commanders.

Last week, Trump fired Air Force Gen. Tim Haugh, the director of the National Security Agency who also oversaw Cyber Command.

Vice Adm. Shoshana Chatfield, who served with NATO, was fired this week in what appeared to be part of that purge. Officials in Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s office on Monday did not immediately confirm the move or offer a statement on why Chatfield was relieved or by whom.

Other high-profile military leaders who have been fired since Trump took office — without any public reason given — including Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Charles “CQ” Brown, the Navy‘s top leader Adm. Lisa Franchetti, and Air Force Vice Chief of Staff Gen. James Slife.

First published in Military.com


Well that was thankfully quick:



STARRS Town Hall | The Military’s Leftwing Ideological Resistance: Fighting Back Against the Military Reforms of the President and SecDef

The Real Cold War with Drew Dix


Comments on Sean Parnell’s post:

Retired Navy Rear Admiral:

“Officers, especially those in command, must set the example for all by zealously carrying out lawful orders, showing respect for leaders, and supporting their chain of command. Subordination is part of the EXEMPLARY CONDUCT standard set for officers* in law: to be a good example of virtue, honor, patriotism, and subordination.

Subordination is crucial for maintaining discipline, cohesion, and effectiveness within military units. And it’s even more vital the higher you go. Don’t agree? Leave. But do not stay and spread poison and subvert the chain of command, drag your feet, maliciously comply, or simply “wait them out.”

* Each service has the same legal requirement for exemplary conduct in Title 10 USC – Army Ch 345 §3583, Navy Ch 551 §5947, Air Force Ch 845 §8583.”

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