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Thursday, June 11, 2026
Trump & Hegseth Fire Blacks
JUst looking at this guy and you know he was not up to the JOB;
In February, General Charles Brown Jr. was a career Air Force pilot, experienced commander and the nation’s highest ranking military officer. Then, President Donald Trump fired him. In a rare public comment about his dismissal, Brown, who has since joined Duke’s faculty, spoke about his duty to his job and working in the face of opposition at an event Thursday.
“I was never going to resign. They were going to have to fire me,” Brown said. “They did. But, I was going to do my job regardless. I walk away with my head held high. I have zero regrets.”
Five months after his dismissal, Brown joined Duke as an executive-in-residence in both the Sanford School of Public Policy and Pratt School of Engineering. In an August interview with The Chronicle, Brown said this was motivated by his continued interest in mentoring and inspiring leadership.
The event, titled “A Conversation with Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr.,” was hosted by Duke’s Program in American Grand Strategy and Sanford; the event was moderated by Peter Feaver, professor of political science and public policy and AGS program director. Brown was nominated by former President Joe Biden as the 21st chair of the Joint Chiefs in May 2023, following an extensive career as a pilot, commander and the chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force, a post to which he was nominated by Trump in 2020. As chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Brown served as the principal adviser to the President, Secretary of Defense and National Security Council on matters of national security.
“When you’re at that level, you’re on 24-hour renewable contracts,” Brown said. “... Knowing that I was being scrutinized, I wasn’t focused on me. I told the joint staff, ‘we have a job to do.’” Brown, who was the first Black person to head a branch of the military and the second Black chair of the Joint Chiefs, had faced pressure to resign early on in the Trump administration, with Trump’s then-nominee for Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, calling for Brown’s firing in November due to his alleged involvement with “woke” ideology.
“I listened to the podcast [Hegseth] did … He’s never met me. Until he came into the Pentagon on the 27th of January. And so: judge me by the work I do, not by the color of my skin,” Brown said. Working under Trump and Hegseth, Brown said his objective stayed the same: “Trying to help [them] be successful.”
“We still got things to do. Things are happening. The world doesn’t stop just because we changed administration and got a new Secretary of Defense. So, I want to make sure now, the movie’s still playing, so he can pick up the plotlines,” Brown said.
Beyond his dismissal, Brown also discussed foreign policy and issues like the U.S.’s June strike on Iran. “That mission had been thought about for a long time,” Brown said, recalling how he had worked on the bomb used in the strike during his tenure as the Deputy Commander of Central Command. “Maybe there is an easier way to do this, but I think the other part of this, though, is not only is it ‘accomplish the mission,’ it also sends a message to our adversaries,” Brown said.
Brown also spoke on the challenges of leading with continual gridlock in Congress, annual appropriation challenges, the progress of innovation and the future of automation and AI in the military. “We gotta be ready today. You never know what can actually kick [war] off,” Brown said. “... The goal here is to make sure we're doing everything possible to be ready today, next week, next year, next decade. And so we can't rest on laurels.”
In the spring, Brown will co-teach a course with Feaver in the AGS program; Brown is also working with Pratt faculty on the school’s Character Forward Initiative to integrate ethics into engineering.
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