When a four-star general tells you there's no enemy within, it's worth paying attention. Gen. Gregory Guillot, who leads US Northern Command, delivered that message to senators on Thursday, directly undercutting President Donald Trump's rationale for sending National Guard troops into American cities over the objections of local officials.
No Evidence of Internal Threats
"I do not have any indications of an enemy within," Guillot stated plainly when questioned about Trump's claims that an "invasion within" justified military deployments to Democratic-led cities including Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, Portland, and Memphis. It's not every day that a top military commander publicly contradicts presidential rhetoric, but here we are.
Even more striking, Guillot revealed he has "not been tasked to do anything" that aligns with Trump's inflammatory language, despite personally attending a September meeting where the president urged generals to treat "some of these dangerous cities" as "training grounds for our military, National Guard." So the president said it in the room, but apparently nothing came of it operationally.
Two Completely Different Stories
The Senate Armed Services Committee hearing played out exactly as you'd expect in this political environment. Republicans defended the Guard deployments as practical responses to serious problems. Chair Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) argued that "violent crime, rioting, drug trafficking and heinous gang activity have steadily escalated," while Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-Mont.) went further, claiming foreign powers are "actively attacking this country, using illegal immigration, using transnational crime, using drugs to do so." Guillot said he generally agrees on transnational threats, though that's a different conversation from domestic enemies.
Constitutional Concerns Take Center Stage
Democrats weren't having it. They characterized the deployments as both illegal and politically driven, pointing to the Posse Comitatus Act and warning that Trump's "enemy within" rhetoric risks turning military force against American citizens.
Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) put it bluntly: Trump is "forcing our military men and women to make a horrible choice: uphold their loyalty to the Constitution and protect peaceful protesters, or execute questionable orders from the president." Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) said the mere idea of stationing Guard troops at polling places "sends a shiver down the spine of every American."
Charles L. Young III, the Pentagon's principal deputy general counsel, tried to navigate the legal minefield by noting that federal law generally prohibits troops from polling sites, while emphasizing the president has "exclusive authority" to determine whether an emergency requires a Guard response. That's the kind of answer that satisfies nobody.
The timing matters here. This hearing came just one day after a federal judge in California ordered the administration to stop National Guard deployments in Los Angeles without Gov. Gavin Newsom's consent. The courts are clearly paying attention, and they're not automatically deferring to executive authority on this one.




