Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy said Friday there are no plans to investigate Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the former National Security Council (NSC) staffer who was dismissed from his post after he testified during the impeachment inquiry.
When asked about whether the Army would investigate or punish Vindman, McCarthy said he “was scheduled to come back to the Army” and was detailed to the NSC.
“And also when you look at the person he reports to, said horrible things, avoided the chain of command, leaked, did a lot of bad things. And so we sent him on his way to a much different location, and the military can handle him anyway they want,” Trump added.
Earlier this month, Vindman’s lawyer, in a strongly worded statement, said the NSC staffer was removed and escorted from the White House premises, adding that it was political retaliation for testifying in the impeachment inquiry in November.
On the same day, Ambassador Gordon Sondland, another impeachment witness, confirmed via his lawyer that he was being recalled from his post. However, he thanked Trump for allowing him to serve in that role.
The personnel changes prompted Democrats in Congress to call for investigations into how they were dismissed. But national security adviser Robert O’Brien said last week that he made the decision to remove Vindman and his twin brother, explaining that it wasn’t carried out in retaliation for the testimony.
Trump, meanwhile, did not instruct him to remove the two, according to O'Brien.
“It was just time for them to go back. Their services were no longer needed,” he said, adding that Trump “is entitled to staffers that want to execute his policies and he has confidence in.”