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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Wednesday, October 29, 2025

U.S. military officials involved with President Donald Trump's expanding operations in Latin America have been asked to sign non-disclosure agreements, three U.S. officials say, a development that raises new questions about a military buildup that Venezuela fears may lead to an invasion.

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Any strike on Venezuelan land would be an extraordinary escalation in the Americas, pulling the attention of the armed forces of the United States away from both Europe and the Pacific. How likely is that?

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-- The Economist (@economist.com) Oct 29, 2025 at 9:20 AM

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You can have an NDA to hide a felony?

#1 | Posted by Zed at 2025-10-28 03:01 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

... The step is highly unusual, given that U.S. military officials are already required to shield national security secrets from public view, and comes as lawmakers in Congress say they are being kept in the dark about key aspects of the mission. ...

If the ops in the area are as good and needed as Pres Trump says they are, then why not keep Congress informed, at the very least?

#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-28 03:03 PM | Reply

Hide the murders.

#3 | Posted by fresno500 at 2025-10-28 04:56 PM | Reply

"If I were a commander today, I would not sign an NDA like the one reportedly being circulated in the Southern Command theater. Not out of defiance, but out of respect for the oath I took to support and defend the Constitution. I would continue to safeguard classified information with the same care I always did"but I would not allow a redundant or politically motivated document to interfere with lawful communication between the armed forces, civilian leaders, and the representatives of the people. Refusing to sign wouldn't be disobedience; it would be fidelity to both law and principle."
Mark Hertling
"Why Commanders Don't Sign NDAs"
www.thebulwark.com

One more time: Soldiers don't serve individuals; they serve the Constitution. They don't conceal truth from oversight; they protect truth from exploitation. There's a difference between secrecy that saves lives and secrecy that is based on misplaced loyalty. Our system is designed to tell those apart.

I understand why businesses need NDAs, but NDAs have no place in our government. They belong in corporate boardrooms, not command tents. They substitute legal fear for professional trust, and in doing so they erode the very foundation on which military leadership stands.

Because, in the end, this isn't about secrecy at all"it's about trust. Trust in the laws that already govern classified information. Trust in the officers and NCOs who have spent their careers safeguarding it. Trust in the system of checks and balances that keeps our military strong, apolitical, and accountable. Once that trust is broken"once leaders use the tools of secrecy to silence rather than to secure"it cannot be restored by any number of signatures on a form.


#4 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2025-10-29 07:06 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

NDA's are irrelevant when prosecuting war crimes.

#5 | Posted by Nixon at 2025-10-29 08:41 AM | Reply

IMHO these NDAs aren't about hiding information, it's about who they can/can't trust when the sh.. hits the fan! Eventually those that don't sign will be given assignments that keep them out of the chain of command when unlawful orders are given.

#6 | Posted by FedUpWithPols at 2025-10-29 11:26 AM | Reply

#6 | Posted by FedUpWithPols

I agree, this is a loyalty test. A litmus test for loyalty.

#7 | Posted by snoofy at 2025-10-29 11:28 AM | Reply

SCOTUS has given Trump a free pass for in-office criminality. All he has to do for those he involves in crimes is issue blanket pardons and, as they say, Bob's yer uncle.

This is, in effect, introducing the functional equivalent of Nazi Germany's Fuhrerprinzip into our political life.

#8 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2025-10-29 12:35 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

Free speech is back!

#9 | Posted by Derek_Wildstar at 2025-10-29 02:09 PM | Reply

Freespeech is not back. You just have to go to court to have it enforced.

#10 | Posted by fresno500 at 2025-10-29 03:33 PM | Reply

Yeahhhh... sure wouldn't want to give up trade secrets of stupid.

#11 | Posted by RightisTrite at 2025-10-30 08:12 AM | Reply

The NDA also hinder high ranking officers from publicizing what they regard as illegal orders to invade without cause...that is a war of aggression and is illegal under UN standards, not that Trump cares a tiny bit about the UN and other nations.

#12 | Posted by Hughmass at 2025-10-30 08:37 AM | Reply

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