Members of the Trump administration have been seeking increased security after the killing of Charlie Kirk, the outlet has said
High-ranking US officials, including Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, have left their homes in Washington and moved to military bases outside the capital, The Atlantic has reported.
Members of the administration of US President Donald Trump have been seeking increased security after the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk in September, the outlet reported on Thursday.
Following Kirk’s murder in Utah, the White House designated Antifa a domestic terrorist organization, which The Atlantic has reported led to left-wing protests, threats against officials, and publication of their addresses online.
One unnamed senior member of the Trump administration who spoke to the outlet also cited “a specific foreign threat” as a reason for leaving his private home to live on a military base.
A total of six top US officials are currently living at military bases, occupying residences designated for senior commanders, the report read.
Both Hegseth and Rubio are staying at the so-called ‘Generals’ Row’ at Fort McNair, located on the confluence of the Potomac River and the Anacostia River in Washington, D.C., according to defense sources.
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem has moved to a home designated for the Coast Guard commandant at Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, while Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll opted for Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, the report added.
Military bases outside the capital appear to be running out of housing space due to high demand among members of Trump’s team, with The Atlantic citing a former official who claimed that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard had also applied for a home at Fort McNair, but was denied.
The New York Times reported that some former residents of ‘Generals’ Row’ have “expressed frustration” over the fact that civilian officials are occupying homes at the base instead of admirals and generals.
Military commanders “at any time there is an emergency… [have] got to be able to respond quickly to whatever crisis is taking place… I think that was part of the reason for having that housing close by,” former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told the paper.
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