No Pentagon officials deliberately held off on sending the National Guard to the U.S. Capitol Building during the attacks of Jan. 6, 2021, the House committee investigating the insurrection said in its final report. Rather, it said conflicting messages caused a delay.
Laying blame: The committee lays blame on then-President Trump for the hold up as rioters attacked the building's police officers, smashed windows and searched for lawmakers for more than three hours until Guardsmen showed up to help quell the chaos.
"President Trump had authority and responsibility to direct deployment of the National Guard in the District of Columbia, but never gave any order to deploy the National Guard on January 6th or on any other day," the committee wrote in the 845-page report it released Thursday evening. "Nor did he instruct any Federal law enforcement agency to assist."
A major focus: A key focus of the committee was looking into why it took hours for the Pentagon to eventually send the National Guard to the Capitol as the calamity unfolded.
The final report states that Washington, D.C., National Guard head Maj. Gen. William Walker "strongly" considered sending his troops without specific orders from the White House or top Defense Department officials, but ultimately held off.
Woulda, coulda, shoulda: "Guard officials located with Major General Walker at the Armory all say he seriously contemplated aloud the possibility of breaking with the chain of command," according to the report. "'Should we just deploy now and resign tomorrow?' [an officer] recalled Major General Walker bluntly putting it."
Walker told the committee he "would have done just that," had acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller and Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy not sent out two memos just days earlier. Those documents restricted Guard deployments around the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, over fears they could be viewed as too political.
Unintentional: "We have no evidence that the delay was intentional. Likewise, it appears that none of the individuals involved understood what President Trump planned for January 6th, and how he would behave during the violence."
The committee also found there were "genuine" concerns that Trump might try to use the military for a coup attempt as lawmakers counted Electoral College ballots to certify Joe Biden's presidential win after the way the former commander-in-chief used the military to respond to racial justice protests in summer 2020.
Walker did eventually get permission to send Guard troops to the Capitol after congressional leaders frantically called Pentagon officials, but Trump was never involved in the talks, according to the report.
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