WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's national security adviser on Wednesday sidelined about 160 National Security Council aides, sending them home while the administration reviews staffing and tries to align it with Trump's agenda.
The career government employees, commonly referred to as detailees, were summoned Wednesday for an all-staff call and told they will be expected to be available to the council's senior directors but would not need to report to the White House. The council provides national security and foreign policy advice to the president.
Brian McCormack, chief of staff to national security adviser Mike Waltz, delivered the news in a two-minute phone call, telling the detailees they ''are directed to be on call and report to the office only if contacted by the NSC leadership.''
''As anyone who has had the privilege of working here in the White House knows, it's a tremendous honor to support the executive office of the president and the presidency itself,'' said McCormack, according to a recording of the call obtained by The Associated Press. ''We also know that every president is entitled to have a staff and the advisers that they need to implement the goals that the American people elected him to pursue.''
Trump, a Republican, is sidelining these nonpolitical experts on topics that range from counterterrorism to global climate policy at a time when the United States is dealing with a disparate set of complicated foreign policy matters, including conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. Such structuring could make new policy experts brought in to the NSC less likely to speak up about policy differences and concerns.
Waltz had signaled before Inauguration Day that he would look to return holdover civil servants who worked in the council during President Joe Biden's administration to their home agencies. That was meant to ensure the council is staffed by those who support Trump's goals.
By the end of the review, Waltz will look to have a ''more efficient, flatter'' NSC, one official said. The officials declined to comment on the ultimate number of personnel — nonpolitical detailees as well as political appointees — whom Trump and Waltz would like to see as part of the council once the review is completed.
Officials said they have already begun bringing detailees from agencies with expertise that the new administration values, including some who had served during the first Trump administration.