Commentary The recent actions and revelations of the conduct of Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman General Mark Milley may be the greatest acts of insubordination by a very senior officer in U.S. military history. Milley appears overstuffed in his uniform which is more laden with decorations than were those of Generals Marshall, Eisenhower, and MacArthur combined. Milley’s shoulders identify him as both a Ranger and a paratrooper. If it had not been in the midst of an election campaign, he would have been fired for his participation in an outrageous denunciation of the walk of the president and many other senior officials to St. John’s Episcopal Church near the White House the day after the effort by the “peaceful protesters” to burn it down. His telephone call to his analogue in the People’s Republic of China promising to warn them if the president whom Milley served attacked China, like his …