


For anyone desperate to see the Trump administration's hawkish and intensely pro-Israel element offset by bona fide America First voices in key intelligence positions, the selection of retired US Army Lt. Col. Daniel Davis to oversee the production of the President's Daily Brief seemed almost too good to be true. Alas, that has proven to be the case, as an eruption of objections and smears from Israel-supporters killed his job offer in a matter of hours.
Davis is a senior fellow at Defense Priorities, one of few Washington think tanks that are skeptical of foreign interventionism and militarism. He first rose to national attention in 2011 when, as an Army officer, he blew the whistle on the jarring difference between the real-life situation in Afghanistan and the fraudulently false characterizations being voiced by top military officials.
Fast-foward to March 2025: Trump Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was poised to appoint Davis to serve as the Deputy Director for Mission Integration. One of his chief responsibilities would have been compiling the President's Daily Brief (PDB), a highly-classified digest of intelligence assessments that's written for the president and distributed to a small group of senior-most officials, such as the vice president, national security advisor, and the secretaries of Defense and State. The role does not require Senate confirmation.
In addition to being a skeptic of the US proxy war in Ukraine and calling for the withdrawal of American forces from Syria, Davis has pointedly criticized US backing of the Israeli war in Gaza, and has argued that America's confrontationalist approach to Iran only serves to incentivize the country to begin developing a nuclear weapon. Those latter sentiments are anathema to Israel and its backers inside the United States.
On Wednesday, the knives came out, with Jewish Insider sounding an alarm about the imminent ascension of the "anti-Israel" Davis to the critical post. From the Jewish Insider article, here a partial list of Davis's purported sins that made him intolerable to those who seek to perpetuate America's status quo, Israel-catering policies:
Jewish Insider's flimsy indictment was immediately amplified by an assortment of neocons, including radio host Mark Levin, who insinuated that Davis is antisemitic. The Israel-backing Anti-Defamation League followed suit, saying "it would be extremely dangerous" for Davis to be named Deputy Director of National Intelligence. Florida Sen. Rick Scott piled on, telling Jewish Insider he was "absolutely shocked by [Davis'] comments: "President Trump is the most pro-Israel president in our nation's history, and I fully expect every member of the administration to enact his agenda and stand strong with our great ally, Israel."
Davis was already undergoing the background check required for the job. However, within hours of the Jewish Insider article, he was told he wouldn't be coming on board. Citing a senior Trump administration official, the Times said Gabbard "reconsidered her choice given the criticism, and other officials confirmed the decision." Neocons quickly took to social media to spike the football. Laura Loomer expressed relief, saying that Davis "would be a national security nightmare." Levin credited Trump for barring Davis from the White House:
On the other hand, writing at Responsible Statecraft, Kelley Beaucar Vlahos lamented the killing of Davis' appointment:
It is not surprising that the most strident voices in the War Party, particularly pro-Israel hawks trying desperately to manage the remembered history of the 9/11 wars, had it in for him. He is an anathema to everything they have stood for over the last two decades: he is against the U.S. trying to impose its interests and values on the world via foreign regime change, he believes the military is overextended and needlessly placed in harm's way overseas, and he has criticized the military industrial complex for risking troop readiness and basic conventional warfighting capabilities by deferring to the war profiteers in the industry. He has also echoed George Washington's warning about entangling alliances in his own warnings about unconditional aid to Israel and Ukraine.
As the old adage goes, "personnel is policy." From the exclusion of the non-interventionist, America-first Daniel Davis to calling for Rep. Thomas Massie to be ousted from Congress, the Trump White House is plotting a course that diverges from the principles it supposedly espouses.