Global Military Justice Reform's crystal ball is in the shop for repairs, but questions are already being raised in the glass-enclosed newsroom high above Global Military Justice Reform Plaza about what we might expect under the next U.S. administration. Some possibilities:
- Trial of retired senior officers for violation of, e.g., Art. 88, UCMJ
- Presidential dismissal of officers in accordance with Art. 4, UCMJ, presumably without granting any demands for court-martial
- Unlawful-orders issues raised by questionable domestic use of armed forces
- Unlawful command influence
- Revision of DoDI on extremism
- Revision of service regulations on tattoos (here's looking at you, Mr. Secretary)
- Appointment of a successor to Chief Judge Kevin A. Ohlson in 2028
- Filling any unscheduled vacancies on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (CMA judges Robert M. Duncan and Matthew J. Perry left to become federal district judges in Ohio and South Carolina, respectively)
- Early retirement of Judge Advocates General, lead Special Trial Counsels, and other senior officers as a result of the Warrior Board purge (with or without customary decorations)
- Aggressive use of grade determination authority for retiring officers (including officers already retired?)
- Pardons and other clemency for past offenders and/or others facing UCMJ charges
- Changes to the Manual for Courts-Martial and service regulations (including equal opportunity regulations)
- Replacement of members of the Military Justice Review Panel and DAC-IPAD
- Legislative initiatives (e.g., terminating CAAF as an Elon Musk economy measure)