David Petraeus, retired Army general and former CIA chief, on Wednesday urged President Donald Trump not to drag out his election lawsuits and to allow transition planning to begin in the meantime.
“If you really care for the country, at the very least, exhaust these legal challenges as quickly as is absolutely possible, ideally by early next week,” Petraeus said on “Squawk Box.” “Then you can get on with this.”
While NBC News and other media organizations have projected Democrat Joe Biden as the winner of last week’s the presidential contest, Trump has refused to concede. His campaign has launched a flurry of lawsuits related to the voting process or the vote counting. However, there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud, despite Trump’s baseless insistence that his loss is due to “illegal votes.”
Biden, vice president under former President Barack Obama, has nonetheless launched his transition team, announcing various advisory groups and delivering presidential-like speeches on health-care policy and the coronavirus pandemic in recent days. On Tuesday, Biden called Trump’s refusal to concede “an embarrassment, quite frankly.”
Petraeus, who previously served as director of Central Intelligence under Obama, said he believes the Trump administration should, at least, allow important aspects of the transition to a new president to happen concurrently with any legal proceedings.
“My hope would be, obviously, that whatever legal challenges are raised will be resolved very expeditiously,” he said. “I don’t understand why in the meantime, actually, you still can’t get on with a transition in terms of the time-consuming tasks,” Petraeus added, such as background checks for people who will need high-level security clearances.
The White House and Trump campaign did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on Petraeus’ remarks.
“I’m non-partisan. I don’t favor either party, but I do favor the country,” said Petraeus, who is now chairman of KKR Global Institute. “I do believe that we should enable the incoming team to have as smooth of a transition as is absolutely possible for the good of the country.”
Inauguration Day is set for Jan. 20.
Petraeus, a retired four-star U.S. Army general who oversaw years of operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, said he learned lessons about transitioning to new roles from a mentor, retired Gen. Jack Keane.
“He used to tell the battalion and brigade commanders, ‘If you really love your unit, if you really care for it, you will suppress your ego, you’ll let your successor into the organization before you even leave, before the change of command,'” he said.
Petraeus resigned as CIA chief in 2012, under fire for sharing classified information with his biographer, with whom he was having an extramarital affair. He later pleaded guilty to mishandling classified information, and was fined and put on probation.