The rise of Dan Driscoll, Army secretary turned envoy
Add Axios as your preferred source to
see more of our stories on Google.

U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll greets President Trump at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in June. Photo: Alexander Nieves/DVIDS
U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll's impromptu role in negotiating peace between Russia and Ukraine thrusts into the mainstream what defense circles have been whispering about: He's a Trump 2.0 power player.
Why it matters: It was Driscoll who formally presented the 28-point peace plan to Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky. Driscoll then held a flurry of meetings in Kyiv, joined the U.S. delegation in Geneva and jetted to Abu Dhabi to meet the Russians.
- President Trump on Tuesday said he was dispatching Steve Witkoff to Moscow and directing Driscoll to steer the next stage of talks with Kyiv.
- These are — in sum — not the typical responsibilities of an Army secretary, aka the service's No. 1 civilian.
The big picture: Driscoll's star is rising. It's boosted by:
- Trust inside the White House.
- A willingness to engage media outside of the Pentagon's preferred pool of conservative outlets.
- And a marathon travel circuit that has brought him to dozens of military installations and countries — Forts Bragg and Huachuca and Wainwright, plus Belgium and Germany and Poland, among others — in mere months.
Driving the news: It was Vice President Vance's idea to tap Driscoll, who was already planning a visit to Ukraine to discuss weapons, industrial output and strategy, according to U.S. officials.
- Vance and Driscoll are former Yale Law classmates and have a long-standing relationship.
- Driscoll — colloquially known as "drone guy" for his work on military modernization — was ultimately accompanied by Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, Sergeant Major of the Army Michael Weimer, Army Europe and Africa boss Gen. Christopher Donahue and others.
- Members of the delegation were briefed on drones, missiles, vehicles, situational awareness tools and production, alongside all the diplomatic festivities.
What they're saying: "We got Driscoll, who's well-liked, who's well-trusted. He's connected with U.S. government leadership," a U.S. official told Axios.
- "He's got ... experience as a soldier; he's now leading the Army. So he's a military guy. Hopefully, that will connect us better with the culture of the Ukrainians and Russians."
More from Axios:
How Trump's 28-point plan for Ukraine shocked the world
