Army death row executions are again at the center of a sensitive legal and political debate in Washington. The US Army has prepared internal procedures for carrying out military executions if President Donald Trump authorizes them, as noted by customreceipt.com.
What the Army plan says
The internal plan, called Operation Resolute Justice, outlines how condemned prisoners could be moved from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to the federal execution site in Terre Haute, Indiana. Army officials said this is standard planning, not a final order.
A spokesperson said such drills have been held for years. Still, the document matters because the US military has not executed a service member since 1961.
Why presidential approval is crucial
Military courts can impose a death sentence, but an execution cannot happen without presidential approval. The plan reportedly gives the Army up to 150 days after approval to prepare the process.
Key points in the case include:
- 4 military death-row inmates are affected;
- executions would take place through federal coordination;
- media access is also addressed in the plan;
- no direct order has been announced.
This makes the issue both legal and political. It also places the White House under renewed scrutiny.

Who is on military death row
| Case | Key detail |
|---|---|
| Ronald Gray | Execution approved by George W. Bush in 2008 |
| Nidal Hasan | Sentenced over the Fort Hood mass shooting |
| Hasan Akbar | Convicted after a deadly 2003 attack in Kuwait |
| Timothy Hennis | Convicted in military court after DNA evidence revived the case |
The renewed planning comes as Trump pushes broader use of the death penalty in federal cases. For the Army, the question is not only whether executions are possible. It is whether the US is ready to restart a practice absent from military justice for more than 60 years.
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