Retired Army Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster believes Mike Waltz’s removal as national security advisor was due to a dispute within the Trump Administration over “worldview.”

McMaster, a former adviser on national security in the first Trump Administration, made the remarks in an interview that aired on CBS’s “Face the Nation”.

McMaster said that Waltz’s departure was “significant” for U.S. national security, regardless of its cause.

Officially, Vice President J.D. Waltz believes that President Donald Trump will be a better ambassador at the United Nations as Waltz than he is a national security advisor. Vance asserted. According to reports on Thursday, Waltz’s removal was due to “general dissatisfaction” in the National Security Council. Others believe Waltz was fired after the Signal Chat issue.

McMaster has said that he doesn’t buy it.

“I think it shows that there is a battle going on in the administration about our role in the world and the way certain people perceive America’s position in the global arena. McMaster stated that Mike Waltz, although an America First person, was also an internationalist who prioritized our alliances.

“He knew — and I believe he was right — that [Russian president Vladimir] Putin would not stop until he was stopped. He was a proponent of a firm approach towards Putin,” he said. “I think that there are some in the administration with a different worldview. They are for the U.S. to retrench or disengage from complex challenges overseas, and want to give priority, sort of, Western Hemisphere defense, North American.”

McMaster, on the other hand, framed Waltz’s dismissal as an issue of policy instead of the error related to the incident that was referred to by the name Signalgate.

McMaster stated, “I believe it is a policy question, a worldview problem, but also an understanding of the National Security Council and National Security Staff’s role.” President Trump has little patience in the current deliberative process. This is why I believe he might see the National Security Council as a hindrance instead of the best vehicle for driving his agenda and integrating all elements of national strength and efforts of like-minded partners to further American interests.

McMaster served as national security advisor from February 2017 to April 2018, when he was replaced by John Bolton.