That is a) not actually how it works (IC is not involved, different group of folks), and b) not actually described by any actual law (it is an Executive Order/DOD Directive sort of thing, not something passed by Congress).
Separately, the "untrustworthiness" of a President may not be obvious at all times, in far advance, etc. And so while I agree that, in general, if you don't trust a President with nukes, you shouldn't allow them to be or remain President, it's not very realistic policy.
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The sorts of changes that I (and many others) have in mind are more practical and to the point, e.g., before any first use of nuclear weapons should be authorized, there should be at least one other positive agreement required.
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E.g. someone — and we can discuss who, because there are options with difficult implications — should be able to "veto" in such a scenario. This is a much lower bar than removal. It is "merely" an extension of the "two man rule" into the policy realm.
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This would not by any means be a "perfect" situation — it would not guarantee against rash use — but it would be better than unilateral authority, I believe. This is a larger responsibility than an individual human being should have — any of them!
End of conversation
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