The past week was a tumultuous one in the West Wing, even by the drama-laden standards of President Donald Trump’s White House.

White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci resigned on Monday, a mere 10 days after Trump announced his appointment. Just days earlier, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus had resigned after Scaramucci publicly singled him out in an ill-informed crusade against leaks to the news media, describing Priebus in one interview as a “fucking paranoid schizophrenic.” Trump, never one to shrink from a grudge match, was reportedly disappointed in Priebus for not punching back at the hedge fund manager-turned-spokesman informally known as “the Mooch.”

Amid the latest surreal palace intrigue, it is easy to forget just how many top administration officials, most of them in the White House, have either left or been forced out since Trump took office in January.

It is common for presidents to shuffle staff over time, especially after major political setbacks. But the sheer number of high-profile dismissals and departures in Trump’s orbit so early in his presidency speaks to the unique chaos he has wrought with his management style, behavior and judgment.

Long before Priebus left, Trump pushed out several of the former Republican National Committee chairman’s allies in the administration. The president transferred Deputy Chief of Staff Katie Walsh to his outside political group in March. Early last week, Michael Short, an assistant press secretary with apparent ties to Priebus, resigned after Scaramucci hinted at plans to fire him.

Trump’s stinging criticism of Attorney General Jeff Sessions suggests he will churn through still more of his loyal deputies in the near future.

What follows is a list of some of the biggest casualties of the Trump administration, in the order they occurred. We have not included the dismissals of acting Attorney General Sally Yates and Preet Bharara, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, both of whom were holdovers from President Barack Obama’s administration.

Mike Segar/Reuters Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn boards an elevator as he arrives at Trump Tower in New York City on Nov. 29, 2016.

Michael Flynn

Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn lasted all of three weeks as Trump’s national security adviser before being pushed out. A leak in February revealed that Flynn, an early Trump supporter, had discussed American sanctions on Russia with Sergey Kislyak, then-Russian ambassador to the United States, prior to Inauguration Day.

The revelation contradicted Flynn’s previous statements to the contrary, as well as the similar assurances of other top administration officials, including Vice President Mike Pence. Flynn has since attracted scrutiny for accepting a significant cash payment from Russian state-sponsored TV network Russia Today and for sitting next to Russian President Vladimir Putin at a gala for the network in Moscow.

The discoveries about Flynn, who advocated for stronger ties with Russia, fueled suspicion about possible collusion between Trump campaign officials and the Russian government in its efforts to influence the November election. Former FBI Director James Comey confirmed in June that Flynn is one of the Trump officials whose ties to Russia are the subject of a criminal investigation. (That part of the inquiry is specifically focused on whether Flynn lied to FBI agents.)

Flynn’s brief White House career included bizarre episodes such as reportedly fielding a late-night call from Trump about whether a strong dollar was preferable. Prior to joining Trump’s team, Flynn won praise as an innovative military leader while serving in Iraq, but Obama forced out Flynn from his position as head of the Defense Intelligence Agency in 2014 amid concerns about Flynn’s bellicose attitude toward Iran and fractious relationships with colleagues.

During the 2016 presidential campaign, Flynn was criticized for espousing anti-Muslim views and leading attendees of the Republican convention in a chant of “Lock her up!” aimed at Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

Given Flynn’s controversial history, one would think that letting him go would have been one of Trump’s easier decisions. But Trump reportedly had more difficulty giving Flynn his walking papers than other senior staff members he’s canned, and the president stayed in touch with him for months afterward. In fact, Trump’s frustration with the pressure he felt to get rid of Flynn seems to have contributed to his decision to sack Comey in what became the most infamous of his firings.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters Former FBI Director James Comey testifies before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Russia's alleged interference in the 2016 presidential election on June 8, 2017.

James Comey

When Trump got rid of FBI Director James Comey in May, he apparently thought it would be uncontroversial. Comey, after all, had drawn the ire of Democrats for revealing in the final stretch of the presidential campaign that the FBI had reopened its investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server. At the time, Democrats attacked Comey for breaching agency protocol on keeping inquiries secret, and they have since said the negative press his revelation generated at the last minute clinched the election for Trump.

But the timing of Trump’s decision led to suspicion from the outset. Comey’s ouster came less than two months after the FBI director confirmed that his agency was investigating Trump campaign associates’ ties to Russia and mere days after testimony to Congress in which he said the idea that his campaign disclosure about Clinton had influenced the election made him “mildly nauseous.”

The Trump administration’s divergent explanations for the termination only served to fan the flames. In an interview with NBC News shortly after the firing, Trump strongly implied that he fired Comey for aggressively pursuing the Russia investigation and accused him of being a “showboat.” Administration officials also claimed, rather implausibly, that Trump was punishing Comey for his treatment of Clinton and that Comey had lost the confidence of FBI agents.

Congressional Democrats seized on Comey’s firing as evidence that Trump tried to obstruct efforts to learn the truth about Russian interference in the election and whether Trump campaign aides attempted to collude with the foreign power.

The fallout from Comey’s firing became one of Trump’s biggest headaches. Later in May, the pressure prompted Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to appoint former FBI Director Robert Mueller as a special prosecutor to investigate Trump campaign associates’ ties to Russia. And in devastating testimony to Congress in June, Comey revealed, among other things, that Trump had pressed him to drop his investigation of Michael Flynn, something that many legal scholars believe is an impeachable abuse of power.

Now Trump is reportedly examining ways to undermine Mueller by either pre-emptively pardoning officials or firing him outright.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images A rare press photo of former White House Communications Director Mike Dubke.

Mike Dubke

Mike Dubke, who started as Trump’s communications director in mid-February, resigned from the post at the end of May. In an administration known for its colorful characters, Dubke flew below the radar, rarely appearing on television or talking to reporters on the record.

Little is known about the circumstances surrounding his departure, but Dubke’s background as head of an establishment GOP communications firm that worked against Trump during the 2016 primary elicited skepticism about him from Trump loyalists from the get-go. His struggle to build strong relationships with other senior staff members isolated him in the White House, according to The Washington Post. Notably, Dubke also left following the weekslong brouhaha over Trump’s firing of Comey, during which Trump frequently contradicted his own communications team.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters Sean Spicer, who was then White House press secretary, holds a press briefing without television cameras on June 26, 2017.

Sean Spicer

White House press secretary Sean Spicer, who served as communications director of the RNC under Priebus, resigned abruptly on July 21. Spicer endured months of humiliation while defending Trump’s lies and boosting his ego to a restive press corps.

His relationship with the media was rocky from the start, thanks to a rant on his first day on the job in which he declared that Trump had received the biggest Inauguration Day crowds in history and then refused to take questions.

Trump would go on to take issue not with Spicer’s comments that day but with the light color of his suit. Spicer’s daily televised press briefings became must-watch television thanks to his over-the-top explanations and inability to conceal his contempt for assembled journalists.

His irritable performances were quickly immortalized by Melissa McCarthy’s portrayal of him on “Saturday Night Live,” which Trump reportedly disliked. Spicer’s remarkable gaffes included his claim that Syrian President Bashar Assad was worse than Adolf Hitler, because Hitler, he erroneously said, had not used chemical weapons.

Ironically, the impossibility of Spicer’s job and the abuse he suffered for it were not what finally led him to part ways with Trump. Instead, Spicer left because he could not stand the idea of working under Scaramucci. He announced his departure after Trump shared news of the hedge fund manager’s appointment.

Joshua Roberts / Reuters Reince Priebus listens as President Trump meets with Republican congressional leaders at the White House on June 6, 2017.

Reince Priebus

Former RNC Chairman Reince Priebus resigned from his role as White House chief of staff on July 27 after a tension-filled week in which Scaramucci accused him of leaking Scaramucci’s personal financial information.

Priebus, the administration’s highest-ranking representative from the Republican Party establishment, scuffled for control in the White House from the beginning. Trump’s creation of a “chief strategist” position for Steve Bannon and a senior adviser position for son-in-law Jared Kushner appeared to undermine the authority that Priebus expected to wield as chief of staff.

In an interview with CNN the day his departure become public, Priebus denied that Trump asked for his resignation and declined to provide details as to why he decided to quit.

“The president has a right to change direction. The president has a right to hit the reset button,” Priebus said. “I think it’s healthy.”

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters Anthony Scaramucci stands by during the daily briefing at the White House on July 21, 2017.

Anthony Scaramucci

Former Goldman Sachs banker and member of the Trump transition team Anthony Scaramucci resigned as White House communications director a mere 10 days after Trump announced his appointment. He had formally held the position for only six days.

His brief time in the public eye was laden with controversy. The same day he started in the role, Scaramucci gave a profanity-laced interview to The New Yorker in which he vulgarly attacked Priebus and Bannon. He also threatened to fire the entire White House communications staff over “leaks” to the press. New Yorker reporter Ryan Lizza’s account of the unhinged conversation is worth a full read.

That wasn’t the only scandal during his short tenure. Scaramucci provoked outrage when he directed comments about hair and makeup at newly annointed White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders. News also broke days before his resignation that his wife had reportedly filed for divorce.

The Monday morning of Scaramucci’s departure, Trump tweeted that there was “No WH chaos!”

In a statement that afternoon, the White House characterized Scaramucci’s departure as a way to give new Chief of Staff John Kelly “a clean slate and the ability to build his own team.”