Trump and Hegseth are aligned on many issues, particularly their desire to challenge the Pentagon's status quo and senior officers' decisions. Trump likely sees Hegseth as someone who will shake up the institution and address what they perceive as its political correctness.
Hegseth served in the Army National Guard, including a deployment to Iraq as an infantry unit member and a military advisor role in Afghanistan. He also led small veterans' nonprofits and has been a Fox News host.
During the 2021 inauguration, fellow National Guard members flagged Hegseth's tattoos, which they believed could indicate white nationalist sympathies. Hegseth has denied any extremist ties, explaining the tattoos as religious symbols.
The warrior board would evaluate general officers based on partisan loyalty rather than job performance. It aims to remove those involved in the Afghanistan withdrawal and install loyalists, raising concerns about the military's non-partisan role.
Hegseth has expressed concerns that women in combat roles complicate situations and increase casualties. He might push for single standards for certain units or roles, which could impact the integration of women in combat positions.
Trump emphasizes deterrence against China, ending 'forever wars' like those in Iraq and Afghanistan, and avoiding large-scale conflicts like Russia-Ukraine. He also wants to move troops from overseas back to the U.S. for other missions.
Firing generals based on loyalty rather than performance could lead to blind spots in national security strategies. Senior military officers are meant to provide objective oversight, and installing yes-men could risk overlooking critical risks.
Donald Trump is picking his national security team quickly, and his choices run the gamut. There are respected normies like little Senator Marco Rubio for Secretary of State.
It's a tremendous honor to the president would place his confidence in me in a position of such importance. Mike Walz, a China hawk and advisor to Dick Cheney, who Trump chose as his national security advisor, is the first Green Beret in Congress. In our training, we have to learn multiple languages. We have to blend in. We have to specialize in certain parts of the world. Culture warrior, immigration hardliner, RIP cricket, South Dakota gov, Kristi Noem arguably has the experience to lead Homeland Security.
When Texas and Arizona asked for help, that sent my National Guard troops down there to help. Then there are the provocative choices. The weekend Fox News host, Pete. The fill-in Fox News host, Tulsi. Are they prepared for this moment? We're going to ask on Today Explained.
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I'm Noelle King. Dan Lamothe of The Washington Post has covered the U.S. military and the Pentagon for the last 16 years. Dan, tell us what you know about Pete Hegseth, who Donald Trump has picked to lead the Pentagon. Yeah, Pete Hegseth is currently a Fox News host. He's one of the hosts of Fox and Friends Weekend. I don't think I've washed my hands for 10 years. Really, I don't really wash my hands ever.
No, I inoculate myself. It's just not germs are not a real thing. I can't see them. Prior to that, he led a couple small veterans nonprofits. And prior to that, he served...
In the Army National Guard, he had a pretty serious deployment to Iraq in an infantry unit and then also served as a military advisor in uniform for a deployment to Afghanistan. I served in Iraq before I deployed to Afghanistan. Before I left for deployment to Iraq, I had a pessimistic view of the war. Negative headlines were everywhere. We were told it was a quagmire.
Instead, after a year of combat, I came home cautiously optimistic. Iraq had some basic... Is this typically the kind of experience that the person leading the Pentagon has? No. Most typically, your defense secretary is not only somebody who's got...
experience around the Defense Department in some capacity, but often they've got very serious CEO level experience running major institutions, be that a different government agency, somebody that maybe ran the CIA or something like that first.
or someone who's coming into this with serious experience running a major corporation. I mean, the Pentagon is really both. It is both a national security institution and a major, major, major business. So why did Donald Trump pick him if he doesn't have the experience?
I think first and foremost, they're aligned on a lot of the issues. I think this is someone who has the impulse to go after the Pentagon, go after the senior officers who have made decisions over the years that they disagree with. You know, I think a generous interpretation would be he will shake up the status quo. I think the concern that a lot of people are sharing with me is that he's going to tear down the institution in any way he can.
You reported this weekend that a fellow member of the National Guard at one point questioned whether Hegseth has ties to extremism. Why was this accusation made and by whom? Yeah, this starts with, if we can set it, I guess, around the inauguration period of Joe Biden. On this hallowed ground where just a few days ago violence sought to shake the Capitol's very foundation.
We come together as one nation. We had January 6th, the attack on the Capitol that had just happened.
you know, early in January. And then you had this period where there were tens of thousands of National Guard members who were stationed all over the city, particularly all over the federal part of the city. Probably about a third of them will be carrying weapons as we came in today. You could see it on the street corners in D.C. You've got National Guardsmen with M-16s over their shoulder. Yeah, Guardsmen that were sleeping in the parking garages of the city. I mean, they were kind of everywhere at that time.
And Hegseth was a member of the D.C. Guard. The D.C. Guard was activated more or less in full. And as that happened, Travis Akers flagged a couple of the tattoos that he had and that generated an internal report to D.C. Guard leadership, basically questioning whether the tattoos he had
would indicate that he may have been a white nationalist or had some sort of sympathies along those lines. I was supposed to be guarding the inauguration. I had orders like everybody else. Remember, half the National Guard was there. And I quietly got a phone call from a member of my unit saying, your orders are revoked. You don't need to show up. What are those tattoos? Can you explain? There's two. And I think the challenge here is there is dual meanings for both of these things. These are things that have been co-opted.
One of them is a Jerusalem cross. It's basically a cross with four smaller crosses around it. That's on Hegseth's chest. And then there's a saying, Deuce Volt, that is on his bicep. And Deuce Volt means God wills it. It goes back to the Crusades. So does the Jerusalem cross in a lot of ways. But they've also been increasingly adopted by the far right. So...
Hegsef has said repeatedly. It's a religious tattoo. It has nothing to do with white nationalism or nationalism or extremism. It's a cross you'll see in Jerusalem when you visit. Christianity is near and dear to who I am. It's really, you know, there's a number of ways you can interpret this. And I think that's one of the challenges when symbols and logos and mottos get co-opted like this is, you know, there's often a sort of, you know, very visceral reaction to it.
But then you got to dig deeper. And I think, you know, we're still going to be looking for more explanation for why would you choose to get that? What were you thinking? Things like that. All right. So there's an investigation conducted into Pete Hegseth. And then what happens next? What happens to his standing in the National Guard?
Uh, he, he left by choice. Um, it's like, I don't need to be here. I don't need to deal with it. That sort of vibe to it. He has written basically that that helped motivate him, uh, to really scrutinize the military on whether it had become too political.
Whether it's woke stuff, social justice stuff, gender stuff, environmental stuff, the obsession with electric tanks, stuff that doesn't make us more lethal, that it doesn't point toward American autocracy and poisons the ranks. So I saw it firsthand. I was I joined the army to fight extremists. 20 years later, I was deemed an extremist because of a tattoo I have on my chest. He is he's really gone to some length since then to portray the military as a very partisan organization, a
an organization that has become too woke, too left-wing. And obviously there are a broad spectrum of people that would disagree with that assessment.
So there was another big story this weekend about Pete Hegseth, and it has to do with a woman who claims he paid her off. Can you tell us what happened with this woman? What is alleged to have happened? So we're talking 2017. He was out giving a speech of sorts at a hotel in California. He appears to have met this woman in the bar nearby after doing the engagement interview.
The allegation is that they ended up in the room. She alleges sexual assault. He says it was consensual. The police looked into it. They didn't file charges. And then in 2020, Hegseth's lawyer is now alleging that she approached again. She was seeking on the civil side recompense for this. And Hegseth decided to settle undisclosed amount, but basically try to make the problem go away.
Apparently, right after the nomination of Hegseth, a report was generated to the transition team going back to this incident. It seems to have caught the transition team by surprise.
At the moment, Trump is still standing by Hegseth, but there are at least other people on that transition team that are now, I think, running a serious assessment of whether they have a problem here. OK, so if they do have a problem here, what does that mean? Does it mean he can't get through the Senate? He can't be confirmed? No.
I mean, that's that I think first and foremost is a question for the senators. I think we're running into a situation where we're not sure what it would take for a Republican led Senate in the year 2025 to knock down a nominee. All right. Aside from these things that have been dug up, reported on and dug up about Pete Hegseth, there's a bunch that did not have to be dug up because he's a media personality and he talks a lot about.
What has he said in the past that has kind of sent a shiver through the spines of sort of normie D.C.? Right before the nomination, he appeared on a podcast called The Sean Ryan Show. It's become very popular, particularly among a lot of veterans. And they were discussing what would it take to sort of fix the quote unquote woke military situation.
And he said, well, first of all, I would start by firing the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. So that's the Pentagon's top general, C.Q. Brown. This is somebody that Trump himself selected to run the Air Force. You got to fire the chairman of Joint Chiefs and you got to fire this. I mean, obviously, you're going to bring in a new secretary of defense, but any general that was involved, general admiral, whatever that was involved in any of the DEI woke shit.
It's got to go. Hegseth's point of view is that he's too woke, has leaned into diversity issues too much, you know, basically is not focused on lethality and other issues that the Pentagon should be concerned with foremost. And basically they need to reset. Is there any argument for Pete Hegseth as head of the Pentagon? Any argument that you've heard beyond just Donald Trump wants this guy?
Yeah, I think the argument you hear from people who know Hegseth, from people who want something different, is that Hegseth...
is a well-spoken individual who has served, does have experiences in these wars on the ground level, who is willing to look at this from a critical point of view, not a sort of institutional, I'm going to be a figurehead at the top. All right. So you've been on this beat for 16 years. And so you know the type of reaction that usually comes when a president's picks are announced.
What do you think about the reactions this time around? I mean, I think it's just the idea that these are...
These are not serious people. These are not serious nominees in the eyes of the overwhelming institution, the institutions they will lead, the people that work around them, the people that have spent their entire lives focused on this sort of thing. And I think there is a very fair discussion, particularly coming out of 20 years of war, Iraq, Afghanistan, and so forth, about whether or not the institutional perspective here often is missing other things. That is a very fair discussion to have.
But I think the counterpoint here, the fear here, is whether or not if the response to that very fair criticism is going to be, all right, we need to fire X number of generals. We need to more or less turn the clock back 20, 30, 50 years where you're like, this is culture war stuff that on one hand,
will make a point, but on the other hand, actually turns off a significant number of people who may want to serve. That was The Washington Post's Dan Lamothe. Coming up, what Donald Trump's picks tell us about his priorities.
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Catherine Kuzminski is the deputy director of studies and director of the Military Veterans and Society Program at the Center for a New American Security, CNAS, her friends call her. Catherine, we learned in the first half of the show that Donald Trump likes Pete Hegseth, in part because he's a veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Hegseth is very critical of those wars, which America was in and out of for a generation. What does Donald Trump want when it comes to war? So there's a couple of things.
One is in line with what we see in our current national security strategy that was rolled out during the Biden administration, a strong emphasis on deterrence against China specifically in terms of a near peer threat. China doesn't want me to win.
Obviously, because I was kicking China's ass. There's been a lot of rhetoric against the forever wars. So considering the wars in the Middle East, in Iraq and Afghanistan. A big part of my campaign, I want to bring our troops back from the endless wars. We have endless wars. They're going on for 19 years in the area. And then also not being drawn into large scale conflict issues.
specifically into Russia-Ukraine, which has been a focus on the campaign. I want everybody to stop dying. They're dying. Russians and Ukrainians. I want them to stop dying. But also a recognition that there are strong threats coming from, certainly from China, also Iran and North Korea. If we take that option, it will be devastating. I can tell you that. Devastating.
for North Korea. That's called the military option. If we have to take it, we will. The focus there is on deterrence. So he essentially wants to build a strong military but not use it.
We saw as he was leaving his previous administration, he called for a removal or a moving of troops out of Germany back to the United States. We're going to be reducing Germany very substantially down to about 25,000 troops. We actually had 52,000, but we'll be moving it down to about 25,000. Germany's paying a very small fraction of what they're supposed to be paying. That didn't actually happen.
even though he called for that, because that requires quite a bit of resources from Congress to wholesale move troops internationally. And that plan did not play out. But I do think that we should expect
expect to see that he will be pushing to move troops from overseas stations back to the United States for other missions. Until we can have a wall and proper security, we're going to be guarding our border with the military. That's a big step.
Let's talk about Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump's nominee for defense secretary. He says he doesn't think the U.S. should be fighting forever wars like the ones in Iraq and Afghanistan. What do we know about what he might mean for the Department of Defense if he's confirmed? There are things that are consistent with any nominee we would expect from President Trump. And then there are things that are specific to potential confirmation of Secretary Hegseth.
So on the one hand, we would expect that any Secretary of Defense who is serving under President Trump, some of the first policies we'll expect are a rollback of the DOD abortion travel policy that was put in place by the previous administration.
Where we saw some of the commentary from Pete Hegseth moving forward that might not align with all nominees are his views on women in combat units and in specific military occupational specialties. Because I'm straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles. In his opinion, women in combat put other troops at risk, put male troops at risk. Everything about men and women serving together makes the situation more complicated.
and complication in combat means casualties are worse. This has been an area of contention even within the military services since women have been allowed to serve in all combat positions. I've been impressed with the fact that everyone, everyone, men and women alike, everyone is committed to doing the job. They're fighting and they're dying together. And the time has come for our policies to recognize that reality.
It's not that we can't carry the weight. We can carry the weight, but it's the pace. You're looking at our size and we have males that are almost six foot with longer strides and it's hard to catch up with them and keep up with them. So one way that Hegseth could move forward on the outcome he is after without banning women from frontline combat units would be to have a single standard for particular units or roles.
The Wall Street Journal had a blockbuster story last week. Donald Trump's transition team is crafting an executive order that would establish a warrior board. What is this and what would it do? The initial warrior board occurred after World War II, examining the performance of sitting general officers against their jobs.
There was a belief that they were staying on too long and they weren't opening up positions for junior officers who needed to promote through the ranks, who were bringing a lot of vigor and vitality to the job. This warrior board is something a bit different. It appears to not be focused on performance in the job, but rather partisan loyalty.
The reporting indicates that Trump will ask for the resignation of all general officers who were involved in the withdrawal from Afghanistan. He should have fired every military man that was involved with that Afghan, the Afghanistan horror show, the most embarrassing moment in the history of our country. Holding general officers accountable for operational outcomes is something that Afghanistan
has been called upon multiple presidents to do and something we haven't necessarily seen in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But on the flip side, what this executive order also lays out is essentially loyalty tests for those who are currently in senior general officer positions. Senior military officers serve careers upwards of 40 years across multiple administrations, and you want to see the continuity and that uniform leadership there.
That will carry the nation's security, regardless of the partisan issues that happen in transitions between administrations. For the for the skeptics in the audience, for the people who voted for Donald Trump because they like the way he operates. What problems could arise if a president is allowed to fire generals because he doesn't think that they're loyal enough to him?
The biggest challenges from a national security perspective is that particularly with your chairman and your joint chiefs of staff, so the leaders of the uniform leaders of each of the individual services, their role is to monitor.
seek out the blind spots the president might not be seeing. And so if the president prefers to install yes-men into these positions, there's the potential that plans, operational plans, the next national security strategy,
That there are real risks that are not being identified, particularly if the perspectives of senior military officers are either disregarded or if the individuals who are appointed to those positions don't feel comfortable sharing bad news. What effect might this move have on the way Americans think about the military and trust the military?
Yeah.
But they are not partisan tools. They are not tied to the agendas of a given administration. They don't set policy. They implement policy that is set by the commander in chief.
One of the biggest challenges is that the way Trump has spoken about general officers over the last eight or nine years has referred to them as though they are partisan tools. So the use of the term "my generals" versus, you know, "Biden's woke generals" misunderstands the role of senior military leadership and drives a narrative that general officers are themselves partisan actors.
Kate Kuzminski of the Center for a New American Security. Peter Balanon-Rosen and Victoria Chamberlain produced today's show. Miranda Kennedy edited. Grant Chamberlain turned four. Happy birthday to him. Patrick Boyd and Mr. Rob engineered. And Laura Bullard checked the facts. I'm Noelle King. It's Today Explained.