Worries rise over a Trump ‘warrior board’ to remove officers ‘unfit for leadership’

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When U.S. military officer turned Fox News commentator Pete Hegseth was nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be America’s next secretary of Defense, a video began circulating.

In a podcast Mr. Hegseth said he’d been deemed a white nationalist by his National Guard unit for a tattoo of the so-called Jerusalem cross, adopted by some extremists and widely on display among Jan. 6 rioters. He said it was the reason his orders to stand guard during the 2021 Biden inauguration were revoked.

Why We Wrote This

President-elect Donald Trump’s untraditional pick for secretary of Defense, coupled with reports of plans to create a board to review and remove senior military officers, sent ripples of concern throughout the defense establishment.

These comments in particular were top of mind around the halls of the Pentagon when news came in quick succession of Mr. Hegseth’s nomination and of Mr. Trump’s reported draft plan to create a “warrior board” tasked with reviewing senior military officers and, according to the Wall Street Journal, remove any deemed “unfit for leadership.”

The ultimate aim, some analysts suspect, is to purge officers deemed insufficiently loyal to Mr. Trump – a litmus test, they warn, that’s incompatible with an apolitical military.

It “sends a message that will politicize the officer corps in the future and perhaps make it more loyal to a serving president than to the Constitution,” says retired Col. Peter Mansoor, professor of military history at Ohio State University

When U.S. military officer turned Fox News commentator Pete Hegseth was nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be America’s next Secretary of Defense, a video began circulating.

In a podcast hosted by former U.S. Navy Seal Shawn Ryan, Mr. Hegseth said he’d been deemed a white nationalist by his National Guard unit.

Pulling back his button-up shirt collar, Mr. Hegseth flashed a tattoo of the so-called Jerusalem cross, adopted by some extremists and widely on display among Jan. 6 rioters. He said it was the reason his orders to stand guard during the 2021 Biden inauguration were revoked.

Why We Wrote This

President-elect Donald Trump’s untraditional pick for secretary of Defense, coupled with reports of plans to create a board to review and remove senior military officers, sent ripples of concern throughout the defense establishment.

On the same podcast, Mr. Hegseth also called for the firing of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, currently Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., the second Black officer to serve in the job. “Any general that was involved – general, admiral, whatever – in any of the DEI woke [expletive] has got to go,” he said, referring to diversity, equity, and inclusion policies.

These comments in particular were top of mind around the halls of the Pentagon when news came in quick succession of Mr. Hegseth’s nomination and of Mr. Trump’s reported draft plan to create a “warrior board” tasked with reviewing senior military officers and, according to the Wall Street Journal, remove any deemed “unfit for leadership.”

What, exactly, the criteria for this designation will be remains unclear but the ultimate aim, some analysts suspect, is to purge officers deemed insufficiently loyal to Mr. Trump – a litmus test, they warn, that’s incompatible with an apolitical military.

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