九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

Military leaders absorb highly partisan presentation from Trump, Hegseth

Author
Washington Post ,
Publish Date
Wed, 1 Oct 2025, 1:44pm
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks to senior military leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia. Photo / Getty Images
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks to senior military leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia. Photo / Getty Images

Military leaders absorb highly partisan presentation from Trump, Hegseth

Author
Washington Post ,
Publish Date
Wed, 1 Oct 2025, 1:44pm

Hundreds of the United States military鈥檚 top leaders absorbed highly partisan addresses from President Donald Trump and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth today. 

Each harshly criticised their predecessors and touted their agendas in a summit that was extraordinary in nature but ultimately broke little new ground. 

The event was organised by Hegseth鈥檚 team at the Pentagon, with generals and admirals in command across the globe and their top enlisted advisers - some travelling thousands of kilometres - ordered last week to Marine Corps Base Quantico, about 50km south of Washington in Virginia. 

General Dan Caine, Trump鈥檚 hand-selected chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told attendees in his opening comments that the event was an 鈥渦nprecedented opportunity and honour鈥 for the senior officers to hear directly from their civilian leadership. 

Trump, in meandering remarks that stretched for about an hour and 10 minutes, joked that if those in attendance did not like what he had to say, they could leave the room - but 鈥渢here goes your rank, there goes your future鈥, he added, drawing some uncomfortable laughter. 

Since returning to power, Trump and Hegseth have fired numerous generals and admirals, often without cause - and focusing on a disproportionate number of women. 

The President defended his polarising use of the armed forces to police American cities, decrying what he said was 鈥渢he enemy within鈥 while insisting he should be allowed to use military force domestically. 

He extolled his decision to rebrand the US Defence Department as the Department of War, lamented his inability to end the conflict in Ukraine, and tacitly acknowledged the highly sensitive movements of US submarines off the coast of Russia. 

鈥淚 call it the 鈥榥-word,鈥欌 the President said of the submarines, appearing to allude to the vessels鈥 nuclear power. 鈥淭here are two n-words, and you can鈥檛 use either of them.鈥 

The assembled military brass sat through the presentations mostly silent, in keeping with the military鈥檚 non-partisan tradition. 

Peter Feaver, a political scientist at Duke University, said that they 鈥渕anaged well a very difficult walk along a high wire鈥 by listening respectfully to both partisan speeches without responding. 

Trump and Hegseth, he added, also deserve credit for showing that they understand why the military leaders were remaining quiet. 

鈥淭he speeches raised a lot of questions that the military will have to grapple with in the months ahead,鈥 Feaver said. 

鈥淏ut they won鈥檛 have to do so on live TV, and so a very tricky moment in American civil-military relations did not produce the disaster that some feared.鈥 

Trump was introduced by Hegseth, who had planned the event without the President involved. 

The gathering came together quickly last week, following a mysterious order for all senior military commanders to be in Virginia that provided them with no information about the itinerary. 

The order, first reported by the Washington Post on Friday, alarmed some military leaders and their staffs after the firing of so many generals and admirals this year. 

During his remarks, Hegseth, a former Fox 九一星空无限 personality who served as an officer in the National Guard at times, lectured the men and women - each with decades more military experience - seated silently before him. 

He vowed to make the military 鈥渟tronger, tougher, faster, fiercer, and more powerful than it has ever been before鈥, repeating numerous talking points he has used throughout his tenure atop the Pentagon - including that the military brass needs to crack down on standards ranging from physical fitness to grooming and discipline. 

Hegseth blamed 鈥渇oolish and reckless politicians鈥 for allowing the military to stray from its primary focus, to fight and win wars, and pledged to fix what he called 鈥渄ecades of decay鈥 in the force. 

He also declared that 鈥減olitically correct and overbearing rules of engagement鈥, the guidelines that shape how US troops use lethal force in combat, are gone. 

Hegseth cited the Gulf War - in which US troops and allies beat back an Iraqi invasion and annexation of neighbouring Kuwait within months, from 1990 to 1991 - as an example of a conflict that he sees as a model for the US. He characterised it as a 鈥渓imited mission with overwhelming force and a clear end state鈥. 

He also cited President Ronald Reagan鈥檚 build-up of the US military in the 1980s as playing a significant role and noted that many military leaders then drew on combat experience in Vietnam. 

鈥淭he same holds true today,鈥 Hegseth said. 

鈥淥ur civilian and military leadership is chock full of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan who say 鈥榥ever again鈥 to nation-building and nebulous end states. This clear-eyed view all the way in the White House, combined with President Trump鈥檚 military build-up, postures us for future victories.鈥 

Hegseth said he will overhaul the channels troops and civilian employees have available to them to anonymously file whistleblower complaints, report toxic leadership, or point out unequal treatment based on race, gender, sexuality, or religion. 

鈥淣o more frivolous complaints. No more anonymous complaints, no more repeat complaints, no more smearing reputations, no more endless waiting, no more legal limbo, no more side-tracking careers. No more walking on eggshells,鈥 Hegseth pronounced. 

鈥淥f course, being a racist has been illegal in our formations since 1948. The same goes for sexual harassment. Both are wrong and illegal.鈥 

Upholding high standards, Hegseth declared, 鈥渋s not toxic鈥, decrying what he said has been a 鈥渂astardisation鈥 of phrases like 鈥渢oxic leader鈥. The Pentagon, he said, will undertake a review of such phrases, empowering military officials to 鈥渆nforce standards without fear of retribution or second guessing鈥. 

That last-minute assembly has raised questions among critics about its cost - particularly for an address that could have been delivered by secure videoconferencing equipment. 

Flying, lodging and transporting all the military leaders from as far away as Japan, the Middle East and Europe is likely to cost millions of dollars, according to two former officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. 

The event also raised security concerns about having all the top leadership in one place, particularly given that today is the end of the financial year, with a government shutdown looming. 

Guidance issued by the Defence Department states that if a shutdown occurs, all travel should be 鈥渢erminated鈥, but with exceptions granted by senior leaders. 

- Dan Lamothe, Tara Copp, Alex Horton, Washington Post 

- Natalie Allison, Michael Birnbaum, Emily Davies, Patrick Svitek and Amy B Wang contributed to this report. 

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you