Hegseth defends Trump's firings of Pentagon leaders and says there may
be more dismissals
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[February 24, 2025]
By WILL WEISSERT
WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth insists President
Donald Trump ’s abrupt firing of the nation’s senior military officer
amid a wave of dismissals at the Pentagon wasn't unusual, brushing aside
outcry that the new administration is openly seeking to inject politics
into the military.
He also suggested more firings could come.
“Nothing about this is unprecedented," Hegseth told “Fox News Sunday”
about Air Force Gen. CQ Brown Jr. being removed Friday night as chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “The president deserves to pick his key
national security advisory team.”
Hegseth said “there are lots of presidents who made changes” citing
former commanders in chief, including Franklin D. Roosevelt, George H.W.
Bush and Barack Obama. Obama, Hegseth said, “fired or dismissed
hundreds” of military officials.
Months into his first term, Obama removed Army Gen. David McKiernan from
being commander of the U.S. forces in Afghanistan. However, Trump, while
running for his second term, vowed to eradicate “woke” ideologies from
the military and to swiftly dismiss many top leaders.
Hegseth and Trump have made no secret about focusing on pushing aside
military officers who have supported diversity, equity and inclusion in
the ranks. The administration says the move will better fortify a lethal
fighting force.
Brown was just the second Black general to serve as chairman. His 16
months in the post were consumed with the war in Ukraine and the
expanded conflict in the Middle East. Trump in 2020 nominated Brown as
Air Force’s chief of staff.
Trump wants to replace Brown with Air Force Lt. Gen. Dan “Razin” Caine,
who retired in December. It is unclear what recalling Caine to
active-duty service will require. The position requires Caine to be
confirmed by the Senate.
Hegseth said Friday's dismissals affected six three- and four-star
generals and were “a reflection of the president wanting the right
people around him to execute the national security approach we want to
take.”

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He called Brown “honorable" but said he is “not the right man for
the moment," without citing specific deficiencies. After the 2020
murder of George Floyd, Brown in a video spoke of his experience as
a Black pilot, apparently making him fodder for the Trump
administration’s wars against inclusion initiatives in the military.
Of Caine, Hegseth said that Trump “respects leaders who untie the
hands of war fighters in a very dangerous world.”
Retired Gen. George Casey called the firings “extremely
destabilizing.” Casey, who was Republican President George W. Bush’s
commander of the U.S. and multinational forces in Iraq from 2004 to
2007, also noted that the Trump administration can change Pentagon
policy without changing personnel, but added, that what happened is
"within the president’s prerogative.”
“That’s his prerogative," Casey told ABC's “This Week.” “He is the
commander in chief of the armed forces.”

Still, Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the ranking Democrat on the
Senate Armed Services Committee told ABC that the firings were
“completely unjustified” and that “apparently, what Trump and
Hegseth are trying to do is to politicize the Department of
Defense.”
Hegseth was also asked on Fox News about officials potentially
compiling lists of more defense officials they plan to fire. He said
there was no list but suggested that more dismissals could indeed be
coming.
“We have a very keen eye towards military leadership and their
willingness to follow lawful order," Hegseth said. “Joe Biden gave
lawful orders. A lot of them are really bad," he said, adding that
things like COVID vaccine mandates “eroded” the military
ideologically
“President Trump has given another set of lawful orders and they
will be followed," Hegseth said. "If they're not followed then those
officers will find the door.”
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