Pete Hegseth accused military lawyers of hurting troop morale
Summary
- Pete
Hegseth criticized military Judge Advocates General (JAGs). - Accused
JAGs of prioritizing political correctness over combat. - Fired
top JAG officers seen as obstacles to orders.
He is now acting on those sentiments in his role as the
recently renamed “Secretary of War” at the Pentagon, taking action to
lessen the impact of those attorneys or remove them completely from
decision-making as his department launches contentious deployments to American
cities and unprovoked attacks on suspected drug smuggling vessels.
Several senior commanders who had previously headed the
legal departments of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Space Force have since been
fired by Hegseth, frequently after they expressed reservations about Trump
administration policies in their legal advice.
Lt. Gen. Joe Berger, the Army’s highest uniformed lawyer in
the past, was one such commander.
According to reports, Berger questioned Hegseth’s early
decisions after taking office in January, including the legality of using Texas
National Guard members for civilian immigration enforcement and the mass
firings that the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency carried out
early in the Trump administration.
Berger was urged to “stop meddling” or ignored
completely in both cases in favor of Pentagon civilian attorneys, who are
political appointments much more likely to capitulate to whatever the
administration’s inclinations may be at the moment.
After being accused by the right-wing social media account
LibsOfTikTok of not fulfilling administration directives to terminate
diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives throughout the federal government,
Hegseth sacked him in February.
“Decapitating those organizations … was an easy way for
Hegseth to send a strong message from the outset and put the entire JAG corps
on notice,”
a defense official said.
The former Fox News pundit’s words and deeds align with a
worldview he had been articulating since he first came into the public eye as a
conservative activist following his time in the Army during the American
invasion of Iraq.
As Hegseth recounted in his book The War on Warriors, JAG
officers in Iraq once instructed him not to shoot at someone brandishing a
rocket-propelled grenade launcher unless the weapon was “pointed at you with
the intent to fire.”
He then claimed that he had informed his commanding troops
that the military lawyer’s order was a “bullshit rule that’s going to get
people killed.”
Hegseth also grieved in the book over being told to free
“Iraqi men who we knew had American blood on their hands.”
However, CNN was also informed by “current and former
officials familiar with Hegseth’s thinking” that the War Secretary’s
contempt for the military’s JAG corps is a result of a war crimes investigation
into his unit that resulted in a reprimand for his commanding officer.
Several individuals Hegseth had served with were also given
lengthy prison terms as a result of the investigation for their involvement in
a 2006 incident that claimed the lives of four unarmed Iraqi men.
Years later, Hegseth would utilize his role as a Fox News
commentator to support a number of military personnel who had been charged with
or found guilty of war crimes, leading to President Donald Trump pardoning
them.
He began by lowering the level needed for all top uniformed
attorneys in the armed forces from three-star officer to two-star.
Because officers at the two-star rank are frequently
excluded from top-level decision-making by the three- and four-star generals
they are supposed to advise, a senior defense official told the television
network that this change has the effect of demoting those officers to
second-tier status.
Additionally, it has been reported that Hegseth has screened
candidates for political loyalty during the interview process for replacing the
fired top JAG officers by asking them about their views on contentious issues
like the Biden administration’s vaccine mandates or allowing transgender
service members to stay in uniform.
“Hegseth’s rhetoric and policies are perceived as a bit
unhinged and counterproductive, but the way forward is just to eat it and put
your head down and act in accordance with his new policies,”
said one current
Army lawyer.
“No JAG is trying to rock the boat or get noticed.”