By Tom Nichols
Thursday, April 02, 2026
The United States is in the middle of a major war, but
that didn’t stop Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Thursday from firing General
Randy George, America’s most senior Army officer. George was the Army’s
chief of staff, and he was cashiered along with another four-star general,
David Hodne, and Major General William Green Jr., the top Army chaplain, in
what has been a rolling purge by Hegseth of senior officers—particularly those
close to the secretary of the Army, Dan Driscoll.
Why were these men fired while U.S. forces are fighting
overseas? The Defense Department has given no official reason for their
dismissals, but likely they are the latest victims of Hegseth’s vindictive
struggles with the Army, which he feels treated him poorly—the service “spit
me out,” he said in his 2024 book—as he struggles in a job for which he
remains singularly unqualified.
Hegseth began his tenure by acting against what he sees
as a Pentagon infested with DEI hires. He pushed for the removal of the
then–chairman of the Joint Chiefs, C. Q. Brown, who is Black, and he fired a
raft of female military leaders, replacing them all with men. But dumping the
Army chief of staff in the middle of a war, without explanation, is a reckless
move even by Hegseth’s standards. George is a decorated combat veteran who was
slated to stay in his job until 2027, and he has never publicly feuded with
Hegseth—despite having good reason to do so.
Trump and Hegseth have been on a clear mission to
politicize the U.S. military, and to turn it into an armed extension of the
MAGA movement. Hegseth regularly proselytizes,
both for Trump and for his right-wing evangelical beliefs, from the Pentagon
podium. He has intervened
in Army promotions, recently culling four colonels—two Black men and two
women—from the list for advancement to brigadier general. (This may be the tip
of the iceberg: NBC
is now reporting that Hegseth has also canceled the promotions, across multiple
services, of at least a dozen minority and female officers.) When two Army
helicopters buzzed a political rally and then flew to MAGA favorite Kid Rock’s
house, Hegseth short-circuited the Army’s suspension of the pilots and squashed
an investigation into their actions. Following the best American civil-military
traditions, George and other senior military leaders have been remarkably
disciplined in keeping their thoughts out of the public eye.
Of course, the tone at the Pentagon was set by the
commander in chief. Last June, Trump spoke at Fort
Bragg, where he tried to turn his appearance into a political rally. Again,
George (and Driscoll) said nothing, at least in public, about this shocking
violation of civil-military norms. Trump, after all, is the commander in chief,
and his behavior can be curtailed only by the Senate or the American people.
Even in less dangerous times, the public would still have
a right to answers about such an unprecedented purge of the senior U.S.
military ranks. These officers are all people with long and distinguished
records of service; none of them has been charged with any wrongdoing, and none
of them has been accused of any kind of incompetence or disloyalty. They all
seem to have committed only the offense of being part of a military institution
that Hegseth—who still harbors obvious bitterness about his undistinguished and
ultimately shortened military career—wants to restock with MAGA loyalists.
These dismissals are not defensible even as the product
of some high-minded strategic reform. Rather, as Pentagon officials told The
New York Times, they are the “product of Mr. Hegseth’s
long-running grievances with the Army, battles over personnel and his troubled
relationship” with Driscoll. Hegseth’s beef with Driscoll may be a product of
insecurity: When Hegseth was stepping on rakes in the aftermath of Signalgate,
Driscoll was an obvious choice to replace him. The Army secretary also took on
important tasks that Hegseth either would not—or could not—do. Last fall, Driscoll,
not Hegseth, was part of a high-level Pentagon delegation that traveled to
Geneva in an attempt to end the Russia-Ukraine war.
Perhaps that was just as well. Hegseth—now scathingly
called “Dumb
McNamara” by some Pentagon staff—has busied himself with culture-war
nonsense rather than substantive defense and security issues. But Hegseth
apparently need not worry: Driscoll, according to reporting from my colleagues Ashley
Parker and Sarah Fitzpatrick, is now rumored to be one of the next senior
appointees facing likely dismissal. (Hegseth may not know much about strategy
or leadership, but he knows how to fight a war of attrition.)
The petty vendettas of a passed-over major mattered less
until the war in Iran, a conflict that may be escalating beyond American
control and is now sinking both Trump’s popularity and the global economy.
Pentagon pissing matches are the stuff of legend, and George is not the first
general to get an unwanted retirement invitation from an irate civilian leader.
But America is now engaged in its biggest conflict in decades, with thousands
of troops headed into possible combat on the shores of a country the size of
Alaska with more than three times the population of North Korea—and with a
president whose only formal speech on the war so far consisted of 19 minutes of
jumbled thoughts. The American people deserve to know why so many of their top
officers are being tossed out of their jobs.
Pete Hegseth has never shown a willingness to explain
himself to the public, nor has he demonstrated the character required to take
that kind of responsibility. But now that Randy George, along with other senior
officers Hegseth has fired or pushed
to resign, are about to be civilians, maybe they can step forward and tell
their fellow citizens what on earth is going on in Hegseth’s Pentagon.
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