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Home » Generals silent as Hegseth ends ‘warrior ethos’ rally speech: ‘Out with the Milleys’ and ‘in with the Pattons’ – UK Times
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Generals silent as Hegseth ends ‘warrior ethos’ rally speech: ‘Out with the Milleys’ and ‘in with the Pattons’ – UK Times

By uk-times.com30 September 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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More than 800 of America’s top military leaders sat silent and showed no reaction as ex-Fox News presenter turned Pentagon boss Pete Hegseth told them he was issuing a series of new directives that will make it harder for women to serve in combat and easier for personnel to engage in hazing and bullying without repercussions during an unprecedented gathering of flag-rank officers at a Marine Corps base in Virginia on Tuesday.

The Secretary of War — a title not used by the head of the U.S. military establishment since 1947 but revived by President Donald Trump earlier this month — told the group of admirals, generals, and their senior enlisted advisers he was “ending the war on warriors” and complained that too many of their peers had been put in their roles “for the wrong reasons” including their race and gender.

Standing in front of a large American flag backdrop, he attacked by name several of the leaders’ retired peers, telling them that the department’s “compass heading” was “clear.”

“Out with the Chiarelli, the McKenzies and the Milleys and in with the Stockdales the Schwartzkopfs and the Pattons,” he said, denigrating former Army Vice Chief of Staff General Peter Chiarelli, ex-U.S. Central Command commander and Marine Corps General Kenneth McKenzie Jr, and ex-Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman and Army General Mark Milley, each of whom has been critical of Trump or his administration.

“The sooner we have the right people, the sooner we can advance the right policies,” he added.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth was greeted with silence after his rally the troops speech to senior military leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025 in Quantico, Va. (Andrew Harnik/Pool via AP)
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth was greeted with silence after his rally the troops speech to senior military leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025 in Quantico, Va. (Andrew Harnik/Pool via AP) (2025 Getty Images)

Hegseth also groused about efforts to open up combat roles to women and initiatives to “weed out so-called toxic leaders” and blamed “foolish and reckless” politicians for having “set the wrong compass” and causing the Pentagon to lose its way.

Hegseth, an Iraq War veteran who attained the rank of Major in the Army National Guard but became a critic of the Pentagon’s efforts to open up military service to women, racial minorities and LGBT+ persons, said the War Department must “restore a ruthless, dispassionate and common sense application of standards” that are “uniform, gender neutral and high.”

He told the assembled leaders he was issuing a directive to ensure that “every designated Combat Arms” role across all branches “returns to the highest male standard only,” all but reversing a 2015 directive from then-Defense Secretary Ashton Carter to open all combat roles to women.

“If you do not meet the male level physical standards for combat positions … it’s time for a new position or a new profession,” he said. “If women can make it excellent. If not, it is what it is. If that means no women qualify for some combat jobs, so be it.”

The War Secretary also claimed — without offering evidence — that the Pentagon had lowered standards “to hit racial quotas as well” and said the revised standards he was promulgating are based on what he called the “1990 test,” which compares today’s standards to those in 1990, a time when women were barred from combat roles and LGBT+ persons were banned from serving.

“The 1990s test is simple. What were the military standards in 1990 and if they have changed, tell me why was it a necessary change based on the evolving landscape of combat, or was the change due to a softening, weakening or gender based pursuit of other priorities? 1990s seems to be as good a place to start as any,” he said.

In addition to rolling back standards to make it harder for women to serve in combat, Hegseth also told military leaders he was rolling back longstanding policies meant to prevent hazing and bullying in the ranks.

He complained that Pentagon initiatives to eliminate “toxic leadership” — including racist and sexist behavior by supervisors — had effectively lowered standards and empowered complainers to attack effective leaders.

“Real, toxic leadership is endangering subordinates with low standards. Real toxic leadership is promoting people based on immutable characteristics or quotas instead of based on merit. Real toxic leadership is promoting destructive ideologies that are an anathema to the Constitution and the laws of nature and nature’s God,” he said, adding later that “the definition of toxic has been turned upside down” and definitions of “bullying and hazing” have been “weaponized and bastardized.”

Under what he calls a “no more walking on eggshells policy,” he said his department would conduct “a full review of the department’s definitions of so called toxic leadership, bullying and hazing to empower leaders to enforce standards without fear of retribution or second guessing.”

Hegseth also said he was ordering reforms of the Pentagon Inspector General’s office and both military and civilian Equal Opportunity offices to “liberate” commanders and non-commissioned officers from a “weaponized” process that put “complainers, ideologues and poor performers in the driver’s seat.”

The new process will no longer allow service members to remain anonymous to their superiors when making reports of racial discrimination or sexual harassment.

The War Secretary said his reforms would eliminate “anonymous complaints” as well as “frivolous complaints” that resulted in “smearing reputations” and “sidetracking of careers.”

“These directives are designed to take the monkey off your back and put you the leadership back in the driver’s seat,” he said.

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