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Hegseth accused of 'lying to the American public' about war in Iran | DW News

Pete Hegseth grilled over Iran war in fiery congressional testimony | ABC NEWS

 

Takeaways From Hegseth’s Testimony on Iran War and His Tenure

 


Takeaways From Hegseth’s Testimony on Iran War and His Tenure

 

It was Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s first public appearance before Congress since Operation Epic Fury began in late February.

 

John IsmayMegan Mineiro

By John Ismay and Megan Mineiro

John Ismay covers the Pentagon and reported from Washington. Megan Mineiro covers Congress and reported from the Capitol.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/29/us/politics/hegseth-congress-hearing-takeaways.html

April 29, 2026

 

In his first major public appearance before Congress since the beginning of the Iran war, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Wednesday that the biggest adversary the United States faced was not Iran’s military, but the “feckless and defeatist words” of Democrats and some Republican lawmakers.

 

It was a preview of what turned out to be a contentious debate over the Iran war.

 

The Defense Department’s nearly $1.45 trillion budget request was ostensibly the reason for the House Armed Services Committee hearing, but lawmakers made little mention of it during several hours of questioning.

 

Mr. Hegseth offered a full-throated defense of “Operation Epic Fury,” which began on Feb. 28. Sitting next to Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Jay Hurst, the Pentagon comptroller, Mr. Hegseth repeatedly stressed that the war was necessary because Iran posed an “existential threat” to the United States.

 

The defense secretary grew testy during the hearing and mocked the questions of Democratic lawmakers, prompting a rare admonition from the committee chairman.

 

Here are the main takeaways from the hearing.

 

The Iran war has cost $25 billion so far, according to the Pentagon.

Mr. Hurst said that figure is mostly representative of the tens of thousands of bombs and missiles used in the conflict. It was the first time the Defense Department has publicly provided a cost estimate for the war.

 

The war has consumed a large percentage of the Pentagon’s longest-range conventional munitions, such as air-launched stealth cruise missiles and ground-launched Precision Strike Missiles.

 

A 14th service member has died during the war.

General Caine mentioned that 14 U.S. military service members have died as part of Operation Epic Fury, although the Pentagon’s casualty analysis system online showed 13 U.S. deaths as of Wednesday morning.

 

The 14th service member was Maj. Sorffly Davius of the Army National Guard, who according to ABC News died on March 6 after a medical emergency in Kuwait. Two Pentagon representatives, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, confirmed the death.

 

Hegseth made a false claim about U.S. support to Ukraine.

The defense secretary said the Biden administration provided Ukraine with “hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of munitions” after Russia invaded in 2022. However, the true tally is far smaller.

 

According to a New York Times analysis of Pentagon records and statements, the Biden administration sent Ukraine $33.8 billion in weapons from Defense Department stockpiles under a program called the Presidential Drawdown Authority. The Biden administration also gave Ukraine $33.2 billion in cash to purchase weapons directly from U.S. defense companies under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative. That totals about $67 billion in military support since the war began.

 

Following the last disbursement of weapons from the Pentagon’s stockpile on Jan. 9, 2025, about $3.8 billion in congressionally authorized funds remains unspent for drawdowns of existing arms for Ukraine.

 

He attacked critics of the Iran War.

Mr. Hegseth, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan as a junior officer in the Army National Guard, took exception to members of Congress who have characterized the Iran War as “a quagmire.”

 

“It’s been two months,” Mr. Hegseth retorted. “You want to talk about a forever war?”

 

“I know the American people support that mission, despite your loose talk and words like ‘quagmire,’” Mr. Hegseth said. Recent polls, however, show a minority of Americans approve of the U.S. military action in Iran.

 

Mr. Hegseth also dismissed queries from Democrats about higher gas and food prices as a result of the war as “gotcha” questions. “What would you pay to ensure that Iran doesn’t get a nuclear bomb?” the defense secretary said.

 

And he defended actions that legal experts have called war crimes.

Asked if he stood by his statement that American troops would allow “no quarter, no mercy for our enemies,” Mr. Hegseth said the military under his leadership “fights to win.”

 

A “no quarter” order is one to kill all enemy combatants, even those who are badly injured or have surrendered.

 

“We ensure that our war fighters have the rules of engagement necessary to be as effective as humanly possible,” the secretary added, after Representative Seth Moulton, Democrat of Massachusetts, pointed out that such an order was a war crime under the military’s Uniform Code of Military Justice and international law.

 

Eric Schmitt and Helene Cooper contributed reporting.

 

John Ismay is a reporter covering the Pentagon for The Times. He served as an explosive ordnance disposal officer in the U.S. Navy.

 

Megan Mineiro is a Times congressional reporter and a member of the 2025-26 Times Fellowship class, a program for early-career journalists.

WATCH: Iran war has cost $25 billion so far, Pentagon confirms in hearing

 

On April 29, 2026, the Pentagon provided its first official estimate for the ongoing war with Iran—$25 billion to date—during a combative House Armed Services Committee hearing.

 


Pentagon Puts Iran War Cost at $25 Billion as Hegseth Berates Skeptics

On April 29, 2026, the Pentagon provided its first official estimate for the ongoing war with Iran—$25 billion to date—during a combative House Armed Services Committee hearing. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended the expenditure as necessary to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, while sharply criticizing lawmakers who questioned the conflict’s direction.

 

Financial and Operational Cost

Total Spend: Acting Pentagon Comptroller Jay Hurst testified that the $25 billion price tag primarily reflects the cost of "tens of thousands" of munitions used in Operation Epic Fury.

Munition Depletion: Critics and analysts noted that the U.S. has burned through a massive portion of its global stockpile, including approximately 1,100 JASSM-ER stealth cruise missiles—nearly half of the entire global inventory—and over 1,000 Tomahawk missiles.

Ongoing Daily Costs: Estimates suggest the war is costing nearly $1 billion per day. Despite this, the current $25 billion figure is lower than the $200 billion the Pentagon initially requested, indicating a slowdown from the first six days when costs reached $11.3 billion.

Asset Damage: The hearing revealed that dozens of U.S. aircraft, including an F-35 and four F-15E fighters, have been damaged or destroyed.

 

Hegseth’s "Skeptics" Remarks

Secretary Hegseth’s testimony was marked by intense friction with congressional Democrats. His key arguments included:

The "Biggest Adversary": Hegseth asserted that the primary obstacle to victory was not Iran’s military, but the "reckless, feckless and defeatist words" of congressional critics.

Rejection of "Quagmire" Label: When Rep. John Garamendi (D-CA) called the war a "geopolitical calamity" and a "quagmire," Hegseth accused him of "handing propaganda to our enemies" and asked, "Who are you cheering for here?".

Endgame Ambiguity: Hegseth declined to provide a specific timeline or total projected cost for finishing the mission, which President Trump initially predicted would take only "four to five weeks".

 

Strategic and Legal Context

The hearing took place just as the conflict approached the 60-day mark, a legal threshold under the War Powers Resolution that may require the President to seek formal congressional authorization for continued hostilities.

 

Lawmakers also highlighted the economic impact of the war, specifically the Strait of Hormuz closure, which has driven global fuel prices higher and remains a central point of contention in stalled ceasefire talks.

Pentagon Puts Iran War Cost at $25 Billion as Hegseth Berates Skeptics

 



Pentagon Puts Iran War Cost at $25 Billion as Hegseth Berates Skeptics

 

During his first public appearance on Capitol Hill since the war began, the defense secretary lashed out at lawmakers in both parties who have questioned the conflict.

 

Robert Jimison

By Robert Jimison

Robert Jimison, who covers military and foreign policy issues in Congress, reported from the Capitol

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/29/us/politics/hegseth-iran-war-cost.html

April 29, 2026

 

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday castigated members of Congress in both parties for questioning the war in Iran, during a contentious Capitol Hill hearing dominated by a conflict that the Pentagon said had cost $25 billion and 14 American lives so far.

 

Appearing at what had been scheduled as a routine hearing to review the Defense Department’s nearly $1.45 trillion budget request for the coming year, Mr. Hegseth spent much of his time lashing out at lawmakers whose approval would be needed to provide that funding.

 

“The biggest challenge, the biggest adversary we face at this point are the reckless, feckless and defeatist words of congressional Democrats and some Republicans,” the defense secretary declared in his prepared remarks to the House Armed Services Committee, before members had asked a single question.

 

The statement set a hostile tenor for the secretary’s first public testimony on Capitol Hill since the war began, coming after Republicans had for weeks refrained from exercising any public oversight of an operation undertaken without congressional authorization, and which polls indicate is unpopular.

 

At multiple points during the nearly five-hour hearing, Mr. Hegseth became so belligerent toward Democrats who questioned him that the Republican chairman of the committee halted the proceedings to urge the secretary to show respect to the lawmakers.

 

“Once I recognize a member, they have control of that five minutes,” the chairman, Representative Mike D. Rogers of Alabama, told Mr. Hegseth. “The witness has to recognize it’s their time.”

 

The tense session unfolded just before a 60-day milestone in the conflict that some in the G.O.P. have said could become a pivot point for their so far unconditional backing for President Trump’s conduct of the war, beyond which they may begin demanding more answers about objectives and a plan for extricating American troops.

 

“Here we are in a full-scale Mideast war, and we’ve seen the costs of that,” Representative Adam Smith of Washington, the senior Democrat on the panel, said, noting military and civilian casualties and asserting that “over a dozen countries now have been dragged into this war in one way or another.”

 

“Where is this going?” Mr. Smith asked.

 

Mr. Hegseth and Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, provided few answers about an endgame, though their appearance did yield some new information about the costs and results of the military campaign.

 

The Pentagon comptroller, Jay Hurst, said the war had so far cost $25 billion, mostly because of the tens of thousands of bombs and missiles used, providing the first such official estimate since Mr. Trump began the operation. He did not elaborate on the figure, which was strikingly smaller than the $200 billion the Pentagon had initially requested for the conflict and suggested a major slowdown in expenditures since the start of the war, when officials estimated it had cost more than $11 billion in its first six days.

 

General Caine put the number of U.S. service members that had died during the war with Iran at 14, slightly above the Pentagon’s own tally of war casualties, which reflects 13 deaths.

 

After two months of war, General Caine testified, the Iranians “are weaker and less capable than they have been in decades.”

 

Still, when asked for a timetable or projected cost for finishing a mission that Mr. Trump initially said would be completed in “four to five weeks,” Mr. Hegseth demurred.

 

“As you know and as the president has stated, you would never tell your adversary, especially once you’ve decimated their military and you control their strait,” that information, he told Representative Chrissy Houlahan, Democrat of Pennsylvania.

 

Democrats sharply questioned the objectives for the mission and what had been gained from it. In one particularly heated exchange, Representative John Garamendi, Democrat of California, offered a tally of U.S. losses so far and asked what the United States had achieved, noting that Iran had retained significant military capabilities and closed the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic waterway for oil shipping.

 

“You have been lying to the American people since Day 1” of the war, Mr. Garamendi told Mr. Hegseth, accusing him of “incompetence.”

 

Mr. Hegseth responded by suggesting that the congressman was rooting for the enemy.

 

“I know the American people support that mission, despite your loose talk,” said Mr. Hegseth, who just a year ago put the flight sequencing of American fighter jets in a group chat on a commercial messaging app. Later, he asked Mr. Garamendi: “Who you cheering for here? Who you pulling for?”

 

In the hallway outside, protesters had gathered to register their opposition to the war, shouting “war criminal” and “arrest Hegseth” as he arrived to testify.

 

Many Republicans praised the war in Iran and Mr. Hegseth’s leadership, and focused their questions on issues such as quality of life improvements for service members, the use of artificial intelligence at the Pentagon and combating adversaries such as China.

 

But some in the G.O.P. made it clear they did not approve of Mr. Hegseth’s personnel decisions, including the recent firings of Navy Secretary John Phelan and of Gen. Randy George, the Army chief of staff.

 

“You have the constitutional right to do these things, but it doesn’t make it right or wise,” Representative Don Bacon, Republican of Nebraska, told Mr. Hegseth.

 

Later, Representative Austin Scott, Republican of Georgia, also criticized General George’s firing and appeared to beseech Mr. Hegseth not to alienate Democrats whose votes would be needed to secure military resources that some in the G.O.P. oppose.

 

“It takes 218 votes to get something across the floor of the House,” Mr. Scott said. “I just would encourage everybody to keep that in mind, because we’re going to lose some Republican votes.”

 

One point of agreement on the committee was the concern expressed over the nation’s dwindling weapons stockpile. Mr. Rogers warned that U.S. munitions stockpiles were dangerously low and that the nation’s industrial capacity to replenish them was weak. The war in Iran has sharply depleted U.S. arsenals, with the Pentagon diverting bombs, missiles and other hardware from commands in Asia and Europe to the Middle East.

 

But ultimately, Mr. Rogers said, the military campaign in Iran has given Mr. Trump “the opening he needs to negotiate a true and lasting peace that will ensure Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon.”

 

Still, even as the hearing unfolded, the conflict’s outcome was uncertain, with a fragile cease-fire and dueling blockades muddying the situation and no binding agreement yet on Iran’s nuclear program or significant change to the country’s leadership.

 

In a predawn social media post before the session began, Mr. Trump urged Iranian leaders to “get smart soon,” alongside an image of himself holding an automatic rifle in front of a hilly desert landscape dotted with explosions. He later told Axios that he was rejecting an Iranian proposal that sought to lift the naval blockade, saying he believed it was “somewhat more effective than the bombing.”

 

When asked by Representative Seth Moulton, Democrat of Massachusetts, how he would characterize the current state of the war, Mr. Hegseth called it “an astounding military success.”

 

“But are we winning the war?” Mr. Moulton asked.

 

“Absolutely,” Mr. Hegseth replied.

 

Eric Schmitt, Helene Cooper and John Ismay contributed reporting.

 

Robert Jimison covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on defense issues and foreign policy.

Lawrence: The first six Americans killed in Trump's war died because Hegseth left them defenseless