Trump
Picks Pete Hegseth, a Veteran and Fox News Host, for Defense Secretary
The choice
of Mr. Hegseth, a dedicated supporter of the president-elect in his first term,
is outside the norm of the traditional choice for the post.
Helene
CooperMaggie Haberman
By Helene
Cooper and Maggie Haberman
Nov. 12,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/12/us/politics/pete-hegseth-defense-secretary-trump.html
President-elect
Donald J. Trump on Tuesday chose Pete Hegseth, a Fox News host and veteran of
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to be his next defense secretary, elevating a
television ally to run the Pentagon and lead 1.3 million active-duty troops.
The choice
of Mr. Hegseth was outside the norm of the traditional defense secretary. But
he was a dedicated supporter of Mr. Trump during his first term, defending his
interactions with the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, embracing his “America
First” agenda of trying to withdraw U.S. troops from abroad and energetically
taking up the cause of combat veterans accused of war crimes.
In a
statement announcing his pick, Mr. Trump praised Mr. Hegseth’s combat
experience and support of the military and veterans. “Pete is tough, smart and
a true believer in America First,” Mr. Trump said. “With Pete at the helm,
America’s enemies are on notice — our military will be great again, and America
will never back down.”
Mr. Hegseth
is a co-host of “Fox & Friends.” He joined the network as a contributor in
2014 and has been the host of Fox’s New Year’s coverage for years.
He served in
the Army in Afghanistan and Iraq and at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
A Minnesota
native, Mr. Hegseth graduated from Princeton University, where he was the
publisher of The Princeton Tory, a conservative magazine, for which he wrote
about seeing the statue of Saddam Hussein toppled in Baghdad in 2003.
“Conservative
ideas have worked, do work and will continue to work,” Mr. Hegseth wrote. “The
list is long: A strong military is absolutely essential to bringing long-term
peace and stability to the world.”
He holds a
master’s in public policy from the Harvard Kennedy School, according to Fox.
In 2019, Mr.
Hegseth lobbied heavily on behalf of Chief Petty Officer Edward Gallagher, a
member of the Navy SEALs who was acquitted of serious war crimes in Iraq. Mr.
Trump reversed a demotion ordered as punishment, then fired the Navy secretary,
whom Mr. Hegseth had aggressively criticized.
Mr. Hegseth
defended Chief Gallagher on Fox News and spoke to Mr. Trump several times about
the case. “From the beginning, this was overzealous prosecutors who were not
giving the benefit of the doubt to the trigger-pullers,” he said.
Mr.
Hegseth’s book, the New York Times best-seller “The War on Warriors: Behind the
Betrayal of the Men Who Keep Us Free,” was published in June. “Our ‘elites’ are
like the feckless drug-addled businessmen at Nakatomi Plaza, looking down on
Bruce Willis’s John McClane in ‘Die Hard,’” Mr. Hegseth wrote in the book. “But
there will come a day when they realize they need John McClane — that in fact
their ability to live in peace and prosperity has always depended on guys like
him being honorable, powerful and deadly.”
In his
statement, Mr. Trump praised Mr. Hegseth’s book, which he said “reveals the
left-wing betrayal of our warriors, and how we must return our military to
meritocracy, lethality, accountability and excellence.”
But Mr.
Hegseth is likely to run into opposition from senior military officials and
perhaps lawmakers who have served in the military for his embrace of narratives
by troops who ran afoul of military justice rules. A former Pentagon official
from Mr. Trump’s first term questioned Mr. Hegseth’s lack of experience — other
than serving in the military — and raised concerns about his ability to win
Senate confirmation, even with a Republican majority in the chamber.
In a
statement on Tuesday, Fox News called Mr. Hegseth “an exceptional host on ‘Fox
& Friends’ and ‘Fox Nation’ and a best-selling author for Fox News Books
for nearly a decade.”
“His
insights and analysis, especially about the military, resonated deeply with our
viewers and made the program the major success that it is today,” the statement
said.
Helene
Cooper is a Pentagon correspondent. She was previously an editor, diplomatic
correspondent and White House correspondent. More about Helene Cooper
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent reporting on the 2024 presidential
campaign, down ballot races across the country and the investigations into
former President Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie Haberman
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