White
House to take choice of Pentagon chief of staff out of Hegseth’s hands
Exclusive:
The intervention to marginalize Ricky Buria is aimed at insulating the Pentagon
from any more missteps
Hugo Lowell
in Washington
Fri 9 May
2025 14.58 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/09/white-house-pentagon-hegseth-chief-of-staff
Exasperated
by the turmoil that has dogged Pete Hegseth’s office in recent weeks, the White
House will block the US defense secretary’s choice of chief of staff and select
a candidate of its own, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Hegseth had
suggested giving the chief of staff position to Marine Col Ricky Buria after
the first person in the role, Joe Kasper, left last month in the wake of a
contentious leak investigation that brought the ouster of three other senior
aides.
But the
White House has made clear to Hegseth that Buria will not be elevated to become
his most senior aide at the Pentagon, the people said, casting Buria as a
liability on account of his limited experience as a junior military assistant
and his recurring role in internal office drama.
“Ricky will
not be getting the chief position,” one of the people directly familiar with
deliberations said. “He doesn’t have adequate experience, lacks the political
chops and is widely disliked by almost everyone in the White House who has been
exposed to him.”
The White
House has always selected political appointees at agencies through the
presidential personnel office, but the move to block Hegseth’s choice at this
juncture is unusual and reflects Donald Trump’s intent to keep Hegseth by
trying to insulate him from any more missteps.
The
intervention comes at a time when Hegseth’s ability to run the Pentagon has
come under scrutiny. It also runs into the belief inside Trump’s orbit that
even the president might struggle to justify Hegseth’s survival if the
secretary does not have a scandal-free next few months.
The
secretary is not expected to have to fire Buria after he agreed to a
compromise: to accept the White House’s choice for a new chief of staff in
exchange for keeping Buria as a senior adviser, the people said. The White
House and Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment.
The internal
staffing situation at the Pentagon has outsize consequences because Hegseth’s
front office is involved in policy deliberations and sensitive decision-making
at the defense department, which has a budget of more than $800bn and oversees
more than 2 million troops.
Hegseth’s
office is currently operating at a fraction of the size it normally does, with
roughly five senior advisers. “There’s so much that’s not happening because no
one is managing the front office,” an official with knowledge of the situation
said.
The
possibility of Buria becoming chief of staff spooked the White House for
multiple reasons. For one, the White House presidential personnel office
previously declined Hegseth’s request to make him a political appointee, but
Buria has been operating in such a capacity anyway, two officials said.
Buria
appears to be considered by the career civilian employees in the deputy defense
secretary’s office as the acting chief, not least because he recently moved
into the chief of staff’s office and has taken steps to redecorate by bringing
in new furniture, the officials said.
Buria also
recently failed to pass a polygraph test that was administered as part of the
leak investigation. The polygraph came back as inconclusive, the officials
said, a result that would ordinarily require him to retake the test before he
could be cleared.
In an
additional twist, Buria was identified as having sent some of the messages in
at least one Signal group chat about sensitive and imminent US missile strikes
against the Houthis in Yemen, the officials said. The Wall Street Journal
earlier reported on Buria’s access to Hegseth’s personal phone.
Buria, a
former MV-22 pilot who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, started his ascent at
the Pentagon as a junior military assistant (JMA) under Joe Biden’s defense
secretary, Lloyd Austin. In the prestigious but unglamorous role, a JMA is
something of a personal aide but with access to high-level operations.
When Hegseth
arrived, Buria continued his role as the JMA and quickly became close with
Hegseth and his wife, Jennifer, traveling with the secretary and spending time
at the secretary’s residence at Fort McNair.
Buria’s
influence expanded after Hegseth fired his boss, the air force Lt Gen Jennifer
Short, who had been serving as the senior military assistant. Buria stepped
into the job, typically held by a three-star officer, and joined bilateral
meetings with foreign dignitaries. The National Pulse reported he also attended
foreign policy briefings.
When Army Lt
Gen Christopher LaNeve arrived as Hegseth’s permanent senior military
assistant, it was expected that Buria would return to his JMA position.
Instead, he told officials he would retire from the military to become a
political appointee in Hegseth’s office and took advantage of the power vacuum
resulting from Kasper’s departure.

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