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.

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