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LetMyPeopleVote

(183,882 posts)
Sat Jun 20, 2026, 08:19 PM Saturday

Secret Vetting and Blocked Promotions: Inside Hegseth's War on Diversity (New York Times Gift Article)

A Black admiral fixed one of the Navy’s worst messes. Mr. Hegseth blocked his promotion anyway.



https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/19/us/politics/hegseth-navy-blocked-promotions-diversity.html?unlocked_article_code=1.rVA.BgXx.2JeTo7zxxqpg&smid=nytcore-ios-share

The Navy’s top leadership believed that Rear Adm. Stephen D. Barnett was by far the best choice to lead the command that oversees the Navy’s bases at home and abroad....

The officer, however, had a big strike against him. Like other Black military leaders, he had been encouraged by his superiors to help the Navy recruit and retain minority officers, who remain significantly underrepresented in the force. His years-old remarks on the importance of diversity had been flagged in a secret vetting process designed to weed out senior leaders whom Mr. Hegseth and his team pegged as a problem.

Instead of Admiral Barnett, Mr. Hegseth selected a white officer who was the Navy leadership’s third choice.

So far this year, Mr. Hegseth has blocked the promotions of at least 40 senior officers to general and admiral ranks. About half of those are women or members of minority groups.....

Mr. Hegseth has argued that the troops most likely to suffer discrimination in the military are white.

He traced the problem to the protests and racial reckoning that followed Mr. Floyd’s murder. The Pentagon’s generals and admirals, he wrote in his 2024 book, started searching for evidence of institutional bias that did not exist. In the process, he argued, they destroyed the military’s meritocratic culture.

“It’s Black over white. Female over male. Gay over straight,” Mr. Hegseth wrote.

Internal Pentagon studies told a different story. Nearly a third of Black U.S. military troops reported experiencing racial discrimination, harassment or both during a 12-month period, according to a survey conducted during President Trump’s first term.....

Mr. Hegseth has removed a total of 32 officers from Air Force and Navy one-star and two-star promotion lists, defense officials said. The only Black officer and the only female officer were removed from a Marine Corps promotion list. The two Marines’ promotions are in limbo.

Much of the vetting process has remained shrouded in secrecy. In some instances, officers up for promotions were not told that they had been removed from the lists. Mr. Hegseth also has refused to give Congress the names of officers pulled from the lists, officials said. The Senate’s version of the 2027 defense bill would require Mr. Hegseth to provide “a written justification and notification” when removing an officer from a promotion list......

Military officials, though, said they have noticed patterns. Officers who had commanded aircraft carriers or amphibious assault ships have been especially vulnerable. The reason: Those ships have public affairs sailors on board who documented their skippers participating in events related to diversity or the Covid vaccine.

Now those articles, videos and photos, posted on the Navy websites, were being used against them, current and former Navy officials said.
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Secret Vetting and Blocked Promotions: Inside Hegseth's War on Diversity (New York Times Gift Article) (Original Post) LetMyPeopleVote Saturday OP
White maga military.......... Lovie777 Saturday #1
If experience, ability and skill mattered, Hegseth... 3catwoman3 Saturday #2
Bingo! GenThePerservering Sunday #3
MaddowBlog-Army general abruptly steps down as Hegseth's Pentagon purge intensifies LetMyPeopleVote 18 hrs ago #4

LetMyPeopleVote

(183,882 posts)
4. MaddowBlog-Army general abruptly steps down as Hegseth's Pentagon purge intensifies
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 11:11 AM
18 hrs ago

Gen. Chris Donahue was described as “the latest casualty” in the defense secretary’s “purge of the military’s senior ranks.”

As Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa, joins the ranks of leaders involuntarily exiting the military, Pete Hegseth’s purge deserves to be seen as a genuine scandal.
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...

Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2026-06-24T13:05:47.412Z

https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/army-general-steps-down-hegseth-pentagon-purge

In the years that followed, the general took on other high-profile duties, becoming the head of Army forces in Europe and Africa. He was also widely seen as the next chief of staff of the Army. This week, however, Donahue’s career became notable for a very different reason. The Hill reported:

Gen. Chris Donahue, commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa, submitted his paperwork to retire after a little over a year in his position, a Pentagon official told The Hill.

The Pentagon official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal military deliberations
.


An Army spokesperson soon after confirmed Donahue’s departure in an official statement, thanking the general “for his leadership of U.S. Army Europe and Africa.”

While military leaders retire with some regularity, there’s reason to believe that Donahue’s decision — announced after just 18 months in his position — was not altogether voluntary. CBS News, citing multiple sources, reported that the general exited the military after a lengthy and decorated career because he had “earned the ire of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.”....

In fact, the New York Times reported in November that Hegseth had fired or sidelined dozens of officials “with little explanation,” creating “an atmosphere of anxiety and mistrust” within the department. Politico published a similar report the month before, noting that the secretary’s firings have “injected a fresh wave of fear into the Pentagon over the cost of speaking up and who might be next.”

Early last year, five former defense secretaries, including retired Gen. Jim Mattis, Donald Trump’s first defense secretary, condemned the pattern of firings as “reckless.” In a joint letter, addressed to Congress, they asked the House and Senate to hold “immediate hearings to assess the national security implications” of the dismissals.

Hegseth and the administration appear to have ignored those concerns; the purge is still going on; and GOP leaders on Capitol Hill have scheduled no such hearings.

Democratic Rep. Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, who served as a Marine officer in Iraq and now serves on the House Armed Services Committee, spoke to Politico about Hegseth’s purges, which the congressman described as politically motivated.

“That’s a recipe not just for a politicized military, but an authoritarian military,” Moulton said. “That’s the way militaries work in Russia and China and North Korea.”....

For his part, Hegseth recently defended the pattern during congressional testimony, telling lawmakers who asked about his personnel purge, “Under Barack Obama, 197 general officers were removed. So this is not something specific to this administration.”

We learned soon after that the statistic the secretary cited was entirely made up and had no basis in fact.
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