Fresh details are coming to light about defence secretary Pete Hegseth’s surprise order requiring hundreds of US generals and admirals to assemble next week in Virginia, with senior officials now describing it as an attempt to showcase the administration’s reinvention of the Pentagon as the “department of war.”
The directive was issued earlier this week to all commanders ranked one-star general or rear admiral and above, along with their senior enlisted leaders. Exceptions will be granted only in rare cases with top-level approval.
Staff across the globe have scrambled to arrange urgent travel, with many officers leaving posts in active conflict zones.
“It’s meant to be an eyeball-to-eyeball kind of conversation,” one person familiar with the planning was quoted as saying by The Washington Post. ‘He wants to see the generals’, the person added.
While the Pentagon has provided no agenda, a senior Trump administration official cited by The New York Times said that the unprecedented gathering, described as without precedent in size and scope, is intended to “get our fighters excited” about Hegseth’s vision for the department.
Congressional committees were informed Friday that the secretary would use the forum to outline new fitness standards and other priorities.
According to CNN, the event is expected to resemble a “pep rally,” emphasising Hegseth’s drive to rebrand the Pentagon as the “department of war” and restore what he calls a “warrior ethos.”
A defence official quoted by the outlet claimed that the meeting is designed as “a showcase for Hegseth to tell them: get on board, or potentially have your career shortened.”
The gathering comes after months of turbulence at the Pentagon, where Hegseth has dismissed numerous senior officers, many of them women and people of colour and ordered a 20% cut in four-star generals and admirals, according to CNN.
Critics say the moves have created a climate of fear.
Hegseth, a former Army officer and Fox News host, has tied his agenda to what he calls a “return to lethality,” though his initiatives have ranged from new shaving standards to banning transgender personnel.
The short-notice order has triggered concern over cost and security. With around 800 generals and admirals in the armed forces, including 44 four-stars, the influx of officers and aides could number in the hundreds.
One US official was quoted by The Post as saying, “It does have an impact, pulling them all in. Why is it so important to get them all in the room?”
Retired Lt Gen Ben Hodges compared the assembly to a 1935 Nazi-era oath ceremony in Germany, prompting Hegseth to respond sarcastically on social media, “Cool story, General.”
Congressional Democrats have also raised alarms. Senator Tammy Duckworth began circulating a letter Friday warning of costs, security risks and disruption to operations if so many top officers are brought stateside simultaneously.
According to The Times, the meeting will be the first of three speeches, with follow-up lectures planned on the defence industrial base and deterrence. The timing is sensitive: September 30 marks the end of the fiscal year, and a potential government shutdown could complicate travel as US forces face crises in Ukraine, Gaza and the Middle East.
Vice President JD Vance has dismissed the controversy, calling the event “not particularly unusual.”
The directive was issued earlier this week to all commanders ranked one-star general or rear admiral and above, along with their senior enlisted leaders. Exceptions will be granted only in rare cases with top-level approval.
Staff across the globe have scrambled to arrange urgent travel, with many officers leaving posts in active conflict zones.
“It’s meant to be an eyeball-to-eyeball kind of conversation,” one person familiar with the planning was quoted as saying by The Washington Post. ‘He wants to see the generals’, the person added.
While the Pentagon has provided no agenda, a senior Trump administration official cited by The New York Times said that the unprecedented gathering, described as without precedent in size and scope, is intended to “get our fighters excited” about Hegseth’s vision for the department.
Congressional committees were informed Friday that the secretary would use the forum to outline new fitness standards and other priorities.
According to CNN, the event is expected to resemble a “pep rally,” emphasising Hegseth’s drive to rebrand the Pentagon as the “department of war” and restore what he calls a “warrior ethos.”
A defence official quoted by the outlet claimed that the meeting is designed as “a showcase for Hegseth to tell them: get on board, or potentially have your career shortened.”
The gathering comes after months of turbulence at the Pentagon, where Hegseth has dismissed numerous senior officers, many of them women and people of colour and ordered a 20% cut in four-star generals and admirals, according to CNN.
Critics say the moves have created a climate of fear.
Hegseth, a former Army officer and Fox News host, has tied his agenda to what he calls a “return to lethality,” though his initiatives have ranged from new shaving standards to banning transgender personnel.
The short-notice order has triggered concern over cost and security. With around 800 generals and admirals in the armed forces, including 44 four-stars, the influx of officers and aides could number in the hundreds.
One US official was quoted by The Post as saying, “It does have an impact, pulling them all in. Why is it so important to get them all in the room?”
Retired Lt Gen Ben Hodges compared the assembly to a 1935 Nazi-era oath ceremony in Germany, prompting Hegseth to respond sarcastically on social media, “Cool story, General.”
Congressional Democrats have also raised alarms. Senator Tammy Duckworth began circulating a letter Friday warning of costs, security risks and disruption to operations if so many top officers are brought stateside simultaneously.
According to The Times, the meeting will be the first of three speeches, with follow-up lectures planned on the defence industrial base and deterrence. The timing is sensitive: September 30 marks the end of the fiscal year, and a potential government shutdown could complicate travel as US forces face crises in Ukraine, Gaza and the Middle East.
Vice President JD Vance has dismissed the controversy, calling the event “not particularly unusual.”
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