A piece today in The Atlantic, online, by the fine writer and military analyst Tom Nichols, concerned Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and atrocious remarks he made during a Thursday briefing.
Mr. Hegseth spoke, at one point, about the American press, and its reporting about the killings on Sunday, via an Iranian drone, of six American service members at a base in Kuwait. Mr. Hegseth and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Dan Caine both spoke at the briefing.
Here is part of what Mr. Nichols wrote:
This morning, the defense secretary gave a briefing on the war that quickly degenerated into Trumplike bombast. (Wisely, the Pentagon scheduled this at 8 a.m. eastern time, when most of the country is either sleeping or busy starting their day.) Hegseth apparently prefers to sound more like a Call of Duty player leading a raid than a sober and judicious secretary of defense: “Death and destruction from the sky all day,” he said, along with other empty phrases such as “We’re playing for keeps.” (As opposed to what, exactly?)
Most reporters are now accustomed to Hegseth’s drama-laden antics. But even by the low standards he has set, he managed to shock many of them when he cynically used the deaths of U.S. military personnel to air his own grievances with the press.
On Sunday morning (local time), an Iranian drone hit a makeshift operations center in Kuwait. The Pentagon says that six Americans are dead. Not only is this event a tragedy, but it also requires an explanation: The drone reportedly snuck through U.S. defenses without setting off any alerts, and struck a target that now seems to have been unduly vulnerable to aerial attack.
Wrote Mr. Nichols:
The defense secretary, the man who is supposed to carry this news [of the deaths of the troops] to the American public and mourn with them, instead whined about the unfairness of it all. “When a few drones get through or tragic things happen, it’s front-page news. I get it,” Hegseth told the reporters, military personnel, and civilians gathered this morning in the Pentagon. “The press only wants to make the president look bad, but try for once to report the reality. The terms of this war will be set by us at every step. As I said Monday, the mission is laser-focused.” (Bold type added.)
“Tragic things happen”? Hegseth said this as though it is unreasonable to look any closer at such events. He seems unable to grasp that the deaths of Americans are not merely a public-relations problem: When a drone slips through U.S. defenses and kills six members of America’s armed forces, the deaths of those servicepeople are the story. The people of the United States deserve to know what happened and why. Hegseth complaining that he’s not getting credit for all of the drones that didn’t get through is like an airline executive responding to an air disaster by growling about all of the planes his company made that didn’t crash.
My colleague Nancy Youssef was at the Pentagon this morning, sitting just three rows from the podium. I asked her what the atmosphere was like after Hegseth’s heartless remark. She told me that his comments “sent a stunned silence through the briefing room.” Even members of Hegseth’s staff, she said, seemed to flinch at what he was saying. “Some put their heads down,” she said, while others just looked around. Someone in the room then said: “That was one of the most insulting things I have ever heard,” quietly but audibly and, as far as Nancy could tell, to no one in particular.
Unlike
Hegseth, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine opened his
remarks by grieving the deaths of the fallen soldiers, saying that “it’s
with profound sadness and gratitude that I share the names of four of
our six fallen heroes.” He didn’t have the names of the other two,
because while Hegseth was griping about media coverage, the U.S.
military was completing the next-of-kin notification....“Our nation stands with
you,” Caine told Gold Star parents, wounded warriors, and their
families, “and we are eternally grateful for your courage, your
resiliency, your devotion to this mission and to our nation.”
Here is the link to the Atlantic piece:
https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/2026/03/pete-hegseth-american-soldiers-iran-media/686240/?gift=Tcay7nmVziC9n3Jf9Qllm-qeVFxOcZqFe-F147_fDUg&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share 0/?gift=Tcay7nmVziC9n3Jf9Qllm-qeVFxOcZqFe-F147_fDUg&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=sharehttps://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/2026/03/pete-hegseth-american-soldiers-iran-media/686240/?gift=Tcay7nmVziC9n3Jf9Qllm-qeVFxOcZqFe-F147_fDUg&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share