Pentagon will cut billions of dollars in programs
but not its overall budget, Hegseth says
By
John Vandiver
Stars and Stripes • February
21, 2025
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
delivers recorded remarks at the Pentagon on Feb. 20, 2025. Hegseth said he
will immediately begin shifting billions of dollars away from nonlethal
programs in connection with a broader reorganization of military priorities.
(Alexander Kubitza/Defense Department)
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said
Thursday that he will immediately begin shifting billions of dollars away from
nonlethal programs in connection with a broader reorganization of military
priorities.
In a late-night video address to the
force, Hegseth said 8%, or roughly $50 billion, will be pulled from
non-mission-essential programs in the current budget to direct the expenditures
toward priorities at the top of the Trump administration’s agenda.
“That’s not a cut,” Hegseth said.
“It’s refocusing and reinvesting existing funds into building the force that
protects you, the American people.”
Hegseth’s comments come on the heels
of reports that the Pentagon is looking to make
sweeping reductions to its overall budget. The new Pentagon chief
said that is not the case.
“In short, we want the biggest, most
badass military on the planet, on God’s green earth,” he said.
An aerial view of the Pentagon in
May 2023. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Feb. 20, 2025, that he will
immediately begin shifting billions of dollars away from nonlethal programs in
connection with a broader reorganization of military priorities. (Alexander
Kubitza/Defense Department)
Hegseth said the military is now
working up plans to restructure the Pentagon budget. Funds redirected from
programs deemed nonessential will go to supporting initiatives such as rebuilding
the defense industrial base, border security and an array of weapons programs.
The Pentagon also is looking to trim
overhead, beginning with a review of probationary employees, which generally
refers to recent hires.
He said that jobs won’t be eliminated
in an across-the-board manner and that performance will be considered.
“We’re starting (cuts) with the poor
performers among our probationary employees because it’s common sense that you
want the best and brightest,” Hegseth said.
Federal employee probation typically
lasts one or two years after hiring. Many of those employees haven’t had a
performance evaluation, which usually comes after a year on the job.
In other departments, such as the
Department of Veterans Affairs, employees say they received termination notices
for performance reasons shortly after going through
orientation.
Hegseth added that the Defense
Department will “be aggressive up and down the chain” to ensure that “the best
and brightest are promoted based on merit.”
A hiring freeze also will be
implemented to review employment practices in a manner that prioritizes top
performers, he said.
Meanwhile, Elon Musk’s Department of
Government Efficiency is at work inside the Pentagon.
Hegseth said DOGE staff will be
looking for signs of waste and redundancies and “the last vestiges” of
diversity, equity and inclusion programs, as well as initiatives dealing with
climate change.
DOGE also will look for cuts inside
military headquarters and other “top-line stuff that allows us to reinvest
elsewhere,” Hegseth said.
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