I think the biggest issue is can he manage the mumber of employees of the Pentagon and the soldiers. Who does he want to fill out the Deputy, Asst, Deputy Asst, Under SecDef positions?
fc2112 said:
In all seriousness - I think I am more qualified to be SECDEF than this guy and I am nowhere near being qualified to be SECDEF.
JB99 said:fc2112 said:
In all seriousness - I think I am more qualified to be SECDEF than this guy and I am nowhere near being qualified to be SECDEF.
And in all seriousness you have no idea what qualifies as a good sec def candidate.
fc2112 said:JB99 said:fc2112 said:
In all seriousness - I think I am more qualified to be SECDEF than this guy and I am nowhere near being qualified to be SECDEF.
And in all seriousness you have no idea what qualifies as a good sec def candidate.
Said without knowing to whom you speak.
That's a very impressive list! If he does that he'll be the best SECDEF of all time.P.U.T.U said:
If you listen to his podcast interview with Shawn Ryan it sounds like he will focus more on transforming the military back to what it should be instead of making all of the decisions. Seems the new joint chiefs will be more of the military advisors and Hegseth will reform the military.
During the podcast he said we should:
- Get rid of all DEI/CRT. Anyone who has pushed those will be fired
- Refocus the military to do what it is supposed to do, kill people
- Focus on rebuilding our weapon stockpiles, our troops at the DMZ have 3 days worth of artillery. They sent over everything else to Ukraine
- Regain confidence in the military, said at this point we would lose a traditional confrontation against China, Russia, and maybe a few other countries. Don't have the proper manpower or equipment
- Get rid of most of the women in fighting roles such as infantry and special operations. If you cannot meet the current male standards you don't belong on the ground for those roles. Women belong in the military, just not in those roles.
- Get the physical standards back to pre-Obama levels
- Get rid of anyone with foreign ties to enemy nations like Iran, China, Russia
- Come up with plan to better defend infrastructure
- Increase missile capabilities, our entire naval surface fleet could get knocked out in a short period by hypersonic weapons
Glad I know the context here and that is our military. Still, I'd throw at least one female into that picDemosthenes81 said:
I can't wait for the confirmation hearing when the dems go after his tattoos.
Hell, just having a SecDef with a bicep will be mind blowing to the left.
One weekend a month, two weeks a year doesnt make it a career.Teslag said:K2-HMFIC said:He knows Miller and Colby.JB99 said:oldag941 said:
I don't have a confidant, but have served with some of these men. And they are continuing to serve. I can say your confidant is painting with too broad a brush. So much of that is tied to personality. There is a whole group of retired generals and admirals that signed up to support Trump. To some extent, the senior leaders actions are a product of their CEO (the President). Just like in any other business. But I would be careful to paint with such a broad brush. There are some badass war fighters leading today. Lopping them off would be like "cutting off your nose to spite your face".
And how did that work out last time? He hired super qualified guys he didn't know very well and they sabotaged him
We're not arguing it's one or the other...you can have competency and know the guy.
Hegseth is a news anchor.
That's it...thats what he's spent the majority of his life doing.
He's literally been in the military longer than he's been a news anchor.
K2-HMFIC said:One weekend a month, two weeks a year doesnt make it a career.Teslag said:K2-HMFIC said:He knows Miller and Colby.JB99 said:oldag941 said:
I don't have a confidant, but have served with some of these men. And they are continuing to serve. I can say your confidant is painting with too broad a brush. So much of that is tied to personality. There is a whole group of retired generals and admirals that signed up to support Trump. To some extent, the senior leaders actions are a product of their CEO (the President). Just like in any other business. But I would be careful to paint with such a broad brush. There are some badass war fighters leading today. Lopping them off would be like "cutting off your nose to spite your face".
And how did that work out last time? He hired super qualified guys he didn't know very well and they sabotaged him
We're not arguing it's one or the other...you can have competency and know the guy.
Hegseth is a news anchor.
That's it...thats what he's spent the majority of his life doing.
He's literally been in the military longer than he's been a news anchor.
K2-HMFIC said:One weekend a month, two weeks a year doesnt make it a career.Teslag said:K2-HMFIC said:He knows Miller and Colby.JB99 said:oldag941 said:
I don't have a confidant, but have served with some of these men. And they are continuing to serve. I can say your confidant is painting with too broad a brush. So much of that is tied to personality. There is a whole group of retired generals and admirals that signed up to support Trump. To some extent, the senior leaders actions are a product of their CEO (the President). Just like in any other business. But I would be careful to paint with such a broad brush. There are some badass war fighters leading today. Lopping them off would be like "cutting off your nose to spite your face".
And how did that work out last time? He hired super qualified guys he didn't know very well and they sabotaged him
We're not arguing it's one or the other...you can have competency and know the guy.
Hegseth is a news anchor.
That's it...thats what he's spent the majority of his life doing.
He's literally been in the military longer than he's been a news anchor.
K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
The job of the military is to deter (some of you guys need a lesson on how that works)...and to execute the national will.4 said:K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
You are right about one thing.
The job of our military is to kill people and break things. Period.
The greater our capacity to do those two things in overwhelming fashion, the greater the inverse relationship to peace in the world.
Rogue regimes that like to cause problems don't cause problems when they know they will be put down quickly and violently.
They may be evil, but they aren't stupid. They will sit on their hands out of a simple sense of self-preservation.
It's not more difficult to understand than that.
And by the way, that is how deterrence works.
Quote:
...but the mission of the military is far far wider than killing people.
Quote:
..and to execute the national will.
He's been deployed to Gitmo, Iraq, and Afghanistan.K2-HMFIC said:One weekend a month, two weeks a year doesnt make it a career.Teslag said:K2-HMFIC said:He knows Miller and Colby.JB99 said:oldag941 said:
I don't have a confidant, but have served with some of these men. And they are continuing to serve. I can say your confidant is painting with too broad a brush. So much of that is tied to personality. There is a whole group of retired generals and admirals that signed up to support Trump. To some extent, the senior leaders actions are a product of their CEO (the President). Just like in any other business. But I would be careful to paint with such a broad brush. There are some badass war fighters leading today. Lopping them off would be like "cutting off your nose to spite your face".
And how did that work out last time? He hired super qualified guys he didn't know very well and they sabotaged him
We're not arguing it's one or the other...you can have competency and know the guy.
Hegseth is a news anchor.
That's it...thats what he's spent the majority of his life doing.
He's literally been in the military longer than he's been a news anchor.
You don't deter enemies by not enforcing "red lines" and promoting LGBTQ causes on social media. You deter evil people by training the military to be a highly efficient killing machine that evil people fear. They don't fear you if you are unable or unwilling to follow through on threats and "red lines". Every task the military does should be focused on that mission of being able to be that highly efficient killing machine. If it isn't, it should be shunted wayyy down the list of priorities.K2-HMFIC said:The job of the military is to deter (some of you guys need a lesson on how that works)...and to execute the national will.4 said:K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
You are right about one thing.
The job of our military is to kill people and break things. Period.
The greater our capacity to do those two things in overwhelming fashion, the greater the inverse relationship to peace in the world.
Rogue regimes that like to cause problems don't cause problems when they know they will be put down quickly and violently.
They may be evil, but they aren't stupid. They will sit on their hands out of a simple sense of self-preservation.
It's not more difficult to understand than that.
And by the way, that is how deterrence works.
Sometimes thats direct action, sometimes that HUMRO, sometimes FONOPS, sometimes its presence missions, sometimes its just sitting in a missile silo, sometimes its delivering cargo, sometimes its sitting watch at an isolated site watching a satellite...but the mission of the military is far far wider than killing people.
Afraid some weird group would think, "Hey, our new Def Sec was at Fire Island".txags92 said:
Yeah, I was thinking that looked like a float in a Palm Springs parade if you don't know anything else about it.
bowhuntr said:
All the O-2s in the National Guard are getting a little concerned about getting nominated to be CJCS.
it's not like he can just walk into the E-Ring and say "you are fired and you are fired and you are fired"Aggieland Proud said:
Serious question as I don't know. Does he have power to fire the generals or where does he power actually lie?
you have two bronze stars, a BA from Princeton, an MA from Harvard, two combat deployments and were promoted to Major?fc2112 said:
In all seriousness - I think I am more qualified to be SECDEF than this guy and I am nowhere near being qualified to be SECDEF.
K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
LMCane said:K2-HMFIC said:
What I've learned how this forum perceives the military
- The majority of the military's day is looking for people to kill.
- When they're not doing that, we're trying to promote DEI and hold white people back
- If time available, forcibly vaccinate people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to lead and manage a 2 million people.
- The SecDef does not need to know how to engage with the leaders of foreign countries
- The SecDef does not need to have an understanding of how deterrence works, or tech dev, or managing a $800B budget.
I would be happy if the SECDEF knows how to:
shoot down a Chinese spy balloon moving over every base in the USA,
or how to plan a retreat so we don't leave 2 billion dollars worth of equipment for the Taliban,
or let's his superiors know when he is having surgery rather than just going AWOL for two days,
or how to stop the Ukraine war,
or the Hamas war,
or how not to have dudes wearing dresses in the military.
Teslag said:Quote:
...but the mission of the military is far far wider than killing people.
Currently. That's what Trump is trying to fix. Your vision is the wrong vision and why we got off track.Quote:
..and to execute the national will.
Trump is.