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Crow Questions Hegseth on Apolitical Leadership and Military Distinctions in Hearing

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Topics in This Edition

CongressDefense DepartmentMilitary leadership

Summary

The clip shows Rep. Jason Crow (D-CO), an Army Ranger veteran, questioning Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, also a veteran, during a hearing. Crow references their shared platoon leadership experience, asks about discussing political affiliations, COIN training in Afghanistan 2011-2012, and contrasts it with a played clip of Hegseth's statements to probe whether the US military differs from adversaries like ISIS. Hegseth affirms the military code, states that political affiliations were irrelevant in his unit, and explicitly says 'Of course, we're different.' The segment ends with Crow summarizing leadership principles on inclusion, civilian interaction, and moral distinction from the enemy.

Editorial Assessment

The exchange accurately reflects standard US military doctrine on remaining apolitical and distinct from enemies through rules of engagement and values. Hegseth's background as a COIN instructor checks out, as does Crow's service record. However, the presentation omits the specific statement or video clip Crow referenced that prompted the line of questioning, leaving viewers without the full policy or rhetorical context. The framing highlights potential inconsistency without noting Hegseth's direct affirmation, which could skew perceptions of the exchange as more contentious than the transcript indicates.

Key Moments

verified

Hegseth served as senior COIN instructor in Afghanistan 2011-2012

Confirmed in his official biography and multiple reports on his deployments.

verified

Hegseth would not ask platoon members their political affiliation

Consistent with his response and standard US military practice of maintaining unit cohesion above partisanship.

disputed

Hegseth is unwilling to say the US military is different from the enemy

Transcript shows him responding 'Of course, we're different' after affirming the military code.

verified

Crow and Hegseth are both combat veterans with overlapping service experiences

Crow served three tours as Army Ranger; Hegseth deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan as National Guard officer.

Notable Concerns

  • Title implies evasion on core distinction from ISIS despite Hegseth's clear affirmation
  • Selective editing omits the content of the 'what you just saw here' clip

Sources Consulted

  1. Confirmation process for Pete Hegseth for secretary of defense
  2. PN11-7 — Peter Hegseth — Department of Defense
  3. Meet Jason | Representative Jason Crow
  4. Pete Hegseth | UANI
  5. hon pete hegseth

Background

  1. Pete Hegseth - Wikipedia