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Trump and Hegseth spark alarm about domestic use of military

At an unprecedented gathering of the nation's top military brass, Trump and Hegseth spoke of using force in America

National Affairs Fellow

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U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth speaks to senior military leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico on September 30, 2025 in Quantico, Virginia. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth speaks to senior military leaders at Marine Corps Base Quantico on September 30, 2025 in Quantico, Virginia. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth delivered remarks that have stirred intense reactions from political commentators, military experts and activists.

Speaking to an audience of hundreds of senior military leaders at Quantico, Virginia, both men outlined their vision for a radically redefined U.S. military, emphasizing “lethality” and “warrior ethos” while promoting controversial shifts in military culture.

Historian Timothy Snyder, an expert on authoritarianism at the University of Toronto, interpreted the event as an ominous signal that Trump and Hegseth are more focused on domestic enemies and ideological battles than real-world military strategy.

“The ‘war fighting’ and ‘lethality’ they plan is inside their own country and comes from conflicts inside their own minds,” Snyder wrote on social media.

Marquette University political scientist Risa Brooks, who specializes in civilian-military relations, echoed that concern, warning that the speeches reflected an effort to realign the military with a partisan political agenda. “This is not about enforcing standards,” she said, “it’s about inculcating a particular value system within the officer corps.”

Hegseth, in his speech, asserted that the Pentagon had become a “woke department” and vowed to reassert a “war fighting” ethos. Focusing on what he saw as the eroding strength of the military, Hegseth announced a sweeping set of directives aimed at reversing what he called decades of “politically correct” rules of engagement.

Brooks described the speech as more than simply “performative,” arguing that its intent was serious: to reshape military leadership in line with the administration’s values.

“The ultimate aim,” she noted on BluSky, “is that people will no longer expect the military to serve the public at large, but that its goal and purpose is to advance the interest of one faction or party.”

Trump’s provocative suggestion of using “dangerous cities” like Chicago as “training grounds” for the military against an “enemy from within” also raised alarm. The president has long targeted Democratic-run cities, and has deployed hundreds of soldiers in urban areas across the country since returning to power. But, speaking Tuesday, he was even more explicit than in embracing violence against his political opposition, urging members of the military to respond to aggressive protests with force.

“They spit, we hit,” the president said.


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Veterans’ advocacy groups immediately condemned the remarks.

“Trump just declared a ‘war from within,’” said Common Defense on X. “That is not just dangerous rhetoric that will lead to violence—it is a threat to American lives.”

But Trump’s remarks about the use of force extended beyond U.S. borders. He defended the military’s legally questionable actions against Venezuelan boats, dismissing international law in favor of what he called a more lethal approach to countering threats.

By Blaise Malley

Blaise Malley is a national affairs fellow at Salon.

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