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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth blocked the promotions of at least seven Navy officers already selected by a board of senior admirals — stripping every woman from the list and most minority candidates along with them. The final slate of 22 one-star admiral nominees included no women at all, despite females comprising roughly 21% of the active-duty Navy. The decision stunned current and former defense officials, who say it may have broken the rules governing military promotions entirely.
At least two of the removed officers are women, two are Black men, and three are white men. The revised slate left only two nonwhite officers among the 22 nominees, despite racial minorities making up approximately 38% of the active-duty force. Hegseth had intervened once before in Army promotions, removing four colonels from a separate list. This time, the scale and the pattern were harder to dismiss as coincidence.
Four current and former defense officials, speaking anonymously, said Hegseth’s actions appear to violate the rules governing a promotion system intended to be apolitical and merit-based. Pentagon rules allow the defense secretary to remove officers from promotion lists only when new information raises specific questions about fitness to serve, not on ideological grounds. That distinction is at the center of everything that follows.
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Internal records suggest some officers were targeted because their names appeared on a website devoted to identifying “woke” military personnel, with infractions as minor as having served as a diversity liaison officer two decades ago. One officer was flagged for a role she held 20 years earlier. The promotion board’s senior admirals had already cleared her. Hegseth removed her anyway.
That officer, a nuclear-trained surface warfare specialist and former aide to a four-star admiral, was singled out shortly after her name appeared on the site. A second female officer targeted by Hegseth had served as a Navy pilot and foreign area officer, building relationships with militaries around the world. Both were considered high performers. Neither had any misconduct allegations pending against them.
Hegseth’s tenure as defense secretary has been defined by his stated mission to eliminate what he has called a “woke” military culture built up under previous administrations. His critics argue that the criteria being applied have nothing to do with performance, readiness, or merit, and everything to do with ideology. The officers who lost their promotions have not been told why.
In a break with protocol, Hegseth urged senior Navy officials to place Capt. William Francis Jr., a Navy SEAL serving as his personal special assistant, on the one-star promotion list. Francis had been passed over for promotion multiple times by previous boards. The reason was straightforward: he lacked the command experience required under the board’s own rules and was not selected. The request itself, however, raised immediate alarm inside the Navy.
At a House Armed Services Committee hearing, Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, a Pennsylvania Democrat and Air Force veteran, asked Hegseth directly whether he had ever ordered the Navy to add a special operations officer who lacked the required command time to the admiral promotion list. “I’m not aware of what you’re referring to,” Hegseth replied. The New York Times described his answer as, at best, misleading.
The failed push to elevate Francis sits alongside the removals of qualified officers as part of the same sequence of events. On one side, decorated careers ended without explanation. On the other, a personal aide with insufficient qualifications was pushed forward. Federal law places strict limits on this kind of intervention: under Section 629 of Title 10 of the U.S. Code, only the President may remove a name from a promotion list, and he must notify Congress within 30 days.
Since taking office, Hegseth has fired or sidelined nearly three dozen senior officers. Nearly 60% of those dismissed are female or Black, a group that currently accounts for fewer than 20% of all generals and admirals, according to Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, speaking in recent Senate testimony.
Among those already pushed out: General Charles Q. Brown Jr., the second African American to chair the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the first woman ever to lead the Navy. Hegseth has declined to explain any individual dismissal, telling lawmakers he does not address such matters “out of respect for those officers,” while speaking broadly of reversing what he called “gender and demographic engineering.” The Pentagon’s chief spokesman Sean Parnell stated that promotions go to those who have earned them and that the department would never consider skin color or gender as a factor.
Senator Reed, in a recent hearing, told Hegseth directly: “You are hollowing out the military’s bench of experience and highest-performing senior officers, while making young officers wonder if they should continue to serve.” The Navy that emerges from this process — led by 22 one-star admirals with no women among them — will reflect choices made not by the admirals who built the institution, but by a defense secretary who overruled them, then denied knowing what he had done.
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