Hegseth, drug boats and Defense Secretary
Digest more
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is coming under a congressional microscope over reports of a second strike to take out survivors or an earlier strike on a boat allegedly carrying drus and
A look at what Pete Hegseth has said about the deadly strike in the Carribean—and how his explanations have changed
Just The News on MSN
Hegseth adviser says 'Signalgate' report debunks allegation War Secretary shared classified intel
Tim Parlatore says report also raises concern about former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin use of personal cell phone in classified rooms.
It’s known as Task Force Scorpion Strike, and pictures of CENTCOM’s drones seem to strongly resemble the cheap yet effective Shahed drones manufactured by Iran for use in the Middle East and in Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. CENTCOM refers to theirs as “Low-cost Unmanned Combat Attack System [or LUCAS] drones.”
President Trump said he would support releasing the footage of a second strike on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat on Sept. 2.
White House confirms and defends second strike against alleged drug smugglers in Caribbean waters, amid Trump administration's anti-drug crusade.
Tens of thousands of blue-collar Defense Department workers are slated to receive their long-delayed 2024 pay raises. The raises were stalled for nearly a year after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s purge of advisory committees halted the DoD Wage Committee’s ability to authorize new wage schedules.
The Pentagon’s watchdog has found that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth put U.S. personnel and their mission at risk when he used the Signal messaging app to convey sensitive information about a military strike against Houthi militants in Yemen.
The family of 42-year-old Alejandro Carranza Medina, who was killed on Sept. 15, insisted he was a fisherman just doing his job on the open sea.
“Secretary of War Crimes”: Pete Hegseth accused of murder for alleged order to kill strike survivors
Like a turtle on its back, Pete Hegseth is floundering.
President Donald Trump is set to meet with his national security team amid growing scrutiny over a September military strike on an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean