Tag: Tammy

  • Tammy Duckworth Blasts ‘Absolutely Clueless’ Pete Hegseth, Senate GOP


    The Department of Defense is the largest employer in the United States, sending out paychecks to 2.1 million service members and more than 770,000 civilians. Its annual budget — $900 billion dollars — is larger than the GDP of Switzerland. With an estimated 750 bases in at least 80 countries, it is an extraordinarily complicated and important organization. And, to run it, Donald Trump picked a Fox News haircut with (an alleged) drinking problem.

    It’s hard to emphasize just how wildly unqualified Pete Hegseth is for the top job at the Pentagon — but at his Senate Armed Services committee hearing on Tuesday, Hegseth did a pretty good job of making the argument himself. “Over and over again, he said, ‘Oh, I’m not that experienced, but I’m going to hire people smarter than myself to do this,’” says Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), a member of the committee. “And that the whole day, I was thinking, ‘Then why don’t we just hire somebody smarter than you for the job?’” 

    Asked by Duckworth to name the three international security negotiations that the Secretary of Defense personally leads on behalf of the United States, Hegseth balked. “…NATO?” he offered, lamely. In case you’re curious, they are: a Status of Forces Agreement, which delineates how military personnel can operate inside another county (Korea, for instance); an Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement, a type of treaty that pertains to shared logistics (a security agreement the U.S. has with countries like Latvia); and a Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties, which relates to moving or sharing equipment (like the nuclear submarine deal hatched by the U.S., U.K. and Australia).

    In his opening statement, Hegseth spoke about the importance of deterring Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific. A key component of the Trump administration’s strategy in the Indo-Pacific was a reliance on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN. Duckworth recalled, “I thought, okay, great… I’m going to lob him some softballs, right?” She went on to ask if he could name the countries in ASEAN, or even how many there were.

    “I know we have allies in South Korea and Japan, and in AUKUS with Australia,” Hegseth offered — none of which are members of association. (For the record, ASEAN is made up of 10 South Asian countries: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.)

    “The man is absolutely clueless,” Duckworth assesses bluntly to Rolling Stone. A woman and a combat veteran who lost both legs in Iraq, Duckworth voted to confirm both Mark Esper and James Mattis, Trump’s nominees for Secretary of Defense in his first term. Even as she disagreed politically with Esper, Duckworth says, “He was competent and he could do his job, and he could go to Singapore, to [the Asian Defense Summit], the Shangri-La Dialogue, and go toe-to-toe with the Chinese defense secretary — and, I’m sorry, but Hegseth is not going to be able to go toe-to-toe with the Chinese defense secretary, and think that he’s going to gee-shucks smile his way out of that type of a situation.”

    Duckworth will not be supporting Hegseth’s nomination, which she says sends a chilling message not just to men and women in the U.S. military, but to other nations as well. 

    ”It says that we don’t care about their lives,” Duckworth says. “We ask our servicemen and women to be tactically proficient, technically proficient, so that they can do their jobs under any conditions — even under fire, even as you’re dying and bleeding to death, our troops are going to fight back, because they are trained to carry out the mission. And yet to have a secretary of defense that’s going to make decisions that will commit their lives to defending America, who doesn’t understand how to negotiate the best deal? It is really scary.”

    At the same time that Hegseth was displaying a woefully inadequate grasp of the basic contours of the job he wants, he was also blithely threatening to fire the admirals and generals currently serving in the Pentagon. If that happens, Duckworth says, service members will be the ones who bear the burden: “All of the top leadership — with the experience, who can tactically plan a combat operation — are going to be gone, and you’re gonna have a bunch of hacks who have never commanded anything more than 200 personnel, who are gonna decide whether or not you go fight in Greenland or Panama, wherever. It’s really demoralizing.”

    Her Republican colleagues appear, nonetheless, ready to confirm Hegseth, she says. “We have a Republican Party in the Senate that is on its knees in front of Donald Trump, and not a single one of them are willing to stand up — at least not on the Armed Services Committee.”



    In a recent interview, Senator Tammy Duckworth didn’t hold back in her criticism of Fox News host Pete Hegseth and Senate Republicans. Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois and a combat veteran, slammed Hegseth for his comments on military service and accused Senate Republicans of being “absolutely clueless” when it comes to understanding the sacrifices made by our men and women in uniform.

    Hegseth, who never served in the military, has faced backlash for his controversial remarks about Duckworth and other veterans. During a segment on Fox News, Hegseth questioned Duckworth’s loyalty to the country and suggested that she cared more about “identity politics” than the well-being of the nation. Duckworth fired back, calling Hegseth’s comments “disgraceful” and defending her record of service to the country.

    In her scathing rebuke of Senate Republicans, Duckworth criticized them for not doing enough to support veterans and their families. She called out their lack of action on important issues like healthcare, education, and job opportunities for veterans, accusing them of being out of touch with the needs of those who have served our country.

    Duckworth’s passionate defense of veterans and her strong condemnation of Hegseth and Senate Republicans has sparked a heated debate on social media and in political circles. As a vocal advocate for veterans’ rights and a respected voice in the Senate, Duckworth’s words carry weight and are sure to have an impact on the ongoing conversation about military service and the treatment of those who have served.

    Tags:

    Tammy Duckworth, Pete Hegseth, Senate GOP, news, politics, government, criticism, Clueless Pete Hegseth, Tammy Duckworth response, Senate Republicans, political commentary, current events

    #Tammy #Duckworth #Blasts #Absolutely #Clueless #Pete #Hegseth #Senate #GOP

  • Sen. Tammy Duckworth unpacks her strategy for questioning Pete Hegseth


    Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of defense, appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee this week for a high-stakes and at many times contentious confirmation hearing

    Many Democrats focused on Hegseth’s personal controversies and past allegations of misconduct, which he vigorously denied, or his past comments opposing women serving in combat, which he backtracked on. 

    But some of the most striking and revealing exchanges were with Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, an Iraq War veteran who served in combat as a helicopter pilot. When asked by Duckworth to name one of the agreements the secretary of defense personally negotiates, he couldn’t name one. He also couldn’t name a country in ASEAN, an intergovernmental association of 10 Southeast Asian countries that includes key U.S. military allies. 

    “He also talked at length about not lowering the standards for anybody else. And yet, as far as I could tell, that hearing was all about him asking us to lower the standards for him,” Duckworth said in an interview with The 19th. 

    Many criticisms of Hegseth have surrounded a confidential settlement he paid to a woman who accused him of raping her in 2017 and past accusations of mismanagement of a veterans’ nonprofit. At the hearing, Hegseth said he was falsely accused of assault in an encounter he said was consensual and dismissed other allegations as “anonymous smears.”  

    After the hearing, Republican Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa, who has worked to combat sexual assault in the military and a closely watched vote on Hegseth, came out for his confirmation. Republicans control the Senate, and the Armed Services Committee plans to vote Monday on Hegseth’s confirmation, setting him up to become defense secretary as soon as the middle of next week.  

    Duckworth said she went into the hearing perhaps most concerned about Hegseth’s qualifications and knowledge base. She said in a floor speech Thursday that she doesn’t oppose his nomination on partisan grounds: she supported past Trump picks to lead the Pentagon, including Gen. James Mattis and Mark Esper, because she believed they were qualified. 

    Hegseth lacks the traditional management experience of past Defense Department leaders, a job that entails overseeing a roughly $850 billion budget and 3.4 million personnel. Hegseth, who served in the U.S. Army National Guard, has most recently been a co-host on “Fox & Friends” weekends. At Tuesday’s hearing, Hegseth pitched himself as an outsider and a force for much-needed change, ready to shake things up. In his opening statement, Hegseth said that he would “bring the warrior culture” back to the Pentagon and would make up for his lack of experience by hiring “people smarter and more capable than me” to work under him. 

    “As this is going along, I’m thinking, ‘Why don’t we just hire some guy who’s smarter than you to do the job at all? If you’re going to have to hire all these other people smarter than you to help you do the job, let’s just cut the middle man,” Duckworth said. 

    Duckworth asked Hegseth about things the secretary of defense can’t delegate to someone else and has to personally negotiate and sign off on: status of forces agreements, acquisition and cross-serving agreements, and defense trade cooperation treaties. She’s traditionally led the congressional delegation to the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual Asia-Pacific defense summit, and seen other secretaries negotiate in real time.

    “I’ve watched Mattis, and I’ve watched [current Secretary of Defense Lloyd] Austin, and I’ve watched Esper go toe-to-toe with the Chinese defense secretary at these international forums,” she said. “And I was like, ‘This man can’t go toe-to-toe with the communist Chinese defense secretary, he’ll be eaten alive.’”

    Duckworth asked Hegseth about the highest level of international security negotiation he’d been involved in, and he responded that he hadn’t been in government since his military service. She then asked him to name one of the three main types of such agreements. 

    “If you’re talking about defense arrangements, NATO might be one,” he said. 

    “Status of forces agreement would be one of them,” she said. 

    “I’ve been a part of teaching about status of forces agreements in Afghanistan,” he said.

    “But you don’t think to mention it?” she replied. “You’re not qualified, Mr. Hegseth.”

    “This is basic, 101 stuff for someone who wants to be secretary of defense, and he couldn’t answer any of them,” Duckworth said later. “So that’s how I got to my line of questioning. It wasn’t actually anything that I was planning ahead of time. It was just really being prompted by his answers and his statements.” 

    Her question on ASEAN also came from Hegseth’s own statements in the hearing. He referenced the 2018 National Defense Strategy, which emphasizes the importance of ASEAN to Trump’s first-term strategy for the Indo-Pacific region, a key sphere of influence for the United States in countering China and a subject Duckworth had hoped to discuss in her allotted seven minutes of questioning. 

    So she asked Hegseth to “name the importance of at least the nations in ASEAN and what type of agreement the U.S. has with them” and how many nations are in ASEAN.

    “I couldn’t tell you the exact number,” Hegseth said, instead listing other key U.S. military allies like South Korea and Japan and the AUKUS agreement the United States has with the United Kingdom and Australia.

    “Mr. Hegseth, none of those three countries that you mentioned are in ASEAN,” she said. “I suggest you do a little bit of homework before you prepare for these types of negotiations.”

    Clips of Duckworth’s exchanges with Hegseth gained traction online following the hearing. Her questions weren’t meant to create a viral or a “gotcha,” moment, she said, but to press Hegseth on basic but crucial aspects of the job. 

    “I think that’s why it resonated because it became very clear that this man is not qualified to do the job,” she said. “And it became very, very clear around the world that this man is not qualified to do the job. When you can’t name a major treaty ally, like the Philippines, where we’ve had base agreements on and off; when you can’t name Thailand, our oldest treaty ally of 190 years; when you can’t name Singapore where we have an air base, are you kidding me?”  

    Her questioning received plaudits across the board. Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former Trump White House official turned Trump critic and current co-host of ABC’s “The View,” said she believed Duckworth had the best approach out of all the Democrats on the panel. 

    “I thought that Tammy Duckworth was the most effective because she challenged him on the facts and duties of the job, and he came up short,” Griffin said on the show Wednesday. “I have been to the ASEAN summit, I can name the countries that are in it, and I am woefully unqualified to be the secretary of defense.” 

    In her floor speech on Thursday and in the hearing, Duckworth spoke in front of a copy of the Soldier’s Creed, which she said hangs over her desk in the Senate and hung over her desk at Walter Reed Medical Center when she was treated for injuries she sustained in combat, including the loss of both of her legs and some mobility in her right arm after Iraqi insurgents hit her Black Hawk helicopter with a grenade in 2004.

    “Part of being a leader is knowing when you’re not competent enough to do the job,” she said on the floor. “Well, Mr. Hegseth, you are not technically proficient. You are not tactically proficient. And your nomination is an insult to those brave enough to be serving our nation. So you, sir, are a no-go at this station.”



    Senator Tammy Duckworth recently sat down to discuss her strategy for questioning Fox News personality Pete Hegseth during a recent Senate hearing. Duckworth, a veteran and Purple Heart recipient, has been a vocal critic of Hegseth’s controversial statements on military matters.

    In the interview, Duckworth revealed that she had carefully prepared questions for Hegseth, focusing on his past comments about veterans and the military. She emphasized the importance of holding individuals accountable for their words and actions, especially when they have a platform as influential as Hegseth’s.

    Duckworth also spoke about the need to challenge misinformation and harmful rhetoric, particularly when it comes to matters as sensitive as military service. She stressed the importance of standing up for veterans and ensuring that their sacrifices are respected and honored.

    Overall, Senator Duckworth’s approach to questioning Pete Hegseth reflects her dedication to advocating for veterans and holding those in positions of power accountable. Her thoughtful and strategic approach serves as a reminder of the importance of speaking out against harmful narratives and standing up for those who have served our country.

    Tags:

    Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Pete Hegseth, questioning strategy, Senate, politics, interview, Fox News, strategy analysis, political tactics, Senate hearing, political debate, veteran issues, military service, political commentary

    #Sen #Tammy #Duckworth #unpacks #strategy #questioning #Pete #Hegseth