Pete Hegseth Instructs Pentagon to Cut 8% From Defense Budget in Effort to Fund 'America First Priorities'

USA Today
Hegseth orders $50 billion of defense budget redirected from Biden to Trump priorities

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered the Pentagon to cut 8% of next year's defense budget – around $50 billion – from "low-impact and low-priority" Biden-era programs to redirect the funds towards President Donald Trump’s "America First priorities." The military will put together a list of programs that could be axed to fund Trump's plans, including "so-called 'climate change' and other woke programs, as well as excessive bureaucracy," according to a statement from acting Deputy Defense Secretary of Defense Robert Salesses on Wednesday night. It was unclear from the statement what new programs would receive the money, but it said Trump's priorities included "securing our borders, building the Iron Dome for America, and ending radical and wasteful government DEI programs and preferencing."

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USA Today
AP NEWS
Hegseth directs Pentagon to find $50 billion in cuts this year to fund Trump military priorities

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has directed the military services to identify $50 billion in programs that could be cut next year in order to redirect those savings to fund President Donald Trump’s priorities. Hegseth has committed to redirecting Pentagon spending to more directly support warfighters. In a statement late Wednesday, Robert Salesses, who is performing the duties of deputy secretary of defense, said “the time for preparation is over” and “excessive bureaucracy” and programs targeting climate change or “other woke programs” such as diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives would be targeted. “To achieve our mandate from President Trump, we are guided by his priorities including securing our borders, building the Iron Dome for America, and ending radical and wasteful government DEI programs and preferencing,” Salesses said.

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AP NEWS
New York Post
Pete Hegseth orders defense leadership to draw up plans for steep budget cuts as DOGE enters the Pentagon: report

Hegseth, 44, demanded a proposal that would include annual 8% cuts to the Pentagon’s roughly $850 billion budget, according to a memo obtained by the Washington Post. The defense secretary ordered senior Pentagon officials, top military commanders, and the directors of several defense agencies to draft plans for the proposed cuts by Feb. 24. Hegseth’s memo contained a list of 17 categories of spending that the Trump administration wants to be exempted from cuts, according to the outlet, including US-Mexico border operations, modernization of nuclear weapons, missile defense, submarine acquisition, one-way attack drones and other munitions.

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New York Post

News Results

Hegseth orders major Pentagon spending cuts
Senate Democrats think Hegseth is in over his head.
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Trump administration orders Pentagon to identify $50 billion in cuts
The Trump administration ordered the Pentagon to draw up plans that cut defense spending by 8% annually over the next five years.
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Pete Hegseth orders senior leaders to cut 8% from Defense budget - UPI.com
Defense Secretary Peter Hegseth has ordered senior military and civilian Pentagon officials to cut 8% from the defense budget over each of the next five years.
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White House eyes 8% cut to defense budget to boost Trump priorities
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered senior military officials to develop a budget plan that would slash defense spending by 8%. The dramatic cut could reshape military end-strength and readiness for decades. Seventeen categories would be exempt from the budget reductions, including military operations at the southern U.S. border.
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Hegseth orders Pentagon to make $50 billion in budget cuts to spend on Trump priorities
“Through our budgets, the Department of Defense will once again resource warfighting and cease unnecessary spending,” Pentagon official said.
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Hegseth orders Pentagon to make plans for major budget cuts to align with Trump DOGE priorities
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered the agency to develop plans to cut 8% from the Department of Defense budget in each of the next five years. The cuts are to align with President Donald Trump's priorities, specifically to achieve peace through strength, officials said.
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Hegseth Orders Pentagon to Draw Up Plans for Cuts
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered senior military and Defense Department officials to draw up plans to cut 8 percent from the defense budget over each of the next five years. One senior official said the cuts appeared likely to be part of an effort to focus Pentagon money on programs that the Trump administration favors.
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Defense Secretary orders military to prepare for major budget cuts
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered the military to prepare plans to make drastic budget cuts over the next five years. The proposals for the massive cuts to the Pentagon’s budget of approximately $850 billion are due by February 24. The memo was issued the day before President Donald Trump endorsed the House's budget plan which includes a $100 billion increase in defense spending.
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Hegseth Faces Backlash After Proposing Pentagon Cuts To Fund Trump's Agenda
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth directed the Department of Defense to find $50 billion in programs to cut next year. His comments were a departure from when he suggested last week, while traveling in Europe, that he would support backing a bigger budget. A deputy secretary of defense said in a statement that the cuts will help fund President Donald Trump's agenda.
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Meaningful Pentagon Cuts Will Require Rethinking What 'Defense' Means
In 2023, the U.S. government spent $916 billion on "defense," says Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. That is more than the combined military budgets of China, Russia, India, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, Germany, Ukraine, France, and Japan. Military spending accounts for about 13 percent of the federal budget.
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Hegseth set to seek 8% spending shift at Pentagon
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth wants to reduce projected U.S. military spending by 8% over the next five years. The cuts would spare southwest border enforcement, the Air Force’s newest drone program, nuclear weapons modernization and preparations for a clean audit. The memo instructs “senior Pentagon leadership,” combat commands, Defense Department agencies, and civilian agencies to propose 8% cuts.
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Sure Looks Like Hegseth's Proposed Pentagon 'Cuts' Wouldn't Be Cuts at All
Sure Looks Like Hegseth's Proposed Pentagon 'Cuts' Wouldn't Be Cuts at All. "It seems that this announcement may amount to a money-moving exercise within the agency itself rather than an overall Pentagon topline reduction," said one.
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