What did Pete Hegseth say about women in combat roles?

(NewsNation) — Comments on women in the military made by President-elect Donald Trump’s choice to head the Department of Defense, Pete Hegseth, have garnered criticism.

“I’m straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles,” Hegseth said during an appearance on “The Shawn Ryan Show” last week. “It hasn’t made us more effective, it hasn’t made us more lethal, has made fighting more complicated.”

While Hegseth said he’s served with women, and they’ve been “great,” institutions shouldn’t have to “incentivize” that in positions where “men are more capable.”

While Hegseth cited a 2015 U.S. Marines Corps report that stated all-male units were faster and more lethal than mixed-gender units, critics said it was biased. Newsweek notes that the lobby group Women in International Security called its research methods “fundamentally flawed.” After it came out, then-Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said he had problems with the study: namely, that “it started out with a fairly large component of the men thinking this is not a good idea.”

“When you start out with that mindset, you’re almost presupposing the outcome,” Mabus said.

The 44-year-old current co-host of Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends Weekend” served as an infantry captain in the Army National Guard and did tours in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois took Hegseth to task over his remarks on women in combat roles.

“We can’t go to war today without our women military members,” Duckworth said.

Duckworth is an Iraq war veteran and Purple Heart recipient who was one of the first women to fly combat missions as a U.S. Army helicopter pilot. When her helicopter was hit by a grenade in 2004, she lost both legs and some mobility in her right arm, NewsNation partner The Hill reports.

If she could talk to Hegseth, “I would ask him, ‘Where do you think I lost my legs, in a bar fight?'” Duckworth said in an interview with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins Wednesday.

Women in the military

Overall, the number of service numbers dropped 2.7% in 2022, though the percentage of women in the military inched upward, according to a Department of Defense report from 2023.

Women, the Defense Department says, make up about 17.5% of the active-duty force. The number of uniformed women serving in special operations, including those in operator and support roles ― has increased significantly in recent years.

The overall proportion of women in special operations forces went up from 7.9% in 2016 to 12% in 2023.

More than 2 million of the veterans currently living in the United States are women. They are the fastest growing group of veterans as well — by 2040, women are projected to make up 18% of all veterans, the Department of Veterans Affairs said.

NewsNation’s The Hill and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Related articles

Ex-GOP insider claims party rotting from the inside out: ‘We rewarded compliance!’



The Republican Party's takeover by the MAGA movement was decades in the making, former GOP strategist Stuart Stephens told MS NOW on Thursday, and the decisions that led to it have left the party with elected leaders who are incapable of taking a stand for themselves or the country as a whole.

This comes as the president made repeated threats to wipe Iran off the face of the earth — and though he hasn't followed through on it for the time being, only a small smattering of Republicans went out of their way to condemn his genocidal rhetoric.

"Stuart, I'll start with you," said anchor Antonia Hylton. "Republicans have repeatedly made this claim since the start of this administration that they have a mandate. I want to know how they can continue to make that case right now, as the president just keeps doubling down on the very things his voters said they did not want."

"Yeah. You know, that's a really great question," said Stevens. "I don't think we had a mandate to have gas prices go through the roof, or mandate to threaten to destroy an entire country, civilization, the Persian Empire. I don't think we had a mandate to keep hiding Epstein files."

"Look, I think what's happened here is something that we did inside the Republican Party, and we didn't realize it. At least I didn't realize it was happening when I was working in the party," said Stevens. "And that as we evolved a system that rewarded compliance, that you got ahead by going along and we punish those that were more individual, who spoke out, who were willing to break with the party. And if you do that decade after decade, I think it's like a genetic experiment. You end up with this extraordinary, highly compliant, weak group of senators and congressmen."

Years ago, he said, "had you said to them that Donald Trump is going to threaten to annihilate another civilization, they would have laughed and said, of course that's never going to happen. But now it's happening or us, the way that we're supporting Russia in this war. We have the vice president over there supporting Putin's candidate in Hungary, and 90 percent of Republicans are against this, but they won't say anything. And I think it's just a collapse of a party unlike anything that we've seen in modern political history."

- YouTube www.youtube.com

Why doesn’t the U.S. recycle more plastic? New study points to lack of access.

Recycling infrastructure inequities in the South, sparsely populated states tied...

White House Shuts Down Nuke Talk After Incendiary Trump Threat Sparks Uproar

The White House responded after comments by Vance in Hungary sparked uproar online in the wake of the Trump's incendiary threat against Iran.

The post White House Shuts Down Nuke Talk After Incendiary Trump Threat Sparks Uproar first appeared on Mediaite.