Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has never been one to tiptoe around hard truths, and his latest move inside the War Department proves it.
Barely months after taking command, Hegseth ordered a new deep-dive into whether America’s combat readiness has taken a hit since the Pentagon’s politically driven decision back in 2015 to integrate women into ground combat roles.
Critics are already melting down, accusing him of running a study “built to reach one conclusion.” Translation: they’re terrified the facts may not fit their preferred narrative.
Hegseth, a combat veteran who’s actually worn the uniform and seen the battlefield, has been outspoken for years about his belief that the armed forces should prioritize lethality, not identity politics.
During a recent interview, he didn’t mince words: “It hasn’t made us more effective. It hasn’t made us more lethal.” He’s not wrong. Despite a decade of glowing bureaucratic studies, the military’s overall readiness and recruitment numbers have declined while woke social experiments have thrived.

The new review, directed from the highest levels of the War Department, will take a hard look at the “operational effectiveness” of the Army and Marine Corps’ combat units. That phrase alone has the usual crowd of left-leaning advocacy groups — and their media allies — clutching their pearls.
They insist, of course, this is all a veiled attempt to push women out of combat roles. What they fail to mention is that Hegseth’s efforts are focused on standards — the objective yardsticks that determine whether any warrior, male or female, is truly battle-ready.
Hegseth’s critics point to his book The War on Warriors, in which he slammed the Pentagon’s misplaced priorities and warned that political correctness was eroding America’s fighting edge. They call it “sexist.” Warriors call it honest.

Opponents such as Sue Fulton from the Women in the Service Coalition argue that Hegseth’s study is little more than a pretext for rolling back “progress.” But her definition of progress appears to include watered-down standards and gender-based quotas. Meanwhile, Hegseth’s team has made clear: they’re not targeting women—they’re targeting weakness. “Service members want a challenge,” a War Department briefing read. “They do not want to be part of a losing team.”
At every stage, Hegseth has emphasized that any evaluation must be driven by performance, not politics. The same liberal lawmakers now railing against him were singing a different tune when bureaucrats rammed through the 2015 decision to open all combat roles, ignoring the caution of senior commanders.
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Those commanders, as it happens, turned out to be right: mixed-gender units statistically underperformed and reported higher injury rates.
The researcher leading Hegseth’s new review, Dr. Jane Pinelis, is no stranger to controversy. She helped conduct the original Marine Corps study in 2015 that found all-male units outperformed gender-integrated ones on 69% of tasks.

That study was conveniently shelved by the political leadership of the time because it didn’t fit their pre-written storyline. The same establishment is now nervous that Hegseth’s willingness to revisit the truth will once again expose the costs of progressive social engineering in the military.
Hegseth’s detractors love to bring up his critics by name — retired colonels, former bureaucrats, and think-tank analysts who have never had to drag a wounded comrade under fire. They spin the same narrative: that “there’s no problem to solve,” that “standards haven’t been lowered,” and that the issue is settled.
Yet the real-world evidence from the front lines, where readiness and cohesion matter more than ideology, tells a different story.
Senator Mazie Hirono and other Democrats have already tried to corner Hegseth’s generals by demanding assurance that no standards have been lowered.
Their hearings produced predictable talking points, but those scripted statements don’t explain why field units frequently report operational drag in mixed formations. It’s the classic Beltway dodge — pretend everything’s fine, then accuse anyone raising the alarm of bigotry.
Unlike the Obama-era brass who rubber-stamped “gender integration” studies to please politicians, Hegseth’s team reportedly insisted that this new research include combat-relevant field tests.

That means boots on the ground, ammo cans lifted, real weight carried, and actual combat simulations measured. If that’s “sexist,” then America better hope there’s more of it.
The political left might want to cry foul, but this kind of study is what the War Department should have done from the beginning.
After all, national security isn’t a sociology experiment. The military’s mission is to win wars—not check DEI boxes.
Analysts inside and outside the Pentagon admit that modern warfighting demands technical skill, endurance, and resilience, regardless of gender.
Hegseth’s point is simple: if you can do the job, prove it under identical standards. If you can’t, you don’t belong in the fight. That’s meritocracy, not misogyny.
While Democrats like Rep. Chrissy Houlahan rush to introduce bills protecting “gender inclusion” in combat roles, the real warriors are watching whether Hegseth’s War Department finally brings some long-overdue sanity back to military policy.
America deserves the toughest, most lethal fighting force possible. Secretary Hegseth is daring to ask the uncomfortable questions necessary to get there. And that’s exactly why the professional outrage machine is going haywire.
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