Hegseth Orders 90‑Day Task Force Review of U.S. Senior War Colleges for ‘Woke’ Ideology
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has ordered the undersecretary of war for personnel and readiness to immediately establish a task force to evaluate the nation’s senior service colleges — including the Army War College, National Defense University, Naval War College, Marine Corps University and Air War College — for both educational effectiveness and what he calls "woke" ideological influence. In a video and post on X, Hegseth said "Professional Military Education should produce warfighters and leaders—not wokesters" and vowed to "rip" out courses and ideologies he likens to those in civilian universities. The task force has 90 days to assess whether these institutions are actually preparing officers for warfighting, a move that comes as the U.S. is fighting a major war against Iran alongside Israel. Hegseth framed the review as a follow‑through on pulling officers out of civilian universities he deems "too woke," insisting that internal military colleges must be "prepared to do the task properly." The order signals an escalation of the administration’s ideological purge campaign into core command‑level education, raising questions about academic freedom, the independence of professional military education, and whether curriculum changes will be driven by operational needs or political litmus tests.
📌 Key Facts
- War Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a new task force to evaluate U.S. senior service colleges for quality and "woke" ideology.
- He directed the undersecretary of war for personnel and readiness to establish the task force "effective immediately" with a 90‑day assessment window.
- Institutions named include the Army War College, National Defense University, Naval War College, Marine Corps University and Air War College.
- Hegseth said he wants to ensure that "what we've seen in our civilian institutions never surface in our military education institutions" and pledged to "rip" out similar courses and ideologies.
- The move is framed against the backdrop of the ongoing U.S. war against Iran in partnership with Israel.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2024, among active-duty officers in the U.S. military, White officers comprised 73.1% of the total, Black officers 11.3%, Hispanic officers 8.9%, Asian officers 5.2%, and other groups 1.5%, compared to the overall U.S. population where Whites are about 59%, Blacks 13%, Hispanics 19%, and Asians 6%.
2024 Demographics Report — Military OneSource
The U.S. Department of Defense allocated $86.5 million for DEI programs in fiscal year 2023, up from $68 million in 2022, with programs including diversity training and equity initiatives in military education institutions.
DEI Is Distracting Our Military From Its Primary Task — The Heritage Foundation
A 2024 study found that DEI efforts in the U.S. military, including at service academies, involve extensive bureaucracy with over 100 dedicated personnel and mandatory training, potentially impacting focus on core military education.
New Study Details 'Vast DEI Bureaucracy' in Pentagon, Service Academies — STARRS
From 2020 to 2023, the proportion of White enlisted personnel in the U.S. military decreased from 52% to 47%, while Hispanic personnel increased from 18% to 20%, and Black personnel remained around 19%, reflecting broader demographic shifts in recruitment.
Here is the makeup of the US military and how it's changed — WMTW
DEI initiatives in the U.S. military expanded significantly post-2016, with mandates for diversity training in professional military education stemming from executive orders and congressional laws aimed at addressing historical underrepresentation.
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