{"id":98,"date":"2026-05-27T20:12:11","date_gmt":"2026-05-27T20:12:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=98"},"modified":"2026-05-27T20:12:11","modified_gmt":"2026-05-27T20:12:11","slug":"why-does-pete-hegseth-have-to-make-his-desperate-need-for-masculine-validation-our-problem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=98","title":{"rendered":"Why Does Pete Hegseth Have to Make His Desperate Need for Masculine Validation Our Problem?"},"content":{"rendered":"<article>\n<div>\n<p>This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To stay on top of important articles like these, sign up to receive the latest updates from TomDispatch.com.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=96\">Drones? Europe\u2019s Automakers Are Taking Orders.<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>Earlier this year, President Donald Trump surveyed his top military brass on the prospect of making war in Iran. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine urged caution, presciently predicting that a ramped-up campaign against Iran could lead its leaders to close the Strait of Hormuz. However, Pete Hegseth, Trump\u2019s self-styled \u201csecretary of war,\u201d jumped at the prospect of such a conflict.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cPete, I think you were the first one to speak up,\u201d Trump recently recalled at a press event. \u201cAnd you said, \u2018Let\u2019s do it, because you can\u2019t let them have a nuclear weapon.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Americans join the military for any number of reasons: to serve their country, gain economic stability, or simply join a community. For Hegseth, a thirst for martial victory and a desire for a masculine metamorphosis seemed to surpass all else.<\/p>\n<p>Much to Hegseth\u2019s chagrin, however, his career as an Army officer corresponded to a series of distinctly failed military campaigns. After graduating from Princeton in 2003, he deployed to two doomed military locales\u2014Afghanistan and Iraq\u2014and then relentlessly defended the Pentagon\u2019s occupation of parts of those places in essays, speeches, and, ultimately, as a weekend host on Fox News. While Hegseth\u2019s rhetoric on those wars long reflected mainstream Republican talking points\u2014papering over chaos and death in the Middle East and beyond with pledges that stable democracies were close at hand\u2014his zeal indicated something deeper: a desperation, it seemed, to wring some sort of personal validation from his time in uniform.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe rank and file, and even some of the officers, have accepted the gravity of the war\u2019s failures,\u201d Adam Weinstein, a Marine Corps veteran and deputy director for Middle East policy at the Quincy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank focused on peace and diplomacy, told me, speaking of Iraq and Afghanistan. \u201cThere\u2019s a deep sense of sacrifice and loss for nothing. And that can lead to fatalistic beliefs. It can lead to Islamophobia. In its healthier form, it can lead to questioning the principles of interventionism and the US foreign policy establishment.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Hegseth, for his part, chose to totally avoid any personal or geopolitical reckoning. Once the Global War on Terror became politically untenable to defend, he cast about for excuses that wouldn\u2019t implicate his own career in the military. Rather than zero in on tactical or intelligence failures, his rhetoric took a dark turn, increasingly inflected by Islamophobia, misogyny, and a distinctly toxic version of masculinity.<\/p>\n<p>As his profile rose, Hegseth argued ever more forcefully that the Pentagon was weak-willed, insufficiently lethal, and overrun by incompetent and cowardly leaders, many of them women or minorities who (in his eyes) had been unfairly promoted. His proposed remedy was as blunt and dense as his diagnosis: America simply needed to fight harder in the Middle East until the mission was accomplished and \u201cIslamic extremism\u201d was eliminated. As one of his former coworkers told me, \u201cI never got the feeling that he wanted to abandon the Middle East.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I asked Weinstein if, during his own 2012 deployment to Afghanistan, he saw Islamophobia bubbling below the surface. \u201cIt was right on the surface,\u201d he responded. \u201cBut what do you think the World War II generation was saying about the Japanese? Dehumanization is a natural outgrowth of war.\u201d<\/p>\n<h4>\u201cIf You Want Something, You Go After It\u201d<\/h4>\n<p>As a boy growing up in Minnesota, Hegseth appeared to be a perfect version of the American male. He was religious, athletic, well-spoken, and remarkably handsome. He was ashamed, however, of his self-perceived softness. \u201cI didn\u2019t get in fights as a kid and shied from confrontation because, frankly, I was scared of it,\u201d he wrote in his 2016 book <em>In the Arena, Good Citizens, a Great Republic, and How One Speech Can Reinvigorate America<\/em>. In it, he went on to hail his father, Brian, for his \u201cintegrity\u201d and \u201cScandinavian work ethic,\u201d before evincing thinly veiled resentment for not having been reared effectively in the masculine art of aggression. \u201cMy father was\u2014and is\u2014an incredible man,\u201d he reflected, \u201cbut confrontation isn\u2019t necessarily his forte.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Military service, Hegseth figured, would imbue him with some much-needed and previously missing manliness. It was also his best path to class mobility and prestige. When it came time for college, he applied to West Point, America\u2019s most prestigious service academy, and Princeton, where he was gunning for a ROTC scholarship. He got into both schools and chose the latter, touching down on its verdant New Jersey campus in 1999.<\/p>\n<p>In deciding on Princeton, Hegseth launched himself on a path eerily paralleling that of another Minnesota native of a previous era, novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald. Both of them were working-class lads who attended Princeton, where they bristled at the elitism while craving its validation. Both developed a writing voice on campus and then joined the Army. Both also struggled with the bottle and with women, though Fitzgerald, unlike Hegseth, was somewhat reflective about his vices. He initially called his first novel <em>The Romantic Egotist <\/em>(later, <em>This Side of Paradise<\/em>). It followed a handsome, middle-class Princeton man whose greed and social ambition inhibited his ability to find true love. Hegseth himself expressed a similar ambition in a 2015 interview: \u201cIf you want something, you go after it\u2014you\u2019re willing to sleep a little less, put up with more, put up with a little insanity and do things you don\u2019t want to do.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In a widely read 1927 essay on his alma mater, Fitzgerald asserted that Princeton men \u201cresent any attempt at analysis.\u201d Hegseth also did his best to make such analysis impossible. At Princeton, he was deemed a man with \u201cmany faces,\u201d loudly endorsing the Iraq War and attacking feminist groups on campus (even if, in quieter moments, he showed a capacity for nuance and kindness).<\/p>\n<p>One of his former professors has pointed out that Hegseth\u2019s current persona and his Princeton one \u201cdon\u2019t fit.\u201d Part of the disconnect stems from the fact that his puffed-up, bellicose military posturing in the Trump era doesn\u2019t match either his Ivy League education or his actual service record. Hegseth came away from the war in Iraq with a Bronze Star that, it\u2019s worth noting, was issued \u201cwithout valor.\u201d (It was, in short, a lesser version of the medal that, according to <em>The Washington Post<\/em>, was \u201cissued somewhat liberally\u201d during the War on Terror years. Some enlisted personnel joked that such a decoration was little more than a \u201cparticipation trophy\u201d for needy officers.)<\/p>\n<p>Hegseth\u2019s award citation was indeed dry and formulaic, chock-full of the soaring platitudes then used by the White House to sell the American public on the disastrous war in Iraq. It asserted (in what was, historically speaking, a fantasy) that he had \u201ccontributed immeasurably to the success of building a free and democratic nation for the citizens of Iraq.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In reality, the supposed heroes of Hegseth\u2019s war were generally not pedigreed Army National Guard officers like him, but door-busting, ass-kicking Green Berets and Navy SEALs. This was largely thanks to movies like <em>American Sniper<\/em> and <em>Zero Dark Thirty<\/em> that lionized their contributions.<\/p>\n<p>After returning home, Hegseth made inroads with such operators via his advocacy work at a series of astroturf veterans groups, including the \u201cConcerned Veterans for America\u201d (backed by the Koch network), which advocates for the privatization of the Veterans Administration. As part of his duties, he embarked on a 10-city \u201cDefend Freedom\u201d tour in 2014. Such events featured Madison Rising, billed as \u201cAmerica\u2019s most patriotic rock band,\u201d as well as speeches from decorated military heroes and family members.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=94\">Dr. Harry Edwards on the NAACP\u2019s Call to Boycott Gerrymandering States<\/a><\/p>\n<p>On that tour, Hegseth connected with Karen Vaughn, a Gold Star mother whose son, Aaron, a SEAL Team Six member, had been killed in Afghanistan. Vaughn told me that she supports Hegseth mostly because he listens to those who have experienced conflict up close. \u201cHis friends are the people who fought these wars,\u201d she said. \u201cThey are not the people who sat around white linen tablecloths with glasses of wine discussing them.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Vaughn later introduced Hegseth to Eddie Gallagher, a SEAL who ignited a simmering debate over the military\u2019s rules of engagement when he was accused of killing civilians and fatally stabbing a wounded captive. Hegseth used the case of Gallagher and two others accused of grisly war crimes against civilians in an attempt to move the Overton window on what should be deemed acceptable rules of wartime engagement. \u201cThese are men who went into the most dangerous places on earth with a job to defend us and made tough calls on a moment\u2019s notice,\u201d he brashly asserted. \u201cThey\u2019re not war criminals, they\u2019re warriors.\u201d Ultimately, President Trump agreed with him and reversed Gallagher\u2019s demotion after he was acquitted of the most serious charges, while pardoning other troops who had been convicted of war crimes.<\/p>\n<p>It was through this work that Hegseth earned serious credibility among that badass class of warfighters and ultimately came to embody the essential Trumpian soldier archetype of this moment: white, male, and God-fearing.<\/p>\n<h4>The Jerusalem Cross Secretary of War<\/h4>\n<p>According to 2019 Department of Defense data, approximately 70 percent of active-duty service members were Christian (and that undoubtedly hasn\u2019t changed in the era of Donald Trump). It\u2019s the people who look, talk, and pray like Hegseth who also seem most receptive to opposing women serving in combat roles and in favor of Islamophobic war rhetoric. \u201cIf we\u2019re going to send our boys to fight\u2014and it should be boys,\u201d he wrote in his memoirs, \u201cwe need to unleash them to win. [America needs] them to be the most ruthless.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>But the United States had already sent too many boys into harm\u2019s way in disastrous wars and its citizens were becoming exhausted by conflict. By 2013, as Hegseth\u2019s star was rising, 53 percent of polled Americans already saw the Iraq war as a mistake. That same year, Hegseth first ventured to Jerusalem, where, in a piece penned for <em>National Review<\/em>, he hailed \u201cIsrael\u2019s sense of purpose.\u201d Unlike other nations, Hegseth observed, Israel maintained \u201can ever-present understanding that the fragile peace they enjoy and their nation itself are preserved only through intentional, purposeful, and courageous action.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Here was a nation that could satisfy Hegseth\u2019s unquenched thirst for military dominance in the Arab world. And unlike the United States, which sought technocratic rationales for war, Israel had the advantage of framing everything in biblical terms. \u201cI find myself envious,\u201d Hegseth concluded, \u201cof the gravity and substance of the Israelis\u2019 task.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He repeatedly visited Israel in the years that followed, something that helped rejuvenate his faith in both God and war. In Israel, Hegseth consulted with conservative political figures and soldiers of the Israeli Defense Forces; visited military bunkers on that country\u2019s northern border; and toured Hebron, a Palestinian city in the West Bank that Israel has targeted with attacks and settlements. He also produced a series of on-the-ground, pro-Israel documentaries for Fox News\u2019s streaming service, including <em>Battle in the Holy Land<\/em>, <em>Battle in Bethlehem<\/em>, and <em>Life of Jesus<\/em>. While filming one of those projects, he first spotted a Jerusalem Cross, a symbol once used by the medieval crusaders, and had it tattooed on his chest \u201cto show that my religion is front and center in my life.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Hegseth\u2019s skin would come to perfectly illustrate his signature version of hyper-aggressive Christian masculinity. His collage of body ink today includes an American flag, an assault rifle, and the words \u201cDeus Vult\u201d or \u201cGod wills it\u201d\u2014a motto from the Crusades that has been adopted by white supremacists and was seen at the deadly 2017 march in Charlottesville, Virginia. Hegseth also inked the word \u201ckafir,\u201d meaning \u201cinfidel\u201d or \u201cnon-believer,\u201d on his right bicep.<\/p>\n<p>By 2016, he had come to see Israel\u2019s success as inexorably bound to that of the United States. That January, when President Barack Obama ratified a historic nuclear deal with Iran, Hegseth saw a cowardly capitulation to a country that, he argued then, \u201cwould wipe both Israel and America off the map if it could.\u201d During a visit to Israel that year, he pledged to an audience that the United States was forever prepared to \u201clock arms and shields with all of you in defense of freedom and western civilization.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s this history, as much as anything, that helps explain America\u2019s current war with Iran. In Secretary of War Hegseth, America now has a man with a bone-deep desire for national revenge, one largely animated by his poorly disguised sense of embarrassment and emasculation by the utter failures of the wars he fought in.<\/p>\n<p>These are, of course, profoundly flimsy, deeply egotistical excuses for sending American troops into harm\u2019s way yet again. Not surprisingly, then, there have even been a series of public rejections and defections by former Trump administration figures frustrated by the conflict with Iran. The most notable of these is Joe Kent, a former counterterrorism official in the Trump administration who resigned his post, citing \u201cno imminent threat to our nation\u201d from that country. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe have also tacitly acknowledged that the war in Iran was not launched by an actual threat index.<\/p>\n<p>As Hegseth has made clear in his words and deeds, the latest American war is largely animated by emotional factors, plus (as reporting has shown) intense pressure from Israel. Now, being in charge of the Pentagon, and with a renewed opportunity to pummel the Middle East, he has dropped all institutional pretense to compassion or caution. \u201cWe are punching them while they\u2019re down,\u201d he recently told reporters, \u201cwhich is exactly how it should be.\u201d In practice, this has meant a brutal bombing campaign in conjunction with Israel that targeted, among many other things, a girls\u2019 primary school and oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, acts that respectively killed children and polluted the region. Hegseth also pledged not to offer quarter to enemy combatants, in violation of international law.<\/p>\n<p>He certainly hopes that faith and masculine posturing alone can secure success. Absent tangible intelligence, he has taken a page out of Israel\u2019s book by injecting religiosity across the ranks, recently promising on CBS News that \u201cthe providence of our almighty God is there protecting those troops, and we\u2019re committed to this mission.\u201d Asked directly if he views this conflict as a religious one, Hegseth said, \u201cObviously, we\u2019re fighting religious fanatics who seek a nuclear capability in order for some religious Armageddon.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>To bolster such an atmosphere, he has hosted Pentagon prayer services involving fiery Christian nationalist pastors and a Grammy Award\u2013winning religious singer. His department\u2019s promotional videos have displayed Bible verses alongside military footage. Watchdogs further claimed that US commanders have counseled troops that the war is fulling biblical prophecies around Armageddon. Hegseth\u2019s fusion of strength, religion, and violence was encapsulated in a poster allegedly displayed at a US military installation in recent days. It featured Jesus Christ firing a mortar round.<\/p>\n<p>Hegseth\u2019s 2024 book, <em>The War on Warriors<\/em>, further sketches out his theory for reinvigorating the military\u2019s masculine ethos, often through half-assed aphorisms that could fit on a Ford F-350 bumper. Sprinkled in are mythical tales, most of which have Hegseth or another aggrieved white guy at their center. The military has become so warped and woke, he writes, that it has diluted standards to allow women in combat while simultaneously kicking out \u201cgood soldiers for having naked women tattooed on their arms.\u201d In Hegseth\u2019s eyes, of course, women should only be on the front lines if they\u2019re naked and in ink.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=93\">Dr. Harry Edwards on the NAACP\u2019s Call to Boycott Gerrymandering States<\/a><\/p>\n<\/article>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Nation Magazine<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":97,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-98","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-news"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Why Does Pete Hegseth Have to Make His Desperate Need for Masculine Validation Our Problem? 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