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Hegseth fires Army chief in race and gender promotion dispute

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Hegseth fires Army chief in race and gender promotion dispute

US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth fired Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George amid a row over promotions for black and female officers as the Iran war continues.

US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has fired Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, the service's top uniformed officer, in a lingering dispute over promotions linked to race and gender, the New York Times reported on Thursday. Hegseth also reportedly dismissed two other generals in a purge that is feared to be undermining the US war on Iran.

Sources familiar with the matter told the paper that Hegseth ordered George, a 61-year-old veteran who served in both Iraq and Afghanistan, to retire immediately, describing the move as rooted not in policy disagreements but in the secretary's "long-running grievance with the army and its leadership" and a troubled relationship with Army Secretary Daniel P. Driscoll. Hegseth did not give a reason for the dismissal but had previously vowed to cleanse the department of "woke" culture and fight the practice of promotions based on race and gender quotas.

At the heart of the fallout was reportedly Hegseth's months-long campaign to remove four officers—two black men and two women—from a one-star promotion list comprising roughly 29 other officers, most of them white men. According to the NYT, George and Driscoll pushed back, citing the officers' "long records of exemplary service." About two weeks before his firing, George had reportedly sought a meeting with Hegseth to discuss the removals and what he viewed as unnecessary interference in army personnel decisions—a request Hegseth declined.

Hegseth also fired Gen. David Hodne, who headed the US Army's Transformation and Training Command, and Maj. Gen. William Green Jr., the chief of chaplains, the Washington Post reported. No official reason was given for any of the firings. George's term was not due to end until 2027. According to the NYT, as army chief, he had spearheaded initiatives aimed at fielding new drone technologies and AI-powered targeting systems while opposing a new light tank program, arguing it was too vulnerable to cheap UAVs. Gen. Christopher LaNeve—once Hegseth's top military aide—is expected to serve as acting army chief of staff.

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