The first-time government official now lacks senior personnel who are familiar with Washington after the departure of the Defense secretary’s closest advisers.
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth listens as President Donald Trump meets with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre at the White House on April 24, 2025.
Pentagon leadership crisis is intensifying under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, as his circle of top advisers has shrunk dramatically in recent days — reduced to his wife, lawyer, and two lower-level officials. This sudden shift has left the Pentagon’s lead office without longtime expertise or clear direction. Hegseth’s decision to fire three senior aides last week and reassign his chief of staff has created a vacuum in his leadership team, cutting off vital lines of communication across the department and sparking fears of dangerous missteps, including delays to critical weapons programs.
The rapidity of the wholesale changeover within the first 100 days of Hegseth’s appointment has been impressive. Additionally, it has left the new government official without reliable employees who know Washington — at a time when he is dealing with the repercussions from a slew of scandals that have sparked a lot of conjecture within the building about how long he will remain in office.
One individual with knowledge of the dynamics of the workplace, who was given anonymity to speak openly about the matter, described it as a “free-for-all.”
“Memories and actions that used to be routine are being delayed,” the individual stated. With a procession of people passing through the Pentagon chief’s third-floor apartment and little control over who enters and exits, Hegseth’s office is “up to its eyes” in terms of what it can manage.
Beyond his wife Jennifer, a former Fox New producer, and his personal attorney Tim Parlatore, whom he has commissioned as a Navy commander, Hegseth’s closest advisors are his former junior military adviser, Col. Ricky Buria, and his former platoon sergeant from an Iraq deployment, Eric Geressy. Phil, Hegseth’s brother, works at a nearby office as a liaison between the Defense Department and the Department of Homeland Security.
A second individual with knowledge of office dynamics, who was given the same anonymity as others to speak about a delicate subject, stated, “Everyone has been jockeying for position.”
The insider claimed that the system’s processing of paperwork, including crucial decisions about the Golden Dome, President Donald Trump’s signature project to construct a national missile defense system, had slowed down as a result of staff infighting and firings. The unrest may also have an impact on the Pentagon’s budget announcement next month, which is anticipated to reach a record $1 trillion and involve a significant reorganization of the military’s procurement initiatives.
Current and former defense officials are concerned that some of the less photogenic activities may be postponed since the staff is concentrating on creating an aura around Hegseth by releasing recordings of his memo signings and early morning workouts.
According to Chris Meagher, the Biden administration’s assistant secretary for public affairs at the Pentagon, “the longer these positions remain unfilled, the longer the department will be rudderless and without leaders who can provide cohesive direction.”
A request for comment from the Pentagon was not answered.
The secretary is typically led and prepared for meetings by senior personnel. Along with managing the dozens of special assistants and other advisers, they also deal with matters that come to the office’s notice but may not require Hegseth’s intervention.
According to a former defense official who has held comparable positions, “they will conduct numerous pre-meetings and scope all the meetings in such a way that the main events don’t waste the secretary’s time.” They have a purpose and create well-defined agendas. They basically provide the secretary the ability to conduct the meeting by writing the talking points.
Five senior officers have departed the Pentagon in the last week. Following an open feud with Joe Kasper, the chief of staff for the Defense secretary, Hegseth dismissed senior adviser Dan Caldwell, deputy head of staff Darin Selnick, and the deputy secretary’s chief of staff Colin Carroll.
In an interview on Thursday, Kasper said that he was quitting the Pentagon right away. Last Monday, former Pentagon spokesman John Ullyot, who had been absent for several months, resigned from his position.
The office of Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg, who was confirmed by the Senate in mid-March, is still being reorganized as a result of the official purge. According to a defense official, Hegseth did not inform Feinberg of his decision to fire Carroll.
Feinberg has appointed Bryn Woollacott MacDonnell as his new chief of staff. Until a replacement is found, MacDonnell will continue to serve as the Pentagon’s comptroller and chief financial officer.
According to a person familiar with the matter, the White House has struggled to locate a qualified candidate for the position, making the comptroller’s office one of the few in the Pentagon without a nominee in the wings. It is anticipated that Feinberg would hire at least one individual from Cerberus Capital Management, the venture capital business he created and oversaw prior to joining the Pentagon this year, while he works to assemble the remainder of his staff.
Career civilian and military officials are already dealing with a challenging environment, and this uncertainty is making it worse.
“From junior enlisted to four-star generals, the uniformed military sees right through these clowns, from their inexperience and backstabbing to their careless handling of highly classified information and their disastrous policy rollouts,” stated Alex Wagner, the former assistant Air Force secretary for manpower and reserve affairs under the Biden administration.
“If my coworkers saw me and my fellow appointees, including the secretary, as a joke, I don’t know how I would be able to accomplish anything lasting alongside the uniformed military.”
According to a former Pentagon officer, one potential counterbalance to the disturbance is the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “They’re working extremely hard because they don’t want the department to fail.”
The individual claimed that the departures left “a vast hole.”
May 30, London (Updatix) – As traders awaited important inflation data and evaluated the most recent developments in Washington’s back and forth on tariffs, world equities were on track to reach their highest month since late 2023 on Friday, and the dollar was flirting with its first monthly increase of the year.
Since a U.S. court halted the majority of President Donald Trump’s tariffs then a federal appeals court temporarily reinstated them, markets have been erratic throughout the week as investors attempt to weather a turbulent news flow.
Despite an unexpected decline in German retail sales, European stocks’ initial Friday decline turned into 0.3%–1% gains, while Wall Street futures started to decline once more ahead of the U.S. PCE inflation data that was due later. The dollar, which was up 0.3% on Friday (.DXY), is eerily near to its first positive month of 2025, while MSCI’s main world index (.MIWD00000PUS), which opens a new tab, is up more than 5% this month. /FRX It benefited from a 0.5 basis point increase in benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields in European trade, which serve as a stand-in for U.S. borrowing costs. A strong 7-year bond auction and weak economic indicators caused them to decline on Thursday.
Despite being up for the day and still up for the month, oil prices were headed for a second straight weekly decline due to predictions of another OPEC+ supply boost. After its over 2% gain the day before, Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) suffered overnight profit taking. Investors were particularly worried about the impact of tariffs and the amount of Japanese debt. In London, the yen was trading at about 144 to the dollar, up as much as 2% from its low on Thursday. At $1.13 and $1.34, the euro and pound were down 0.3% and 0.1%, respectively. /FRX Due to the removal of U.S. tariffs, Apple suppliers saw a 1.2% decline on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (.HIS), in Asia. Both the mainland Chinese blue chips (.CSI300) and the new tab had a 0.5% decline, despite their strong monthly advances. In keeping with the main world index, Korean stocks have performed even better, recording their best month since November 2023. In the meantime, an index that tracks emerging market currencies (.MIEM00000CUS) has risen almost 2% for the month. Moreover, it is at its peak since November 2023. Ghana’s cedi has increased by about 40% this month because to the skyrocketing price of gold. “The legal battle adds yet another layer of uncertainty, but Trump’s trade agenda remains alive and kicking,” stated Rodrigo Catril, senior FX analyst at National Australia Bank. “The only thing that looks more certain is more uncertainty,” he stated. The Trump administration claimed that talks with major trading partners were still going on despite the judicial turmoil. In an interview with Fox News, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated that although negotiations with China were “a bit stalled,” he was set to meet with a high-level Japanese team later on Friday in Washington.
HONG KONG— There are many other nations and colleges that are willing to accept overseas students, along with their skills that have contributed to the United States’ position as a global leader in science and technology, if President Donald Trump is not interested in them attending Harvard.
The Trump administration imposed a ban on international enrollment beginning in the 2025–2026 academic year, casting doubt on the future of international students at the oldest, wealthiest, and most prestigious university in the United States.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Harvard was being held responsible for “fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus” after the university declined to provide copious amounts of data about its international students.
Harvard filed a lawsuit against the move, claiming it was illegal, and a federal court in Boston put it on pause for two weeks on Friday. Current international students would be compelled to transfer elsewhere or lose their legal status if the Trump administration wins, and future students would not be allowed to enroll at Harvard.
International students, who frequently pay significantly higher tuition than their American counterparts, are a major source of enrollment for American universities, such as Harvard. Many of them choose to remain in the United States, where they have contributed to significant advancements in strategically significant domains like artificial intelligence, where China, the United States, and other countries are engaged in fierce competition.
Simon Marginson, a professor of higher education at the University of Oxford, told NBC News via email Monday that Trump’s campaign against Harvard is a “treatable policy error” that might jeopardize the United States’ position as a global leader in research and development since World War II.
According to him, a decline in foreign enrollment would hurt American universities’ “talent pipeline” and revenue while helping their rivals in the United States. He predicted that “Western Europe will also gain significantly” and that “China will become much more attractive than before to students and researchers from the Global South.”
In addition to significant financial cuts and attempts to meddle in colleges’ internal affairs, Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric was already causing anxiety among international students attending American universities. The Trump administration has jailed and attempted to deport students due to their pro-Palestinian and other action, while hundreds of students have had their visas revoked.
Over 25% of Harvard’s 25,000+ students are international, and students from more than 140 nations, including the future queen of Belgium, have been affected by the impending ban.
China, which was once the largest supplier of international students in the United States before being surpassed by India last year, accounts for 20% of Harvard’s total number of international students.
Disruptions from the Covid epidemic and rising U.S.-China tensions have caused the number of Chinese students in the U.S. to decline, from over 372,000 in 2019–20 to over 277,000 in the 2023–24 academic year.
The China Initiative, a national security initiative during Trump’s first term that sparked allegations of racial profiling, also turned off Chinese academics. Many of them have relocated to Chinese universities to conduct their study.
Beijing responded to the Harvard ban by claiming that educational collaboration between the United States and China is “mutually beneficial” and will “protect the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese students and scholars overseas.”
At a routine briefing in Beijing on Friday, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning stated, “China has consistently opposed the politicization of educational exchanges.” “The United States’ actions will only harm its own reputation and credibility abroad.”
Hours after Trump’s Harvard ban, 23-year-old Beijing-born Izzy Shen said her visa application was denied.
According to Shen, whose application had already been stamped as “approved,” “I didn’t expect it to be so fast.”
After Thursday’s injunction hearing, Shen, who was accepted into Harvard’s Master of Design Engineering program, said she was still “relatively optimistic” and that things would “get clearer.”
Due to increasing doubts regarding her enrollment, Duo Yi, who was accepted into Harvard Kennedy School’s doctoral program in public policy, claimed she is currently looking into other choices. She claimed that Trump is “just too unpredictable.” “I am unable to predict the course of his future policies.”
Universities and governments throughout the world are not waiting to court the Harvard students that Trump turned away. Authorities in Hong Kong, China, have called on academic institutions to engage proactively “to attract top talent.”
Hong Kong’s top leader, John Lee, stated on Tuesday that the city’s “doors are wide open” to “any students who face discrimination and unfair treatment in the U.S.”
Four institutions in Hong Kong are listed in the top 100 of U.S. News & World Report’s Best Global institutions Rankings, with Harvard at the top. However, experts claim that since Beijing enacted a national security law in 2020, academic freedom in the 7.5 million-person former British colony has declined.
Harvard undergraduates and postgraduates, along with those who have received confirmed admission offers, are welcome to enroll at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology instead, the university announced on Friday.
With the launch of a $570 million effort this month called “Choose Europe,” Europe has also attempted to entice academics who are concerned about funding cuts and research independence under Trump.
In a speech promoting the program at Paris’ Sorbonne University, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stressed “free and open research” without specifically mentioning Trump.
“Europe will not compromise on its principles as threats arise globally,” she declared. “Europe must continue to be the birthplace of scientific and academic freedom.”
American institutions continue to be the top choice for many Chinese students, according to Alex Zeng, an overseas education consultant based in Guangzhou, a city in southern China, despite worries about the Harvard ban.
The measure might increase US debt by $3.8 trillion and restrict the poor’s access to food and health programs.
Trump tax-cut bill
A significant package that would implement Donald Trump’s tax and spending policies, add trillions of dollars to the US debt, and perhaps deny millions of Americans access to federal safety net programs was passed by Republicans in the House of Representatives on Thursday.
With 215 votes in favor and 214 against, the narrow Republican majority passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act early in the morning along party lines. Weeks of discussions that raised doubts about the GOP’s capacity to reach a consensus on Trump’s main legislative priority in a chamber they control by just three seats came to an end with its passing.
“I praise the Almighty. To put it bluntly, a lot of prayer went into bringing this all together. Following the bill’s passing, House Speaker Mike Johnson stated, “There were a few moments over the last week when it looked like the thing might fall apart.”
Trump applauded the decision and urged the Senate to swiftly approve the legislation. He posted on Truth Social, saying, “This is possibly the most important piece of legislation that will ever be signed in our nation’s history.” “It’s time for our friends in the US Senate to start working and bring this bill to me as soon as possible! Time cannot be wasted.
The plan will fulfill a number of Trump campaign pledges, such as extending corporate and individual tax breaks and repealing Joe Biden’s renewable energy incentives. Additionally, it pays parents $1,000 if they open “Trump accounts” for their children, lowers taxes on gratuities, overtime, and auto loan interest, and increases the deduction for older taxpayers—but only while Trump is in office.
Along with funding new personnel and facilities for mass deportations of undocumented immigrants, the law also funds the construction of a wall along the Mexican border.
The Republican Party has authorized new job restrictions and funding cuts for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap) and Medicaid, which offer healthcare to Americans with disabilities and the poor, to help balance its expenses. Millions will not be able to benefit from these improvements, according to analysts.
The Congressional Budget Office, which is impartial, estimates that the bill will cost $3.8 trillion over the next ten years, even with the savings. The House passed it less than a week after Moody’s, a credit rating organization, warned of the US’s high national debt and federal budget deficit and revoked the country’s prestigious triple-A rating.
The package is “deeply unpopular, which is why Republicans made every effort to advance it during the dead of night,” according to House Democratic leaders, who have denounced it as a “tax scam.”
The minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, the whip, Katherine Clark, and the caucus chair, Pete Aguilar, declared, “This battle is just getting started, and House Democrats will keep using every weapon at our disposal to make sure that the GOP Tax Scam is buried deep in the ground, never to rise again.”
Barack Obama also issued a rare critique of the bill. Republicans in Congress are currently working to pass a measure that would jeopardize the health coverage of millions of Americans. The former president stated, “They want to increase costs for working-class families, reduce federal funding for Medicaid, and eliminate tax credits that help more people afford coverage.” To reject the bill, he urged citizens to get in touch with their senators.
There are few options for Democratic lawmakers. Republicans are using the budget reconciliation process to keep the party from facing a filibuster in the Senate because it is in the minority in both chambers.
Disagreements among Republicans themselves are the bill’s largest barrier. Johnson had to make concessions to lawmakers from Democratic-led states who wanted a larger deduction for state and local taxes in the days before the vote (Salt). He also had to appease right-wing members who wanted more cost reductions and moderates who were cautious about making drastic cuts to safety net programs.
With the help of Trump’s Tuesday visit to the Capitol, the speaker seems to have healed those divisions. After some cuts were scrapped, moderates gave up, but MPs who resisted Salt received a larger tax break. Johnson also succeeded in swaying the majority of fiscal conservatives, as seen by the only two senators who opposed the bill—Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Warren Davidson of Ohio—who both pointed to its effect on the deficit.
During the bill’s debate, Massie declared, “This bill is a debt bomb ticking.” “On the Titanic, we won’t be moving deck seats tonight. We’re aiming toward the iceberg and loading coal into the boiler.
Now that the bill is in the Senate, Republicans say they want it on Trump’s desk before the Independence Day holiday on July 4.