Pentagon launches six‑month review of women in combat
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Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel Anthony Tata has ordered a six‑month Pentagon review of the "military effectiveness" of women serving in ground combat roles to assess how gender integration has affected operational success over the past decade. The Army and Marine Corps have been directed to submit by Jan. 15 data on readiness, training, performance, casualties and command climate for ground combat units and personnel.
U.S. Military Policy
Women in the Armed Forces
Women in Combat
Pentagon Move Threatens Stars and Stripes’ Long‑Standing Editorial Independence
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The Trump Pentagon has moved to exert far greater control over Stars and Stripes, the century‑old, Congressionally chartered newspaper produced for U.S. troops, announcing a plan to "refocus" its content away from what officials call "woke distractions" and toward war‑fighting, weapons, fitness and "ALL THINGS MILITARY." Pentagon press secretary Sean Parnell, an adviser to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, said in a social‑media post that Stars and Stripes will be "custom tailored" to warfighters, while a Federal Register notice signals the department intends to scrap 1990s directives that guaranteed the paper operational and editorial independence from the chain of command. Current editor‑in‑chief Erik Slavin told staff that "the people who risk their lives in defense of the Constitution have earned the right to the press freedoms of the First Amendment" and warned against censorship, pointing to a history that dates back to Civil War volunteers and Eisenhower’s insistence on "no censorship" other than for security. For decades Stars and Stripes has broken unflattering stories about black mold in barracks, unsafe base child care and mismanaged overseas housing that mainstream outlets often ignore, and press‑freedom advocates worry the new push to pack it with command‑friendly content written by active‑duty personnel will mute that watchdog role. The change comes as the broader Trump defense agenda emphasizes "morale" and ideological conformity, raising fears—echoed in military forums and veterans’ groups online—that a rare, internal check on Pentagon leadership is about to be turned into a house organ.
U.S. Military Policy
Press Freedom and First Amendment