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  "path": "/post/208872/hegseth-plot-take-out-driscoll-army-secretary",
  "publishedAt": "2026-04-09T16:10:30.000Z",
  "site": "https://newrepublic.com",
  "tags": [
    "Breaking News",
    "Dan Driscoll",
    "Pete Hegseth",
    "army",
    "Military",
    "Pentagon",
    "Department of Defense",
    "Donald Trump",
    "Republicans",
    "Republican Party",
    "United States",
    "Politics",
    "Iran",
    "iran war",
    "The Hill",
    "chief of staff",
    "take polygraph tests",
    "only speak"
  ],
  "textContent": "Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is reportedly attempting to frame Army Secretary Dan Driscoll as a “resistance figure” in an effort to oust him from the Trump administration.\n\nMultiple sources told _The Hill_ that Hegseth, who has ousted multiple senior military officials both before and during the war on Iran, sees Driscoll as a rival of sorts. Sources noted that Hegseth’s paranoia had been heightened in recent weeks following Trump’s firing of his two Cabinet colleagues, Pam Bondi and Kristi Noem. And Driscoll has previously been floated as a potential successor to Hegseth if he ever gets canned.\n\n“He’s just really uncomfortable with anyone who could potentially be outshining him,” a current Pentagon official told _The Hill_. The Pentagon itself denies this, stating that _Hill_ sources were “serving up fake news to anyone gullible enough to write about it.” And head Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell wrote that Hegseth “maintains excellent working relationships with the secretaries of every service branch.”\n\nBut another Pentagon official claimed that Hegseth’s inner circle “believes they’ve uncovered proof that Driscoll has become a resistance figure within the Pentagon not only against Hegseth, but against President Trump as well”—raising major doubts about just how copacetic things really are inside Hegseth’s Pentagon right now.\n\nHegseth has also made moves targeted at Driscoll’s support network, firing his chief of staff, Gen. Randy George, and two other high-ranking military officials. The new plot against Driscoll fits into a larger pattern with Hegseth, who at the start of his term was overcome by paranoia and suspicion so intense that he made Pentagon employees take polygraph tests and would only speak in confidence to his wife.\n\nIt’s unclear what exactly Driscoll has done to elicit this alleged treatment from Hegseth, other than to be reasonably well liked and respected.\n\n“From what I’ve seen in the press, and from whatever it’s worth, what I hear from people in the Army, it’s not like Driscoll is scheming and plotting to make Hegseth look bad. I mean, Hegseth takes care of that himself on a regular basis. It’s just, it’s all just very strange. And it’s just irresponsible,” retired Army reserve colonel and Pentagon staffer Kevin Carroll told _The Hill_.\n\nDriscoll has no plans to resign, and has stated that “serving under President Trump has been the honor of a lifetime.”",
  "title": "Hegseth Hatches Plot to Oust Army Secretary in Middle of War"
}