Pete Hegseth Sparks Outrage With Wild New Arabic Tattoo
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth quietly debuted a new tattoo this week while posting a set of workout photos, sparking fierce backlash among critics who claim it holds a distinctly anti-Muslim message.
Eagle-eyed social media users spotted the ink on the underside of Hegseth's bicep after he posted photos of himself exercising with soldiers at a military base in Hawaii.
The tattoo is the Arabic word 'kafir,' which translates to 'disbeliever' or 'infidel.' Critics say that it clearly brands Hegseth, who is a devout Christian, as an enemy of Islam. It remains unclear when he got the new ink—but the symbol does not appear in photos of Hegseth as recently as several months ago.
'Hegseth just got a kafir (كافر) tattoo under his Deus Vult tattoo—a Crusader slogan,' wrote pro-Palestinian activist Nerdeen Kiswani, who is Muslim. 'It isn't just a personal choice; it's a clear symbol of Islamophobia from the man overseeing U.S. wars.'
The latin phrase 'Deus Vult,' which also appears on Hegseth's bicep, means 'God wills it.' It is associated with the First Crusade, which saw 11th-century European Christians try to reclaim the Holy Land from Muslims. Many of Hegseth's tattoos relate to Christianity and American patriotism.
'To the Muslim world the tattoo will be seen as an open declaration of Hegseth's enmity towards them,' wrote journalist Tam Hussein.
British journalist Dilly Hussain, meanwhile, wrote, 'Muslims should not be offended or shocked at Pete Hegseth's new 'kafir' tattoo or his crusader 'Deus Vult' tattoo. He's merely displaying America's foreign policy and mindset to Islam and Muslims.'
However, user @BrotherRasheed defended Hegseth's tattoo as a common 'symbol of defiance against Islamic terrorists' among U.S. veterans who have served in the Middle East.
'It's commonly seen on stickers, the backs of trucks, T-shirts, and mugs,' the account wrote. 'Personally, I had it on a hat, a mug, and even on the door of my office.'
Hegseth did tours in both Afghanistan and Iraq. He has made killing terrorists—largely in Muslim countries—a key goal in the early days of his tenure as defense secretary.
The Pentagon did not answer the Daily Beast's request for comment on Hegseth's tattoo.
The controversy comes on the heels of another scandal involving Hegseth. The defense secretary shared operational details about an imminent strike targeting terrorists in Yemen on a group chat which inadvertently included a prominent journalist: Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg.
Hegseth has insisted that no classified details or 'war plans' were shared, despite accounts to the contrary.
Hegseth has more than a dozen tattoos, the most notorious of which is the Jerusalem Cross on his chest. The symbol is associated with Christian nationalists, and it got Hegseth, who was part of the National Guard, kicked off duty at Joe Biden's inauguration in 2021.
'Members of my unit in leadership deemed that I was an extremist or a white nationalist because of a tattoo I have, which is a religious tattoo,' Hegseth told Fox News last June, explaining how he felt it was misconstrued.
His body also features a cross with a sword through it, which is an allusion to a bible verse, and 'We the people'—the words that begin the preamble to the Constitution—among others.
Hegseth explained in a 2020 interview that he got his first tattoo when he was around 37 or 38. He had always wanted one, but his father had stopped him when he was younger.
Since then, Hegseth, who is 44, has been on a roll, adding one after the other.
'I knew inside my soul this was something I wanted to do and I've finally hit the chapter in my life that I'm able to do it,' he said.
Hegseth added that an upside of the ink is that people 'know were I stand. I wear my views on my sleeve anyway.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
38 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Do we really need two public radio stations in Boston?
Trying to get in tune with the political times, GBH, Boston's other National Public Radio-affiliated station, launched a ' in 2023 . The news show was intended to help combat polarization and give voice to listeners in red America. On a recent Thursday night, I drove home listening to an episode, broadcast from Birmingham, Ala., about the Christian right. It lived up to its name and featured a perfectly civil conversation between an author and a minister. With advertising revenue dropping at WBUR and expenses taking a toll at GBH, Advertisement Boston is one of only four cities that has the luxury of two NPR stations; the others are Atlanta, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. So the Boston public stations will suffer twice the pain if government backing is lost, even though only a of their funding comes from taxpayers. The city does lean liberal, and WBUR and GBH have cultivated their own loyal audiences over the years. Lunch time wouldn't be the same without 'Jim and Margery,' Jim Braude and Margery Eagan, who cohost and quibble during their daily call-in 'Boston Public Radio' show on GBH, which often gives airtime to the state's top political figures. The live news production 'Here and Now' is consistently WBUR's top-rated show and can be heard in 90 percent of the country. WBUR reaches approximately 387,000 listeners each week, and GBH has a weekly audience of 299,000, according to Advertisement Still, a hard question lingers in the Boston air: Do we really need two NPR affiliates in Boston? Rather than cutting both operations to the bone and seeing a decline in the quality of their programs, might it be wiser to merge the two stations? I can already hear the howls of rage across the city coming from our highly educated, affluent population — NPR's target audience. The question has been asked previously and rejected. GBH's Goldberg, who moved to Boston after a successful run at National Geographic, said last week that speculation about a merger was premature. NPR And given the loss of so many newspapers over the past decade and so much of Advertisement Trump would consider seeing an NPR station disappear as a victory. That's one big reason not to merge GBH and WBUR. In February 2019 I gave one of the first public talks in CitySpace, to promote my latest book, 'Merchants of Truth.' As senior WBUR executives proudly showed me around, I did wonder whether a public radio station could afford this crystal palace. Maybe we will soon know the answer.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
General Staff: Russia has lost 999,200 troops in Ukraine since Feb. 24, 2022
Russia has lost 999,200 troops in Ukraine since the beginning of its full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, the General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces reported on June 11. The number includes 1,120 casualties that Russian forces suffered just over the past day. According to the report, Russia has also lost 10,927 tanks, 22,783 armored fighting vehicles, 51,579 vehicles and fuel tanks, 29,016 artillery systems, 1,413 multiple launch rocket systems, 1,183 air defense systems, 416 airplanes, 337 helicopters, 40,297 drones, 3,337 cruise missiles, 28 ships and boats, and one submarine. Read also: US to cut military aid to Ukraine, Hegseth says We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Funeral row causes chaos for mourners of Zambia's ex-president
Arranging a funeral can be testing at the best of times - let alone for a former head of state. Amid that intense, initial stage of grief, loved ones must juggle cost, the wishes of the deceased and numerous other factors in order to throw a fitting send-off. Add the clashing desires of a national government and its political opponents into the mix, and things become doubly complicated. Edgar Lungu, who led Zambia from 2015 to 2021, died last Thursday. His death at the age of 68 has shocked Zambians - and there is genuine sense of grief with all radio stations playing gospel music for the man who had remained influential in Zambian politics despite being barred from contesting last year's election. Zambia is officially a Christian country - and most people take their religion and periods of mourning seriously. But a standoff between his family, the government and Lungu's political party, the Patriotic Front (PF), has left mourners confused about how exactly the former president should be honoured. The government announced there would be a state funeral and declared that the official venue for mourning would be a lodge it owns in the capital, Lusaka, but the PF dismissed this plan, directing mourners to its headquarters instead. As for Lungu's family, they have said they are not opposed to a state funeral, but have insisted on choosing who will preside over it, family lawyer Makebi Zulu has told the BBC. Then there is the official book of condolence, in which mourners can pay tributes to Lungu. The government has set up an official book - at the lodge - but the PF has urged people to sign theirs instead - at their headquarters. The government wanted to repatriate his body from South Africa last week - Lungu died there after receiving treatment for an undisclosed illness. However, the PF and Lungu's family intervened, wanting to organise the safe passage of the ex-leader themselves. "The state was saying, 'We are giving him full military honours, therefore we're taking over from here' - as if to say that 'you have no say over what happens,'" Mr Zulu said. Plans for returning Lungu's remains are still unclear, though the family are now engaging with the government on this issue. There has also been confusion over the "official" mourning period when all forms of entertainment like big football matches and concerts are stopped. The government declared a seven-day national mourning period starting last Saturday, even though the PF announced one days earlier. This chaos is, in short, a continuation of the tumultuous relationship between Lungu and his successor, President Hakainde Hichilema. The pair are long-time rivals - in 2017, when Lungu was president, he had Hichilema locked up for over 100 days on treason charges after Hichilema's motorcade allegedly refused to give way for him. It took the intervention of the Commonwealth for Hichilema to be released. Four years later, and after five attempts at the presidency, Hichilema defeated Lungu. Now, the PF and the Lungu family's lawyer are accusing Hichilema's government of being partly responsible for the former president's death. Lungu returned to frontline politics in 2023, frequently accusing Hichilema's government of victimising him and other PF members. Now, after Lungu's death, his party allege that Lungu was banned from leaving the country for years and that if he had been allowed to travel to seek medical treatment sooner, he might still be alive. The government has vehemently denied any responsibility for Lungu's death, with spokesperson Cornelius Mweetwa insisting that the ex-president was never prohibited from travelling. Mr Mweetwa told the BBC that the PF was trying to use Lungu's death as a "springboard" for a "political comeback". It is not the first time conflict has broken out following a Zambian leader's death. In 2021, the family of Kenneth Kaunda, the country's first post-independence president, said he wanted to be laid to rest next to his wife and not at the site designated by the government. Despite this, the government went ahead and buried Kaunda at Embassy Memorial Park in Lusaka. "The High Court ruled that national interest takes precedence over individual or family preferences because there is a designated burial place for former presidents, and there is a designated set of protocol to handle those proceedings that are conducted by the state, not a political party," Mr Mweetwa said. This argument - about the state's rights to a dead president's body - has played out numerous times across Africa. In 2019, Robert Mugabe died almost two years after being unseated as Zimbabwe's president by his former right-hand man, Emmerson Mnangagwa. Mugabe's family refused to allow him to be buried at the national Heroes' Acre, arguing that he had been betrayed by his former colleagues. After a bitter feud, the man who had led Zimbabwe to independence was laid to rest after his state funeral in his home village. But a legal row rumbles on over his burial site, with some still wanting him to be interred at Heroes' Acre, where a mausoleum has now been completed for him. And loved ones rarely won such disputes. The relatives of Angola's José Eduardo dos Santos and various Ghanaian presidents have clashed with the government over post-death arrangements, but all eventually had to yield to the state. In Lungu's case, the government has the constitution - the supreme law of the land - behind it, but the PF has significant clout as the former leader's long-time political home. In an attempt to break the standoff, the government has sent envoys to South Africa to negotiate with Lungu's family, where a private memorial service was held at Pretoria's Sacred Heart Cathedral on Tuesday - organised by the PF. This was attended by his widow and daughter and where it was announced to the congregation that the former president's body would not be flown home on Wednesday as had been expected. So for those in Zambia, there is still no clear direction on how to send off the nation's sixth president. 'My son is a drug addict, please help' - the actor breaking a Zambian taboo An ancient writing system confounding myths about Africa Zambia president orders ministers to stop sleeping in cabinet Go to for more news from the African continent. Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica Africa Daily Focus on Africa