logo
Pentagon Hosts Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania To Strengthen European Defense

Pentagon Hosts Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania To Strengthen European Defense

Yahoo5 days ago
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met Friday with his counterparts from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania at the Pentagon to discuss European defense spending and security challenges.
The meeting comes as Baltic nations prepare to dramatically increase military budgets amid ongoing regional tensions.
Hegseth praised Estonian Minister Hanno Pevkur, Latvian Minister Andris Sprūds, and Lithuanian Minister Dovilė Šakalienė for committing to allocate 5% of their respective countries' GDPs to defense by 2026. The spending target represents one of the highest defense investment rates among NATO allies.
According to Chief Pentagon Spokesman Sean Parnell, the Secretary 'appreciated the Baltic states' clear-eyed view of the European security environment.' Hegseth emphasized that European nations must take 'primary responsibility for Europe's conventional defense.'
The defense leaders also explored ways to strengthen their nations' defense manufacturing capabilities. Building industrial capacity has become increasingly critical as allies seek to replenish weapons stockpiles and modernize military equipment.
The Baltic states have emerged as some of NATO's most committed members in terms of defense spending. Their proximity to Russia has driven aggressive military modernization efforts in recent years.
The Pentagon readout noted Hegseth's push for allies to convert higher spending into 'combat credible capabilities.' This reflects broader U.S. concerns about ensuring defense dollars translate into meaningful military readiness rather than bureaucratic overhead.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The president repositioned two nuclear submarines in response to a remark from a Russian official.
The president repositioned two nuclear submarines in response to a remark from a Russian official.

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

The president repositioned two nuclear submarines in response to a remark from a Russian official.

President Donald Trump's former national security adviser has bashed the president for getting drawn into nuclear brinkmanship with Russia. Trump announced Friday that he had repositioned two nuclear submarines in the region after an incendiary remark from a Kremlin official. 'I think it's a very risky business for a lot of reasons,' John Bolton told CNN. 'It's really just very ill-advised to have the president responding to somebody like that.'

Hegseth weighing run for Tennessee governor's office: report
Hegseth weighing run for Tennessee governor's office: report

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hegseth weighing run for Tennessee governor's office: report

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is considering running in the 2026 Tennessee gubernatorial race. Two sources close to Hegseth told NBC News that the Defense Secretary is engaging in 'serious' discussions about running for political office and his chances of winning. The sources both say discussions revolve around a potential bid at the governorship of Tennessee, where Hegseth lives. One source said these discussions happened in the last three weeks. The Department of Defense prohibits employees from seeking elected office, so a gubernatorial bid would require Hegseth to resign from his federal post. The Pentagon's chief spokesman Sean Parnell denied the claims, saying that Hegseth's 'focus remains solely on serving under President Trump.' 'Fake news NBC is so desperate for attention, they are shopping around a made-up story… again. Only two options exist: either the 'sources' are imaginary or these reporters are getting punked. Secretary Hegseth's focus remains solely on serving under President Trump and advancing the America First mission at the Department of Defense,' Parnell said in a statement. According to NBC News, other sources close to Hegseth denied that he had plans to seek political office. One source said that Hegseth made it 'very, very clear' as recently as last week that he didn't plan to run for office. Since his confirmation in January, Hegseth's tenure at the Defense Department has seen its fair share of controversy. Scruting of the former Fox News host's performance increased significantly after Hegseth and other Trump administration officials used the encrypted messaging app Signal to discuss military plans, accidentally including a journalist in the chats. NBC News reported that even if he decides to run, Hegseth likely doesn't meet the requirements to run in Tennessee, which requires candidates to live in the state for seven years. The post Hegseth weighing run for Tennessee governor's office: report appeared first on

Hegseth's office exodus hides the real problem: It's him
Hegseth's office exodus hides the real problem: It's him

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hegseth's office exodus hides the real problem: It's him

For the past month, the Epstein files (or lack thereof) have eclipsed other law enforcement and national security stories, and the issues and questions raised by the Trump administration's actions are important. But we should not lose sight of the Pentagon's continued implosion. After all, the Department of Defense is tasked with defending the country, not chomos. I've previously written about the Pentagon hemorrhaging top officials, but now they have outdone themselves. Justin Fulcher, a 32-year-old high-level official in Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's office — those words alone should have set off alarm bells — is now at least the secretary's sixth top advisor to leave in six months. Most of the think pieces following Fulcher's exit have missed the forest for the trees. The story is not about the usual Hegseth office drama; it's more about Hegseth himself. It's easy to see why the office dysfunction narrative took hold. When the Fulcher story initially broke, CBS News reported he had been fired. Sean Parnell, the chief Pentagon spokesperson, then acknowledged Fulcher's exit in a text message. (Normally, there would have been a media briefing and some perfunctory farewell puffery, or at least a press release.) It didn't help that Fulcher had to be his own communications guy and lily-gild his departure as 'perfectly amiable.' Most of us know by now that when anything in Trump World is described as 'perfect,' that's usually code for pockmarked. The Fulcher departure is unlike the other Hegseth scandals. To recap, in 'Signalgate,' National Security Advisor Mike Waltz unwittingly invited Jeffrey Goldberg, the editor of The Atlantic, into an encrypted-but-unsecured chat during which Waltz, Hegseth and other principals discussed real-time U.S. airstrikes on Yemen. Subsequently, it emerged there was a second Signal group chat on the same topic, which involved Hegseth's wife, brother and divorce lawyer. The next scandal involved three top Pentagon officials and Hegseth loyalists being put on administrative leave — and then unceremoniously fired — because of their suspected involvement in leaks about military plans to retake the Panama Canal. The trio issued a joint statement saying they were being unfairly targeted and thrown under the bus. As it turns out, they were right to feel scapegoated. Hegseth fell for a 'batshit crazy' story 'cooked up' by his divorce lawyer, which was used to help justify their ouster. The toxic office kerfuffle continued to play out publicly, including unflattering headlines about Hegseth's third wife crashing principals' meetings with foreign military leaders, his first chief of staff being laterally arabasqued to a different position, his difficulty finding a new chief of staff and the departure of his chief spokesman, who described a 'full-blown meltdown at the Pentagon.' Now we have learned there was a third kerfuffle back in April, which adds another layer to the Pentagon intrigue. Fulcher, then with the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, stormed out of a meeting with Yinon Weiss, the DOGE team lead at the Pentagon, because he thought Weiss had reported him to the internal police and security group. Fulcher took his complaint directly to Hegseth and enlisted his help in reigning in Weiss. Hegseth obliged, shouting at Weiss, which is never a good look for any workplace — especially when the head has a history of anger management problems. The icing on the cake of this fustercluck is that Fulcher was wrong. Weiss had contacted the Pentagon transition office, not the Pentagon police. Whatever the true reason for Fulcher's departure, the alarming part should be Hegseth's gullibility, inexperience and glaring ineptitude in both his hiring and ousting of Fulcher. In a mash-up of George Santos and Elizabeth Holmes, Fulcher appears to have padded his resume, claiming he was a college dropout, an entrepreneur of a successful telehealth startup and had received a non-existent PhD from Johns Hopkins University's' prestigious School of Advanced International Studies. It's unclear how he could have obtained even a low-level security clearance. It's also difficult to imagine how bad, and perhaps how lethal, an infraction by Hegseth would have to be for him to be canned. Perhaps revealing nuclear design information? Or outing an undercover agent who then gets killed? I represent former Pentagon employees who were harshly investigated, prosecuted and often imprisoned because they blew the whistle on waterboarding, as was the case with John Kiriakou; inaccurate drone targeting (Brandon Bryant and Chris Aaron) and underreported civilian casualties from drone strikes (Daniel Hale). All these men received far more scrutiny and punishment than Hegseth, who has suffered no meaningful consequences. I get that Whiskey Pete is Trump's younger, fantasy alter ego — the swagger, the tough talk, the telegenic head of hair. But he also embodies Trump's worst traits: Hubris, unresolved anger, misogyny, falling up. I can only wonder what our adversaries think when the official tasked with defending the most powerful country on the planet can't even hold his own hand-picked front office together. A warrior ethos may be good for the battlefield, but it's not when you unleash it on your own men. (And they are all men, which is a topic for a different column.) There are multiple exit ramps Hegseth can take. He's served his six months and can legitimately leave to spend more time with his three wives and seven kids. He can easily move into a cushy gig with a big defense contractor. He can probably get his own show in the Fox News universe, and certainly can compete on 'Dancing with the Stars.' He has also apparently discussed the idea of running for governor of Tennessee. Yes, Hegseth has nine lives. The troops he leads do not. The post Hegseth's office exodus hides the real problem: It's him appeared first on Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store