Hegseth asked US army chief to step down, Pentagon says
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WASHINGTON – US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has asked Army Chief of Staff General Randy George to step down, according to Pentagon officials, a move that comes after President Donald Trump warned of military escalation against Iran.
The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed an earlier report from CBS News, which cited people familiar with the decision.
The Pentagon’s top spokesperson Sean Parnell said in a social media post that “George will be retiring from his position as the 41st Chief of Staff of the Army effective immediately”.
“The Department of War is grateful for General George’s decades of service to our nation. We wish him well in his retirement.”
Two other Army generals were also removed, according to a Defence Department spokesperson.
The move comes as the US and Israel continue a war against Iran, a mission that has recently seen the US send thousands of troops – including Marines and paratroopers – into the region for a possible ground operation.
Gen George, a career infantry officer and West Point graduate, took over as Army chief in 2023 after serving as vice-chief and as a senior military assistant to then President Joe Biden’s Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin.
The soft-spoken and understated officer has not made any public statements about the operations in Iran or the ground troops being sent to the region.
His removal comes amid a wider shake-up of senior military leadership under Mr Hegseth, who has moved assertively to reshape the Pentagon’s top ranks and shift its cultural and strategic direction.
Gen George’s ouster in the middle of the ongoing war against Iran has echoes of former defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld sidelining General Eric Shinseki after disagreements in 2003 over the number of troops needed for the war in Iraq.
Gen Shinseki, a former Army chief of staff, had said the US needed to station 200,000 to 300,000 US troops in Iraq to secure the country.
The other generals forced out along with Gen George are Gen David Hodne and Gen William Green Jr.
Their departures were reported earlier by the Washington Post.
Gen Hodne, also a West Point graduate, had only recently taken over as the inaugural commander of one of the service’s most consequential experiments, a sweeping consolidation meant to reshape how it prepares for future wars.
That effort in 2025 merged the relatively young Army Futures Command with the decades-old Training and Doctrine Command, creating a single entity charged with driving both modernisation and training.
Gen Green, a major general, has been the chief of Army chaplains and holds a Master of Divinity from Emory University.
Last autumn, Mr Hegseth abruptly removed Army Vice-Chief of Staff General James Mingus, replacing him with General Christopher LaNeve.
Admiral Alvin Holsey, who led US Southern Command, also stepped down unexpectedly as Mr Trump ordered a military build-up in the Caribbean to target alleged drug trafficking boats.
US forces in the region eventually participated in a special operations mission to seize Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and helped erect a quarantine to better control the country’s oil resources.
Gen George was deployed during the Gulf War and later in Iraq and Afghanistan, building a reputation as an operational commander with deep experience across combat theatres.
Before his elevation, he had drawn scrutiny earlier in his career when a vulnerable outpost under his command in Afghanistan was overrun by Taliban fighters.
Eight US soldiers and four Afghan army soldiers were killed defending the outpost and Gen George received a formal reprimand.
He ultimately rebounded to earn key leadership roles and the confidence of senior civilian leaders.
As chief, he pushed a sweeping transformation agenda aimed at preparing the Army for future conflicts, including restructuring formations, cutting headquarters staff and accelerating the integration of new technologies such as counter-drone systems. Bloomberg