Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s move to block the promotions of high-ranking service members is “even worse than it looks,” according to political analyst and longtime federal trial attorney Sabrina Haake, who argues the real motive behind the blocked promotions is more dangerous than the racial and gender bias suggested by mainstream coverage.
Writing in her Substack newsletter, The Haake Take, Haake reported that Hegseth had blocked career professionals with exemplary records who were on track to become one-star generals and admirals — and contended that the secretary has no clear legal authority to do so.
Haake laid out the statutory problem in detail. Congress, she wrote, entrusted military promotions largely to the respective promotion boards and the Secretaries of the Military Departments, not the Secretary of Defense. While federal law gives the president removal authority, she noted that a longstanding executive order limits the defense secretary’s removal authority to grades below colonel or captain — not the general and admiral promotions Hegseth has blocked. The Pentagon’s own regulations, she added, restrict the grounds for removing an officer from a promotions list to specific circumstances like moral, mental, or professional deficiencies, “none of which were present in Hegseth’s removals.”
It’s where Haake parts ways with the prevailing narrative that the “worse than it looks” argument comes into focus. While she acknowledged that a disproportionate number of the blocked, delayed, or demoted officers are women and people of color, she warned that the focus on demographics may obscure something more alarming.
“While mainstream headlines suggest Hegseth is motivated by race and gender animus, an even worse—and more dangerous—likelihood is that he is weeding out those he deems ‘ideologically incompatible’ with how he and Trump plan to use the military,” Haake wrote.
She pointed to Hegseth’s own rhetoric, noting his frequent emphasis that “every officer serves at the pleasure of the president” and his argument that Trump’s policy goals require removing commanders “tied to the culture” of previous administrations. Haake wrote that while Hegseth claims past promotions were based on race and gender rather than qualifications, military records refute those claims, and there is no evidence the blocked promotions were attributable to anything other than merit.
Haake, who has spent more than 25 years as a federal trial attorney specializing in First and 14th Amendment defense, was unsparing in her assessment of Hegseth’s qualifications, describing the former Fox News host as a mid-level National Guard officer with no senior military leadership experience suited to overseeing three million personnel and an $800 billion budget.
She argued that what Hegseth is truly stripping away are legal protocols, in service of elevating “maximum lethality” for what she characterized as Trump’s politically motivated aims.
“What he’s really weeding out are legal protocols in order to elevate ‘maximum lethality’ in pursuit of politically incorrect and illegal wars: Trump’s,” Haake wrote.
To underscore the stakes, Haake drew on history, surveying how authoritarian regimes — from Nazi Germany and Stalin’s Soviet Union to Maoist China and Saddam Hussein’s Iraq — sought to subordinate professional militaries to political loyalty, often purging capable officers in favor of those deemed reliably loyal. That approach, she argued, consistently produced militaries effective at internal repression but dysfunctional against external threats.
Haake tied that history directly to her central warning, contending that because Hegseth and Trump are both focused on domestic “enemies within,” the blocked promotions are “less about demographics and more about fortifying top brass willing to break the law” by removing those unwilling to go along.
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