Vance and Pete Hegseth Heckled Loudly at Shake Shack
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Washington Post faces criticism for publishing sensitive information about defense secretary Pete Hegseth's protective security arrangements and requirements.
The agency tasked with protecting Defense Department leaders is under significant strain, and the secretary’s atypical needs are becoming untenable, officials say.
Hegseth teamed up with Secretary of Health Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to create the 94-second video, doing what they are calling the “Pete and Bobby Challenge”—50 pull-ups and 100 push-ups in under five minutes.
The challenge requires participants to complete 100 push-ups and 50 pull-ups within 10 minutes, with five minutes being the “top standard."
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Pete Hegseth is requiring so much security it’s taking officers off of criminal investigations
Members of U.S. Army’s law enforcement arm complain they are being taken out of the field to watch defense secretary’s family and homes
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Raw Story on MSNDOD official calls for 'severe punishment' after report exposes Pete Hegseth security cost
A Department of Defense official is calling for "severe punishment" for reporters who he said published sensitive "details" about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's security detail. The Washington Post penned a report on Wednesday talking about the significant increase in security and protection
Sec. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. visited the Department of Defense to challenge Sec. Pete Hegseth to a pullup and pushup competition, dubbed the “Pete and Bobby challenge.”
The controversial health secretary sparked confusion online after he was seen working out in jeans alongside Hegseth, who was wearing athletic shorts
Air Force Chief Gen. David Allvin’s abrupt retirement wasn’t driven by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, but by growing frustration with the service’s priorities, according to multiple people familiar with the decision.
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Lee Zeldin says Army’s 250th anniversary parade made him ask Pete Hegseth if he could rejoin
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin was so stirred by the esprit de corps of the US Army’s 250th anniversary parade in June that he asked Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth