‘COWARD!’ Ted Lieu TORCHES Hegseth For Blaming Admiral Bradley In Boat Strike Scandal

The Cowardice of Command: Pete Hegseth and the War Crime with No Statute of Limitations

The confrontation led by Representative Ted Lieu was not a piece of political theater; it was a legal and moral indictment of the Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, and by extension, the entire administration. Lieu, speaking with the authority of a former Air Force JAG officer, cut through the administration’s evasions to label the second strike on shipwreck survivors for what it is: a war crime.

The message is clear: Hegseth is a coward who must resign, not just for the alleged crime, but for the dishonorable conduct of hiding the truth and throwing a subordinate under the bus.


The Economic Neglect and the Gilded Vanity

Lieu initially anchored his critique in the brutal reality of the affordability crisis crippling American families. He noted that average prices for household goods and essentials have skyrocketed—with some categories like furniture and decor increasing by 24%—while the President’s approval rating sits at a devastating 36% among modern incumbents at this point in their term.

The contrast is damning: while millions of Americans are struggling to afford health insurance and basic necessities, the President is obsessed with the size of his “Great Gatsby ballroom.” This illustrates an administration not merely failing to govern, but actively disdaining the public good to indulge in vanity projects, leaving everyday Americans to face skyrocketing premiums and economic decay. This neglect sets the stage for the moral rot exposed in the military command structure.


The Black Letter of the Law: Murder is a War Crime

The transition from economic hypocrisy to military criminality was seamless and devastating. Lieu brought immediate clarity to the Caribbean strike, citing the Pentagon’s own Department of Defense Law Manual on the Law of War, which literally states: “Orders to fire upon the shipwreck will be clearly illegal.”

This is not a gray area; it is a black-letter rule of international law, codified in the Geneva Conventions and rooted in the principle that those who are hors de combat—shipwrecked, wounded, or incapacitated—must be protected. Lieu declared that killing shipwreck survivors is a war crime.

The most important warning Lieu issued was a legal one: “There is no statute of limitations for war crimes.” This was a direct promise that even if the Trump administration uses its political power to shield those responsible, a future administration or international legal body is guaranteed to hold them accountable.


Dishonorable Conduct and the Cowardice of Command

The administration’s handling of the aftermath cemented its dishonor. Lieu highlighted the evolution of the lie:

    Initial Denial: Hegseth publicly denied reports of the second strike.

    The Shift: When the truth began to surface, the administration walked back the denial, choosing instead to throw Admiral Bradley under the bus, claiming the Admiral—and not the Secretary—ordered the second strike.

Lieu pointed out that Hegseth had previously boasted, “I watched it live. We knew exactly who was in that boat.” This statement eliminates any credible claim of ignorance, shifting the focus back to Hegseth’s command responsibility.

Lieu’s final message was directed at the American military: they deserve leaders who follow the code of conduct, which demands honesty and the acceptance of responsibility. By lying on national television and shifting blame to a subordinate, Hegseth engaged in dishonorable conduct. Lieu’s words were unsparing and necessary: “Shame on Pete Hegseth. He is a coward. He must resign.”

This entire episode is a crisis of ethical and constitutional leadership. It shows an administration that not only ignores the economic suffering of its people but also, when confronted with the most serious possible legal violation—a war crime—chooses to lie, shift blame, and sacrifice the honor of the U.S. military to protect a political appointee.