Rep Adam Smith Confronts Hegseth Over Plans to Invade Panama & Greenland

The Militarization of Fantasy: Pentagon’s Shocking Contingency for Greenland and Panama

The exchange between Representative Adam Smith and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was less a budgetary hearing and more a jarring display of the administration’s aggressive, boundary-pushing foreign policy imagination. The core of the controversy lies in Hegseth’s evasive, yet revealing, responses to direct questions about military plans for the conquest of two sovereign nations: Greenland and Panama.

The Congressman’s question was stark: “Is it the policy of the Department of Defense that we need to be prepared to take Greenland and Panama by force if necessary?” Hegseth’s refusal to offer a simple “No,” or to dismiss the idea as absurd for a NATO ally and a friendly nation, created the political firestorm.

The Planning Business: An Admission of War Games

Hegseth dodged the question by repeatedly retreating to a bureaucratic defense: “Our job at the DoD is to have plans for any particular contingency.” When pressed to clarify if this included plans to “take Panama and Greenland by force,” he responded, “I think the American people would want the Pentagon to have plans for any particular contingency.” This carefully worded non-denial, which the Congressman correctly notes normalizes the talk of military conquest, all but confirmed that contingency plans for invading or seizing these territories—whether for their strategic value in the Arctic or to counter China’s influence in the Panama Canal—do exist on paper.

This position aligns directly with President Trump’s past public statements and interests, which included the infamous proposal to buy Greenland from Denmark in 2019. The insinuation is that if the political-economic approach fails, the military option is ready, serving the “commander-in-chief’s” expansive geopolitical vision.

Border Funding vs. Readiness: An Obsession with Political Priorities

The hearing was also marked by a fierce debate over budget priorities and the administration’s selective definition of “secure.”

The Border vs. Barracks: Rep. Smith criticized the Pentagon’s decision to shift a reported $1 billion (and earlier, a separate transfer of funds from military construction (MilCon) was used, diverting money from projects like military barracks and schools) from the MilCon budget to fund border security measures, while simultaneously preparing to send thousands more troops to the border. Smith challenged the Secretary, arguing that if the border is “secure” (as Hegseth stated: “It is secure”), then the spending and troop deployment are fiscally irresponsible and politically motivated.

Acquisition Reform & “Goldplating”: The Secretary did acknowledge the critical need for defense acquisition reform to move faster. He specifically cited “goldplating”—making the perfect the enemy of the good—as a central cultural problem within the Pentagon and the defense contracting world. Hegseth suggested bringing in “disruptors” from the private sector and leveraging AI/virtual design to speed up the procurement process. This section highlighted a structural issue in the military budget that critics argue is neglected while the administration focuses on more politically visible projects.

The final takeaway is one of alarming disconnect: a Defense Department that struggles with basic transparency, budgetary deadlines (failing to submit a budget in compliance with federal law), and acquisition dysfunction, yet seemingly has ample time to war-game the invasion of sovereign, friendly nations. This, as the Congressman implies, is less about strategy and more about the militarization of political fantasy.