Tammy Duckworth DESTROYS Pete Hegseth: “This Was Illegal. This Was Murder.”

⚠️ The Combat Veteran’s Warning: Duckworth Calls Caribbean Strike a “War Crime”

The confrontation between Senator Tammy Duckworth—a decorated combat veteran, former Black Hawk pilot, and double amputee—and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is a catastrophic flashpoint in the growing military scandal. Duckworth delivered a scorching denunciation, moving beyond partisan critique to issue a severe legal warning that labels the recent Caribbean “double-tap” strike as illegal, a war crime, and murder.

Her judgment, backed by her lived experience under the laws of war, is a devastating challenge to an administration that appears to treat military action as cavalier performance art.


The Illegalities of the “Double-Tap”

Duckworth’s core argument rests on three fundamental legal failures:

    Unauthorized War: Unlike the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, which she noted were authorized by Congressional votes, there was no such declaration or debate for the Caribbean operations. She explicitly stated that the military professionals involved were “not been authorized to be at war,” rendering the offensive actions immediately problematic under domestic law.

    Violation of International Law: She challenged Hegseth’s claim that the actions followed the laws of war. Duckworth invoked the Geneva Conventions, stating unequivocally that to carry out a second strike on survivors clinging to the wreckage is illegal. She used a powerful analogy from her own experience: “Under all the international laws of warfare, you are supposed to help render aid” to a downed pilot in a rubber dinghy—you are “not allowed to go back in and kill them.” By the administration’s own briefing, the two survivors were “clinging to half of a boat… and had no access to a radio.” She explicitly called this “murder” and a “war crime.”

    Lack of Imminent Threat: Duckworth further punctured the justification for the strike by noting that the admiral who briefed Congress confirmed that the boat was not even aimed at the United States. This demolishes the narrative of an imminent threat justifying lethal force.


Endangering American Service Members

For Duckworth, the most serious consequence of Hegseth’s actions is the legal jeopardy into which he has placed American military personnel.

Legal Exposure: She warned that the soldiers, pilots, and drone operators involved could be “brought up in international criminal courts.” By willfully disregarding the Geneva Conventions, the administration strips away the legal and moral foundation that protects American troops abroad.

Safety Compromised: Duckworth noted that if the U.S. disregards the laws of war regarding shipwrecked personnel, it creates a dangerous precedent that could be used against any American service member who is shot down and “in a rubber dingy in the middle of the ocean” in the future.

This is why she called Hegseth the “least qualified secretary of defense in our nation’s history.” True leadership protects its professionals; Hegseth’s perceived recklessness, she argues, puts them directly into harm’s way for a politically motivated operation.


The Hypocrisy of Drug Trafficking

Duckworth delivered a sharp blow to the administration’s stated rationale for the operation: combating drug trafficking. She pointed out the obvious, crippling contradiction: “If they really cared about drug traffickers, the president wouldn’t be pardoning drug traffickers.” This exposes the administration’s policy as a clear-cut case of hypocrisy, where the rhetoric of fighting crime abroad is undermined by rewarding criminals at home.


Denying Transparency

The Senator demanded access to the classified video of the strike, the pilots’ after-action reports, and the intelligence debriefs, criticizing the administration for using the excuse of protecting “sources and methods” to keep the video hidden. She argued that members of Congress, who hold top-secret clearances, should have immediate access to this evidence, stating that secrecy is being used to “hide wrongdoing.”


The Attack on Military Families: IVF Coverage

Finally, Duckworth transitioned to another critical issue affecting military families: the reported effort by the House Speaker to strip In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) coverage for active duty service members. Drawing on her own public struggle with infertility and her experience working with injured veterans, she highlighted the devastating impact this policy would have:

Veterans’ Sacrifice: She noted that many service members lose their fertility due to their military service.

Bipartisan Support: She stressed the irony that this coverage had passed unanimously or by roll call vote out of the relevant Armed Services Committees in both chambers, showing broad, bipartisan support for military family readiness.

Ideological Hostility: Duckworth attributed the stripping of the benefit solely to the Speaker’s “religious views,” arguing that the belief in personhood for a fertilized egg classifies aspects of IVF as “murder,” overriding the needs of the nation’s service members.

Duckworth’s testimony was a forceful synthesis of legal precision, military ethics, and personal experience, painting a picture of a defense department operating outside of legal and constitutional norms, endangering its own troops, and sacrificing military readiness for ideological posturing.