Politics

New Hegseth Leak Reveals Secret Plan for Years of Troops on U.S. Streets

OH BROTHER

Phil Hegseth wrote the document laying out how the Pentagon and DHS could help Donald Trump’s immigration plans “for years.”

Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth salutes during a ceremony at the Normandy American Cemetery to mark the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings during World War II on June 06, 2025 in Colleville-sur-Mer, France.
Kiran Ridley/Getty Images

The Department of Homeland Security is looking to boost its deployment of the military on the streets of the U.S. in order to help carry out Donald Trump’s immigration policies, according to a leaked memo written by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s brother.

The document, obtained by The New Republic, details plans for how the Trump administration could use the military to assist with domestic law enforcement as part of its mass deportation agenda for “years” to come.

The letter from Phil Hegseth, the younger brother of the defense secretary, pushed for the move despite admitting the deployment of thousands of National Guard troops and U.S. Marines to Los Angeles amid the anti-ICE protests was not “perfect.”

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Its leak is the latest to begall the leak-prone Pentagon, where a paranoid Hegseth has been making aides and even generals take polygraphs to work out who is revealing his secrets.

Phil Hegseth official portrait
Phil Hegseth is allowed to work for DHS, as the defense secretary wasn’t involved in his hiring and therefore did not violate federal laws. Mikaela McGee/DHS

Carrie Lee, senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund, told The New Republic the contents of the memo are “disturbing” and outline intent to use the “military within the United States at a level not seen since Japanese internment.”

“The military is the most powerful, coercive tool our country has. We don’t want the military doing law enforcement,” Lee said. “It absolutely undermines the rule of law.”

Phil Hegseth, who works inside the Pentagon as a liaison to the Department of Homeland Security and as a senior adviser to the defense secretary, previously made headline news after it was alleged his brother discussed the Trump administration’s plans to attack Yemen with him on a messaging app during the Signalgate controversy.

He is now alleged to have written a memo that outlines a July 21 meeting between senior DHS and Pentagon officials discussing how the departments could coordinate “in defense of the homeland.”

That includes convincing leading military officials, such as Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, of the “urgency” of the so-called “homeland defense mission.”

The memo also suggests this ramping up of military deployment is needed as foreign gangs and drug cartels that Trump has listed as terrorist organizations pose a similar threat to “Al Qaeda or ISIS cells and fighters operating freely inside America.”

Protesters confront California National Guard soldiers and police outside of a federal building as protests continue in Los Angeles.
Donald Trump was criticized for inflaming tensions by deploying the National Guard to quell the anti-immigration raid protest in L.A. David McNew/Getty Images

Elsewhere, the memo suggests that the deployment of troops to L.A.—which allegedly saw them sleeping on floors, not being provided food or water, and complaining of having nothing to do once the protest calmed down—did not go as planned.

“Everyone here is also aware of our joint work in L.A. It hasn’t been perfect, and we’re still working through best practices together, but I think it’s a good indicator of the type of operations (and resistance) we’re going to be working through for years to come,” the memo said.

Joseph Nunn, counsel for the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center, told The New Republic that the memo suggests “military involvement in domestic civilian law enforcement” on the streets of the U.S. is about to become “more common.”

The White House, DHS, and the DoD did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the Daily Beast.

The younger Hegseth was a podcast producer and social media poster for a conservative think-tank before his brother’s rise from the Fox & Friends Weekend couch to being in charge of the world’s most powerful military. He is not technically a Pentagon employee, but one of the Department of Homeland Security, which means anti-nepotism rules are not directly engaged. But he has an office close to his older brother—a three-times married father and stepfather of seven who promised at his confirmation hearing that he would no longer drink amid accusations of extreme alcohol use and sexual assault, which he denied—and has been dubbed the “emotional support brother” for the embattled Trump cabinet member.

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