Navy tanker renamed to honor WWII hero
Goodbye, political posturing; hello, real heroism. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has stripped the Navy oil tanker USNS Harvey Milk of its former name, rechristening it USNS Oscar V. Peterson to honor a World War II Medal of Honor recipient, as Fox News reports. This bold move signals a return to valuing sacrifice over symbolism.
Hegseth announced the renaming of the fleet replenishment oiler, originally named in 2016 under then-President Barack Obama, to celebrate Oscar V. Peterson, who gave his life to save others during the Battle of the Coral Sea.
The decision reflects Hegseth’s campaign to purge Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) policies from military naming conventions. It’s a shift that prioritizes valor over agenda.
In 2016, the Navy named the tanker after Harvey Milk, California’s first openly gay politician. Milk, who served four years in the Navy during the Korean War, was assassinated in 1978 by a former San Francisco supervisor. His name was chosen to highlight progressive ideals, a choice now reversed.
From Milk to Peterson
A ship naming ceremony for the USNS Harvey Milk took place on Aug. 16, 2016, in San Francisco. Attendees included Stuart Milk, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, and Navy Secretary Ray Mabus. The event was steeped in the era’s focus on social activism.
The tanker officially departed the General Dynamics NASSCO shipyard in San Diego on Nov. 6, 2021, after a ceremonial address. By then, the ship’s name had become a lightning rod for debates over military priorities. Hegseth’s renaming cuts through that noise.
Oscar V. Peterson, the new namesake, was a Navy veteran of 20 years. He ran the steam engine on the U.S.S. Neosho during Japanese attacks in the Philippines in 1942. His story is one of grit, not glamour.
A hero's sacrifice
On May 7, 1942, during the Battle of the Coral Sea, the U.S.S. Neosho was heavily damaged. Peterson sustained third-degree burns while closing four bulkhead steam valves to keep the ship afloat. His actions saved countless lives.
Four days later, on May 11, 1942, the U.S.S. Henley rescued 123 survivors from the Neosho. Peterson, however, succumbed to his injuries on May 13, 1942. His posthumous Medal of Honor cements his legacy as a true hero.
Hegseth’s decision has sparked predictable outrage. Rep. Nancy Pelosi called it a “shameful, vindictive erasure” of those who fought for equality. Her words drip with the sanctimony of an elite out of touch with the military’s core values.
Pelosi’s predictable outrage
Pelosi doubled down, hoping the Navy would “reconsider this egregious decision” during Pride Month. Her plea misses the point: the military isn’t a canvas for social crusades. Peterson’s sacrifice outweighs any symbolic gesture.
Hegseth was clear: “We are taking the politics out of ship naming.” He emphasized that sailors want to serve on ships that inspire pride, not push ideologies. It’s a refreshing dose of common sense in a Pentagon long mired in woke dogma.
The renaming aligns with Hegseth’s broader mission to eliminate DEI and “woke” policies from the Department of Defense.
These initiatives, often cloaked in moral superiority, have distracted from the military’s primary purpose: readiness and strength. Good riddance.
Restoring military pride
Sailors don’t need political activists as figureheads; they need heroes like Peterson. Hegseth’s move ensures the Navy honors those who embody selfless service, not those who fit a progressive checklist. It’s a step toward a military that respects its own history.
The USNS Oscar V. Peterson will now sail as a tribute to a man who gave everything for his country. This renaming isn’t about erasing anyone’s story—it’s about elevating the right one. Peterson’s courage deserves the spotlight.
Critics like Pelosi will cry foul, but the Navy isn’t a stage for cultural battles.
Hegseth’s decision is a win for those who value duty over dogma. The USNS Oscar V. Peterson stands as a proud symbol of what truly matters.




