Army Secretary Dan Driscoll says he will not resign amid reported friction with Hegseth
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll told The Hill on Wednesday that he has no intention of stepping down from his post, pushing back against weeks of speculation about his future at the Pentagon. "I have no plans to depart or resign as the Secretary of the Army," Driscoll said in a statement, adding that serving under President Trump "has been the honor of a lifetime."
The declaration came after The Hill reported that some White House officials had discussed Driscoll's future in the role he has held since February of last year. The Washington Post first reported his comments. The backdrop: repeated tension between Driscoll and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth dating back to last year, friction that has played out across several fronts inside the defense establishment.
For readers following the broader political environment around Hegseth, the Driscoll episode is the latest chapter in a string of personnel and policy disputes that have kept the Pentagon chief in headlines, even as the administration wages a military campaign against Iran.
Where the friction started
The reported clashes between Driscoll and Hegseth have not been limited to a single disagreement. One of the most visible involved Gen. Randy George, the Army's chief of staff and an experienced military leader described as close to Driscoll. Hegseth ousted George, a move that, by itself, would have generated friction between any service secretary and the defense secretary who removed his top uniformed officer.
Then came the helicopter episode. The Army had suspended a crew that flew two military helicopters near Kid Rock's estate in Tennessee and opened an investigation into the service members involved. Hegseth stepped in, ended the suspension, and quashed the branch's investigation entirely. Whatever the merits of that call, it cut directly across the Army's own disciplinary process, the kind of intervention that a service secretary would notice.
Driscoll, a former Army officer who deployed to Iraq, is also described as a close friend of Vice President Vance. That political connection may complicate any effort to push him out quietly. It also raises the stakes of any internal maneuvering around his position.
The White House steps in
White House spokesperson Anna Kelly offered a statement that praised both Hegseth and Driscoll by name, a signal that, for now, the administration wants to project unity rather than pick sides. Kelly told The Hill:
"President Trump has effectively restored a focus on readiness and lethality across our military with the help of leaders like Secretary Hegseth and Secretary Driscoll."
Kelly also pointed to the ongoing military campaign against Iran as evidence that the defense team is functioning. She used the administration's preferred name for the Pentagon, the Department of War, and cited Operation Epic Fury by name.
"The extraordinary talent of the United States Army and entire Department of War were on full display throughout Operation Epic Fury as all of our military objectives were met and Iran's capabilities were diminished."
That campaign has been a defining feature of Hegseth's tenure. The U.S. military effort against Iran has included massive naval operations and thousands of strikes, and the administration has leaned on its wartime results to defend its Pentagon leadership choices.
Trump praises Hegseth, and the skeptics who came around
President Trump, speaking to reporters at the White House on Monday, offered pointed praise for Hegseth. But he framed it as vindication against the defense secretary's early critics, many of them Republican senators who had initially resisted the nomination.
"All I can say is that he was treated very unfairly, and now those same people that treated him unfairly, that fought against him, they called me up saying what a great choice he was."
Trump went further, describing the turnaround among former skeptics in personal terms. "I'm telling you, people that were not for him, senators, friends of mine, 'sir, I don't think you're doing the right thing' now to call me up, what a choice," the president said. The remarks were clearly aimed at reinforcing Hegseth's standing, not at undermining Driscoll, but they also made clear who occupies the center of the president's confidence on defense matters.
Hegseth has faced pressure from multiple directions during his time leading the Pentagon. An Arizona Democrat filed impeachment articles against him during the Iran conflict, and media critics have targeted him for everything from policy decisions to personal statements of faith.
What remains unanswered
Driscoll's statement settles one question, he is not leaving voluntarily. But it leaves several others open. What specific event or development prompted him to issue a public statement now? What did the reported White House discussions about his future actually look like? Were they exploratory conversations or something more serious?
The reported friction between Driscoll and Hegseth has touched on promotions and the helicopter-crew matter, but the full scope of their disagreements remains unclear. Whether the two men can work together effectively going forward, or whether the tension simply gets managed through careful public messaging, is a question the administration has not yet answered.
Trump has previously praised Driscoll for his work on bolstering U.S. drone capability, suggesting the president values what the Army secretary has delivered. That record, combined with Driscoll's friendship with Vice President Vance, gives him a political foundation that most sub-cabinet officials lack. Removing him would carry costs that a simple reassignment would not.
Meanwhile, the broader geopolitical situation with Iran continues to demand focused leadership at every level of the defense establishment. Internal friction at the Pentagon is a luxury the country cannot afford when American forces are engaged in active operations.
The administration's posture toward Iran has been aggressive and unapologetic. That posture requires a defense team that can execute without tripping over internal disagreements about authority, personnel, and chain-of-command prerogatives.
The real test ahead
Personnel disputes inside any administration are normal. What matters is whether they stay manageable or metastasize into the kind of dysfunction that undermines mission readiness. The White House's decision to praise both men publicly suggests it wants this story to fade. Driscoll's decision to issue a blunt, on-the-record statement suggests he wants the same, on his own terms.
The question is not whether Driscoll and Hegseth like each other. The question is whether the Army can do its job while the two men at the top of its civilian leadership chain sort out their differences. With American forces in the field, that is the only question that matters.
Wartime is no season for turf fights. If both men mean what they say about readiness and lethality, the proof will show up in results, not in statements to reporters.






