THE PENTAGON — Budgetary offices across the service branches are scrambling after Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth released his long-awaited fiscal guidance, sources confirmed today.
With uncertainty already high in the wake of surgical and well-implemented cutbacks executed by the Department of Government Efficiency, Pentagon fiscal planners genuinely looked forward to the new defense budget as a predictable planning document clearly articulating the administration’s military priorities. Instead they were greeted by a late-Friday night message on Hegseth’s X account, which featured what appeared to be a female stick figure with enhanced mammaries on SecDef letterhead along with the cryptic message “#budget #boobs #battletested.”
With his background of extensive leadership in large organizations with multi-billion dollar budgets, observers expected Hegseth’s fiscal guidance to be laser-focused on key priorities such as recruiting, retention, shipbuilding, revitalization of the defense industrial base, maintenance supply chains, infrastructure for overseas basing and access, resilience in space-based satellite constellations and communications nodes, modernization of legacy equipment, proliferation of unmanned and autonomous systems, network hardening, integration of hypersonic and quantum technology, live virtual constructive training environments, competitive pay, quality of life improvements, and other programs nested within the priorities of the National Security Strategy, National Defense Strategy, and National Military Strategy.
It appears, however, that Secretary Hegseth opted for a different direction, leaving each Service to interpret the drawing as best it could.
“Putting Pete at the Pentagon made it clear things weren’t business as usual, so on the Marine Corps side, we were already spring-loaded with several fiscal options for the SecDef,” noted Maj. Travis Brasidas of the Corps’ Combat Development and Integration command. “After all, we’re the only branch that’s repeatedly passed an audit, so we figured we could meet Secretary Hegseth’s high standards. We ran dozens of budget drills under different scenarios, everything from funding the Corps enough to make every rifleman an orbital drop shock trooper to replacing all of our machine guns with chainsaws for bureaucracy.”