Hegseth Unleashes on Dem Congressman Who Called Iran Op a ‘Quagmire’ | WATCH
Hegseth: "Two months in, caling this a quagmire, handing proganada to our enemies. Statements like that are reckless to our troops."

War Secretary Pete Hegseth didn’t hold back during today’s House Armed Services Committee hearing.
When Rep. John Garamendi (D-CA) slammed the U.S. military operation in Iran as a “quagmire” and accused the Trump administration of misleading the public, Hegseth fired back with both barrels.
“You sit there on CNN handing propaganda straight to our enemies,” Hegseth shot back. “Shame on you for calling this a quagmire two months in!”
Hegseth, a combat veteran, drew a sharp line between past “forever wars” in Iraq and Afghanistan, which he called years of “nebulous missions and utopian nation-building” - and the current targeted campaign against Iran.
“Congressman, you should know better,” he said. “My generation served in a quagmire… This is not that.”
Garamendi had earlier told the committee: “This war of choice is a political and economic disaster… The President has got himself and America stuck in the quagmire of another war in the Middle East.”
Hegseth accused the California Democrat of undermining troop morale and giving aid and comfort to adversaries with defeatist talk so early in the operation. “Who are you cheering for here?” he demanded. “Your hatred for President Trump blinds you to the truth of the success of this mission.”
The fiery exchange lit up social media within minutes, with supporters praising Hegseth for standing up to what they call partisan sniping during active military operations. Critics called it a defensive meltdown as the Iran conflict enters its third month amid rising costs and questions over strategy.
The hearing on the defense budget comes as U.S. forces continue operations to neutralize Iran’s nuclear threat and secure key waterways, a mission President Trump says is long overdue after 47 years of Iranian aggression.
Hegseth made clear: America is not going back to endless wars, but it also won’t tolerate weakness in the face of real threats.