
WASHINGTON — In a move that marks a dramatic escalation in the administration’s war on elite academia, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced Friday that the Pentagon will immediately cease sending military officers to graduate programs at several of the nation’s most prestigious universities.
Effective for the 2026–2027 academic year, the directive effectively bars active-duty service members from using Department of Defense (DOD) funds—including tuition assistance, fellowships, and professional military education credits—at institutions such as Columbia, Yale, Princeton, Brown, and MIT.
”Factories of Resentment”
In a video statement posted to social media, Hegseth—himself a graduate of Princeton and Harvard—delivered a scathing indictment of the Ivy League. He accused these institutions of abandoning “pragmatic realism” in favor of “woke indoctrination,” branding them “factories of anti-American resentment.”
”We cannot and will not continue to send our most capable officers into graduate programs that undermine the very values they have sworn to uphold,” Hegseth stated. He further characterized the schools as “breeding grounds of toxic indoctrination” that have “poisoned” the military’s professional education system from within.
A Widening Crackdown
This latest order follows a similar ban imposed on Harvard University on February 6. While Hegseth’s Friday announcement specifically named five additional elite schools, he warned that the “complete and immediate cancellation” of DOD attendance would extend to “many others” currently under review.
Internal memos suggest that universities are being evaluated based on their adherence to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) policies and their perceived “bias” against the U.S. military. The move comes despite recent attempts by schools like Columbia and Brown to reach “truces” with the Trump administration to protect federal research funding.
Impact on the Officer Corps
The policy represents a fundamental shift in how the U.S. military develops its intellectual leadership. For decades, the Pentagon has sent rising stars to top-tier civilian universities to broaden their strategic thinking. Critics of the ban, including some former defense officials, warn that isolating the officer corps from elite academic environments could lead to “intellectual narrowing” and damage long-term national security.
However, Hegseth countered that the “era of a curriculum of contempt is over,” signaling a pivot toward internal military war colleges and institutions deemed more aligned with the administration’s “victory-focused” mission.
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