The Political Scene | The New Yorker

Pete Hegseth’s Holy War

32 snips
Mar 13, 2026
Katherine Stewart, journalist and author who investigates the religious right, explains how Christian nationalism moved from fringe to centers of power. She discusses Pete Hegseth’s ties to extreme churches and how sacralized rhetoric is shaping the Iran conflict. Short, sharp analysis of ideological networks, militarized masculinity, and the risks of mixing religion with military policy.
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INSIGHT

Pentagon As A Sacred Mission

  • Pete Hegseth frames the Pentagon as a sacred mission, blending Christian-nationalist rhetoric with military authority.
  • He has called America a Christian nation, holds prayer meetings at the Pentagon, and labels it the Department of War.
INSIGHT

From Veteran To Christian Nationalist

  • Hegseth's trajectory combined combat service, grievance over being labeled an extremist, and a shift into hardline reformed evangelicalism.
  • He joined the National Guard after 9/11, deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, then embraced CREC beliefs that oppose women's suffrage and criminalize homosexuality.
INSIGHT

Grievance Fueled By Crusader Symbols

  • Hegseth's grievance centers on being labeled an insider threat after tattoos and perceived disloyalty.
  • He has tattoos of a Jerusalem cross and Deus Volt, symbols tied to crusader imagery and adopted by some white supremacists.
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