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Amanpour’s Major Claim Sparks Backlash
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Amanpour Takes Aim at HegsethChristiane Amanpour used X to criticize… |
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Amanpour Takes Aim at HegsethChristiane Amanpour used X to criticize Secretary of War Pete Hegseth after his remarks at the Pentagon, calling his biblical language wrong and unprecedented. She then said she had once been listed as a major on her Gulf War dog tags, which was meant to land as a jab. Instead, it raised a basic question: since when does a press credential count as military service? In Washington, the answer is usually found in a memo nobody reads and everyone misquotes.https://twitter.com/amanpour/status/2045178770756190419?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw What the 'Major' Tag Actually MeantDuring the Gulf War, some reporters embedded with U.S. forces were given administrative tags or badges that used military-style ranks for access, housing, and movement. That label was a practical fix, not an actual commission, promotion, or record of service. It was paperwork, not a battlefield award. The system did what systems do best: it created a technical detail and then let people pretend the technical detail meant something bigger. A war zone is not exactly the place for branding exercises, but bureaucracy never met a label it could not overwork.Veterans Push BackRetired Lt. Col. Robert "Buzz" Patterson, a former Air Force pilot and author, said Amanpour’s comparison showed deep ignorance…
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