Posted on Thursday, September 11, 2025

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by Rob Maness

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President Donald Trump’s decision to restore the Department of Defense to its original name of the Department of War is more than just a rhetorical rebrand. In an era where seemingly everything is drowning in euphemisms, the renaming is a refreshing dose of clarity and sends a firm message that America is strong and confident once more under Trump’s leadership.

I served more than three decades in uniform and have seen the inner workings of the Pentagon as a retired Air Force Colonel. I’ve commanded missions in the skies, planned strategic operations that demanded unflinching resolve, and watched our military machine work.

I have nothing but praise for the brave men and women I’ve served alongside, but the same can’t be said for the bureaucrats who run the military. In one conflict after another, I’ve had a front row seat as top military brass lost touch with their core mission: winning wars.

Let’s rewind the clock for a moment. The name change to “Department of Defense” happened in 1949, right after World War II, under President Harry Truman. The rationale was to signal a shift from offensive aggression to defensive posture as the Cold War set in. Neither the U.S. nor the U.S.S.R. wanted to be seen as launching a “first strike.”

It was a noble idea on paper – emphasizing protection over provocation. Ironically enough, however, the military became more offensive-minded after that name change than before. Whereas the United States entered World War I and World War II in response to direct attacks on Americans, since then it’s been one unprovoked regime-change operation after another, none of which have succeeded and all of which have cost thousands of American lives and trillions of dollars.

While the title of the department that oversees America’s military may seem trivial to some, the real-world impact of names is impossible to ignore. By renaming the agency as the “Department of Defense,” war hawks were able to justify any military intervention under the pretext of “national defense.”

Trump’s proposal cuts through that fiction like a precision-guided missile. “Department of War” has a certain gravitas to it that conveys the seriousness of any action this agency takes. While critics paint the name change as Trump being a warmonger, the truth is precisely the opposite. No president in modern history has done more to stop international conflicts than Donald Trump. Already in his second term he has brokered a half-dozen peace deals.

By reverting to “Department of War,” Trump is not glorifying conflict; he’s honoring honesty. During my service, we didn’t train for “defense exercises” – we drilled for combat, for the fog and fury of battle where lives hang in the balance.

Soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and Guardians sign up to win wars and to protect freedom by dominating the battlefield. This rename acknowledges that. It sends a message to our enemies – from Beijing’s expansionists to Moscow’s revanchists – that America isn’t hiding behind semantic shields. We’re prepared to wage war if deterrence fails. It also rallies our allies, reminding them that the U.S. still has the firepower and the willpower to defend freedom if necessary.

The usual suspects in the legacy media and the swamp-dwelling think tanks call it reckless. They wring their hands about optics, fearing it’ll alienate partners or embolden foes.

Nonsense. This is the same crowd that spent years downplaying threats from radical Islam or underestimating communist China’s expansionism. Their pearl-clutching ignores history. The original War Department, established in 1789, oversaw our greatest victories – the Revolution and two World Wars. It was under that banner that we built the might that crushed fascism and communism. Renaming it “Defense” coincided with the rise of endless, inconclusive engagements – think nation-building quagmires that drained treasure and blood without clear wins. Coincidence? I think not. The soft name bred soft thinking and endless mission creep.

From a veteran’s perspective, this resonates deeply. Too many of my brothers and sisters came home broken, not just from wounds but from a system that prioritized political correctness over mission focus. Rules of engagement twisted by Washington lawyers, budgets siphoned for social experiments instead of lethality. Trump’s rename is a clarion call to refocus: Prioritize warfighting readiness, streamline procurement, and cut the fat from a bloated bureaucracy.

Imagine a Department of War that invests in hypersonic missiles and drones without the endless oversight committees or DEI directors. That’s a military that’s ready to win.

Moreover, in Trump’s America First doctrine, this fits like a glove. We’ve spent decades policing the world on the cheap for others while our borders weakened and industries crumbled. A Department of War underscores sovereignty. We’ll fight when and where we choose. We will not be global hall monitors.

The name change also restores pride for our troops. No more tiptoeing around. We’re warriors, plain and simple.

Of course, implementation won’t be easy. Congress, that den of careerist swamp creatures, will balk at upending traditions. But Trump has the mandate. He should push this through executive action where possible and ensure it is placed in the National Defense Authorization Act, framing it as efficiency reform. Rally the VFW halls and the American Legion posts; let the voices of the 18 million veterans echo in D.C. corridors. This isn’t just a name change – it’s a mindset shift toward a victory culture.

Rob Maness is a retired Air Force Colonel, a former wing and squadron commander, veteran of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, a survivor of the 9/11 Pentagon attack, graduate of the U.S. Navy War College and Harvard Kennedy School, a former U.S. Senate Candidate, Chairman of GatorPAC, CEO and Owner of Iron Liberty Group LLC, and Host of the Rob Maness Show on WorldViewTube.



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