Hegseth Orders Department-Wide Evaluation of JAG Operations, UCMJ Processes, and Pentagon Legal Bureaucracy as Experts Warn About Political Influence
The Pentagon has launched a far-reaching review of the U.S. military legal system, setting the stage for what could become one of the most consequential overhauls of military justice and legal operations in years. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth directed senior military leadership and Pentagon legal offices to begin a comprehensive assessment of the military’s legal infrastructure, including prosecution, defense, investigative procedures, staffing, training, and bureaucratic oversight.
The review, announced through a May 8 memorandum, calls for the Pentagon’s General Counsel to establish a special review panel tasked with conducting an “ongoing, long-term, departmentwide review of all aspects of the military legal system as it affects our warriors.”
The move immediately triggered debate across military legal circles, with former and current Judge Advocate General (JAG) officials, defense attorneys, and policy experts questioning whether a review conducted primarily within the Pentagon can remain sufficiently independent from political and bureaucratic influence.
According to legal experts interviewed following the announcement, the issue is not whether reform is needed — many agree the military justice system faces significant operational challenges — but whether the structure of the review itself could undermine the credibility of any recommendations that emerge from it.
“There are a lot of areas in the military legal system that need reform,” attorney Ira Rushing of Tully Rinckey said, while cautioning against an internally controlled review process dominated by Pentagon leadership.
Pentagon Targets Bureaucracy, Training, and Legal Efficiency
Hegseth’s directive states the review is intended to “cut unnecessary bureaucracy, strengthen training and organization, and make military legal professionals more effective.”


















