Pete Hegseth accidentally reveals unusual doodle on sensitive Iran paper
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth revealed a mysterious drawing in his notepad during President Trump's Cabinet meeting early this morning: a large squiggle.
The bizarre doodle raised eyebrows, as it appears parts of his speech was scratched out. But the Secretary's words were far more pointed than his pen.
Delivering his speech on the ongoing conflict with Iran, Hegseth declared that 'Operation Epic Fury is not an endless war,' but rather a 'decisive campaign' that has already left the Iranian military 'in shambles.'
'Never in recorded history has a nation's military been so quickly and effectively neutralized,' Hegseth told the Cabinet. 'Overnight, not only do they not have a navy... they no longer have a navy commander.'
Eagle-eyed observers have long scavenged for clues in the margins of Cabinet notebooks and body-language, desperate for a glimpse into the administration's true agenda.
But while Hegseth's 'secret squiggle' remains a nondescript enigma, it follows a trail of high-stakes paper scraps.
Most famously, Secretary of State Marco Rubio sparked a media firestorm in October when he dramatically interrupted a White House summit to hand President Trump an urgent, handwritten note regarding the Gaza peace deal.
'I was just given a note by the Secretary of State saying that we're very close to a deal in the Middle East, and they're going to need me pretty quickly,' Trump told reporters gathered at the roundtable on Wednesday.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth revealed a mysterious drawing in his notepad during President Trump's Cabinet meeting early this morning: a large squiggle
Delivering his speech on the ongoing conflict with Iran, Hegseth declared that 'Operation Epic Fury is not an endless war,' but rather a 'decisive campaign' that has already left the Iranian military 'in shambles'
'Never in recorded history has a nation's military been so quickly and effectively neutralized,' Hegseth told the Cabinet. 'Overnight, not only do they not have a navy... they no longer have a navy commander'
At another Cabinet meeting back in late January, Trump's Special Envoy Steve Witkoff passed a written note to White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. 'Putin' was the only word that could be made out in the scribbled text
Eagle-eyed observers have long scavenged for clues in the margins of Cabinet notebooks and body-language, desperate for a glimpse into the administration's true agenda
The frantically scrawled note was caught on camera. It read: 'Very close. We need you to approve a post on Truth Social soon, so you can announce the deal first.'
At another Cabinet meeting back in late January, Trump's Special Envoy Steve Witkoff passed a written note to White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. 'Putin' was the only word that could be made out in the scribbled text.
During the briefing today, Hegseth didn't hold back against the journalists in the room, accusing the press of ignoring the mission's reality.
'You wouldn't know it if you listened to the dishonest hate-Trump media,' Hegseth said. 'Behind every fake news story, there's an F-35 pilot executing a dangerous mission. My message to the media is, get it right.'
He claimed that the press was working 'hand in glove' with Democrats, just as they did during the Iraq surge in 2007. 'It's the same old pirate playbook, TDS [Trump Derangement syndrome] in your DNA,' he added, 'but the hard-working, God-fearing, patriotic Americans out there know better.'
In a particularly fiery moment, Hegseth linked the current targets of US airstrikes to the previous administration, claiming the US is now paying to destroy what it once 'funded.'
'Many of the Iranian military factories and bases that we're systematically destroying were paid for by the pallets of American cash that Barack Obama flew into Tehran,' Hegseth claimed. 'You might call it an inconvenient truth. Iran took our money and turned it into weapons and bunkers and ammo, and now we're destroying those weapons.'
Addressing the range of Iranian missiles, Hegseth issued a stark warning to the international community. After noting that Iranian missiles recently targeted a location 4,000 kilometers away, he pointed out the proximity of major Western capitals.
'To the world, I say, London is 4,000 kilometers from Iran. Washington, D.C. is 3,300 kilometers from Venezuela,' he noted, suggesting the global reach of the threat.
Hegseth concluded by making it clear that while the administration 'prays for a deal,' the military pressure will not let up until Iran's offensive capabilities are dismantled.
