Hegseth orders oil ship USNS Harvey Milk be renamed in pursuit of "warrior ethos"
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Tuesday ordered the USNS Harvey Milk be renamed.
The vessel is named for gay rights icon Harvey Milk, who was assassinated in 1978.
The move is part of a broader campaign to "return to
OAKLAND, Calif. - Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth on Tuesday ordered that a naval oiler ship named for gay rights icon Harvey Milk be renamed.
The news was first published by Military.com, which reported that the order was specifically made by Hegseth, and the timing of the announcement — during Pride month — was intentional, and part of the administration's move toward "reestablishing the warrior ethos."
The USNS Harvey Milk is not a combat vessel, and is part of the John Lewis class of oiler ships named for civil rights leaders. Other vessels in that class include the USNS Earl Warren, USNS Robert F. Kennedy, and the USNS Sojourner Truth.
State Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) called the move "absolutely shameful."
"Harvey Milk was a hero. He was a veteran who served our country. He died for our community," Wiener said in a statement. "Brave LGBTQ veterans worked for years to achieve the naming of a ship for Harvey. Now Trump and Hegseth are wiping it away due to straight-up bigotry. They're determined to erase LGBTQ people from all aspects of public life."
The backstory
The USNS Harvey Milk was christened in November 2021. The ship was co-sponsored by then-Senator Diane Feinstein, who served as president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors during Harvey Milk's term in office.
Milk enlisted in the Navy in 1951 and served as a diving officer during the Korean War. He left the service in 1955 with a "less than honorable discharge" after he was questioned about his sexuality.
Milk was the first openly gay man elected to office, as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977. During his time in office, he enacted legislation to protect the gay community, including a 1978 ordinance to ban discrimination against the LGBTQ community in housing and employment.
He was assassinated in 1978 by former supervisor Dan White, who was sentenced to seven years for the crime.
Big picture view
This is not the first time Hegseth, a former co-host of Fox and Friends and veteran of the Minnesota National Guard, has moved to rename a military asset.
He made headlines in February for renaming North Carolina's Fort Liberty as Fort Bragg, the name it has carried since it was established in 2018. The original name was a reference to Confederate General Braxton Bragg, whom historians have called one of the worst generals of the civil war.
The fort was renamed in 2022 after Congress determined that individuals who sided with the Confederate Army to fight against the United States were unworthy of being namesakes.
Hegseth renamed the installation as Fort Bragg, but his order said the name pays tribute to Pfc. Roland Bragg, a recipient of the Silver Star and Purple Heart for his actions during the Battle of the Bulge in World War 2.
The Harvey Milk LGBTQ Democratic Club was among the many to react to this development.
"Harvey Milk's legacy will live on with or without a military ship bearing his name, but the Trump administration's decision to remove his name from the USNS Harvey Milk clearly shows why we cannot give an inch on LGBTQ rights to this or any other far right government: they will not stop until they erase us. We won't let them," their statement read in part.
U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) condemned the defense secretary's decision. He said Milk's legacy would not be erased by the Trump administration. He called the move part of "Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth's petty culture wars and attempts to undermine the tremendous contributions and service of the LGBTQ+ community to our country." He added, "Price Month is a time for celebrating and honoring the LGBTQ+ community. Attempting to rename the USNS Harvey Milk only deepens the divides Trump has forged across our country."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump Promises More Weapons for Ukraine and Criticizes Putin
(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump said he'd ship more weapons to Ukraine, marking an apparent reversal after the Pentagon halted flows of some air-defense missiles and artillery shells to the country. Are Tourists Ruining Europe? How Locals Are Pushing Back Foreign Buyers Swoop on Cape Town Homes, Pricing Out Locals Trump's Gilded Design Style May Be Gaudy. But Don't Call it 'Rococo.' Denver City Hall Takes a Page From NASA In California, Pro-Housing 'Abundance' Fans Rewrite an Environmental Landmark 'We're going to send some more weapons,' Trump told reporters at the start of a dinner with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday evening. 'We have to. They have to be able to defend themselves. They're getting hit very hard now.' Trump didn't specify what the US would provide except to say the armaments would be 'defense weapons primarily.' The president's comments will offer a measure of relief to Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who spoke with Trump on Friday in an effort to get the halt lifted. Trump has also tried to broker peace in talks with Moscow, which have so far failed to end the war. Russia has been pounding Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities with record numbers of drones and missiles. Trump lamented the thousands of people who have been killed and said he wasn't happy with President Vladimir Putin for keeping up attacks. 'I'm disappointed, frankly, that President Putin hasn't stopped,' Trump said. 'I'm not happy about it.' The Pentagon said last week the pause was necessary while the US reviews its stockpiles and weighs the need to save weapons for other threats. While stockpile numbers are classified, the weapons Ukraine needs most aren't urgently required elsewhere and there was no immediate need to deny the country weapons that were already on their way, they said. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier Monday that Trump had told Zelenskiy in the Friday phone call he'd ordered a review of Pentagon munitions stockpiles after the US attack on Iran last month but didn't order the halt. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters Monday that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had ordered the review when he took office. SNAP Cuts in Big Tax Bill Will Hit a Lot of Trump Voters Too 'Telecom Is the New Tequila': Behind the Celebrity Wireless Boom For Brazil's Criminals, Coffee Beans Are the Target Sperm Freezing Is a New Hot Market for Startups Pistachios Are Everywhere Right Now, Not Just in Dubai Chocolate ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Halted military aid for Ukraine may start flowing again
Halted shipments of some American military aid to Ukraine could resume after a series of high-level meetings in Italy and Ukraine over the coming week, according to two people familiar with the planning. These meetings could be the key to resuming some of the aid, which POLITICO first reported were paused earlier this month. President Donald Trump's Ukraine envoy Keith Kellogg will meet with Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov in Rome at an international aid conference followed by a meeting in Kyiv this week and next, with the issue of aid sure to be at the top of the agenda. The Ukrainian government sees the resumption of air defense and precision munitions as critical to its war effort, as Russia has hit civilian targets hard in some of the largest drone and missile strikes of the war over the last two weeks. The U.S. has indicated to Kyiv that deliveries of engineering equipment and some armored vehicles will resume soon, though no timeline has been given yet, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to share details of ongoing discussions. Speaking to reporters on Monday night, Trump confirmed that more aid would be sent to Ukraine but did not offer specifics. "We're going to send some more weapons. We have to. They have to be able to defend themselves. They're getting hit very hard now ... We have to send more weapons, defensive weapons, primarily, but they're getting hit very, very hard. So many people are dying in that mess." The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment. The Kyiv meeting between Kellogg and Umerov was not originally intended to address U.S. military aid, and was 'set up before news of the arms pause came to light last week,' Kellogg spokesperson Morgan Murphy said in response to a request for comment about the meetings. The Pentagon's abrupt halt of missile defense and precision-guided munitions for Ukraine last week came as a shock to Ukraine and caught many lawmakers and Trump allies off guard. It also raised new questions among U.S. allies across the Atlantic about whether America was more broadly stepping back from military support for Kyiv. The munitions pause appeared counter to comments Trump made last month after meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the NATO summit in The Hague, where he indicated he was willing to step up the shipment of air defense systems to Ukraine. 'They do want to have the anti-missile missiles, as they call them, and we're going to see if we can make some available,' Trump said. 'They're very hard to get.' Trump discussed the aid pause on a call Friday with Zelenskyy, and also addressed a potential ceasefire agreement with Russia. The Ukrainian president said it was 'probably the best conversation we have had during this whole time, the most productive." That call came a day after Trump spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a conversation the president indicated did not go well. He was "very unhappy" with the Putin call, he told reporters over the weekend. "It just seems like he wants to go all the way and just keep killing people. It's not good. I wasn't happy with it.' In contrast, he indicated that the call with Zelenskyy was more productive, and suggested that more weapons could soon be on the way. When asked about supplying more Patriot air defense missiles to Ukraine — which were stopped under orders from the Pentagon — Trump replied, "Yeah, we might … they're going to need something because they're being hit pretty hard.' On Monday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt indicated that the aid stoppage wasn't permanent, portraying it as 'a pause, to review, to ensure that everything the Pentagon is pushing out there is in the best interests of our military and our men and women in uniform." Some of the weapons denied to Ukraine included 8,400 155mm artillery rounds, 142 Hellfire missiles, and 252 Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System missiles, which can precisely hit targets up to 50 miles away. Most significantly, the halted shipment also included 30 Patriot missiles used for shooting down Russian missiles and drones, which have been pounding apartment buildings and other civilian infrastructure in Kyiv. 'The air defense munitions — the Patriots — are obviously the big one because Russia is producing so many UAVs that are becoming harder to hit with Ukraine's mobile air defenses,' said Rob Lee, who studies the Russia-Ukraine war for the Foreign Policy Research Institute. 'Russia is actually targeting the defense industry, and sometimes they have success and they destroy factories, so providing air defense systems is important because it also helps Ukraine produce its own munitions so it can sustain the fight itself,' Lee added. The stepped-up Russian attacks killed at least 11 civilians and injured more than 80 others, including children, Ukrainian officials said Monday. Over the past week, Russia launched at least 1,270 drones, 39 missiles and 1,000 glide bombs at different areas of Ukraine, Zelenskyy said Monday. Eli Stokols and Megan Messerly contributed reporting.

Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Trump says U.S. will send more weapons to Ukraine
President Donald Trump said the United States would send 'some more weapons' to Ukraine, making the comment days after the White House announced the Pentagon had halted some such shipments to the country. 'We have to,' Trump said of the U.S. providing weapons to Ukraine, speaking to reporters during a dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 'They have to be able to defend themselves. They're getting hit very hard now.'