War Secretary Pete Hegseth stopped by Washington’s Meridian Hill Park on Thursday morning to honor the National Guard troops deployed to the nation’s capital.
Hegseth, who appeared along with acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and White House official Stephen Miller, addressed approximately 250 National Guard troops gathered around the newly renovated fountain amid the sweltering heat wave.
“Thanks for waiting out here in the sun. I’m to blame. Sorry, I had a meeting go long. I never want to make a formation stand out any longer than it has to because I’ve stood in your formation before, waiting for somebody to show up, so I can get on and do my job,” Hegseth said, later adding that the protests are the “sound of ingrates, of ingratitude, of people who are so blinded by ideology they can’t see law and order and common sense in front of them, that there’s nothing ideological about this group.”
He was greeted by dozens of protesters who were kept outside the park, though their chants could be heard during the officials’ remarks.
He continued: “There’s nothing political about this exercise. Law and order is something all Americans deserve, black, white, rich, poor, man or woman, from D.C. or far-flung places in this country. And the beautiful thing is, when I look out at that, this group, that’s all of you from all across this great country — you’re not from Washington, most of you, but this is your capital, and you believe in this 250th year that it should be safe.”
The secretary also honored and called for a moment of silence for the two National Guard officers who were shot in November. Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, 20, died from her injuries the next day, and Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, was critically wounded but survived.
Since returning to the White House, President Donald Trump has ordered the deployment of National Guard troops to several cities, including Los Angeles; D.C.; Memphis, Tennessee; Portland, Oregon; Chicago; and New Orleans, primarily to handle unrest. There have been protests in several of the cities where they were deployed about their deployment orders.
NATIONAL GUARD DOMESTIC DEPLOYMENTS COULD COST MORE THAN $1 BILLION IN 2026
“It was just about one year ago today when President Trump said that he looked around this city, the capital of the greatest country in the history of civilization, and didn’t like what he saw,” Blanche said. “He didn’t like the crime, he didn’t like the way it looked, and he instructed us to do something about it. And that’s exactly what we’ve done.”
A Congressional Budget Office estimate from January found that continuing the deployments at their end-of-2025 size would cost about $93 million per month, and that deploying 1,000 National Guard personnel to a U.S. city in 2026 would cost $18 million to $21 million per month, depending largely on local cost-of-living differences.









