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Hegseth also referenced a 2025 shooting at Fort Stewart in Georgia that left five soldiers injured. Officials said the suspect, an Army sergeant, used a personal handgun before being subdued and taken into custody.
Current Defense Department policy has prohibited most military personnel from carrying personal firearms on base without approval from a senior commander. The rules also require strict storage procedures when firearms are not in use.
Typically, service members must check weapons in and out of secure storage for approved activities such as hunting or range use. Outside of those situations, military police are generally the only personnel armed on base.
Schardt said most active-duty service members who die by suicide use personally owned weapons rather than military-issued firearms. She said the policy could lead to “an increase in gun suicide and other gun violence.”
“Our military installations are among the most guarded, protected properties in the world, and they’ve never been ‘gun-free zones,’” Schardt said. “If there is a problem with violent crime on these installations, then the Secretary of Defense has an obligation to alert the American people and describe how he’s working to prevent that crime,” she said.
Hegseth has warned that Iran has the ability to hit London with missiles, warning about the global threat coming from Tehran that should have more U.S.-allies concerned.
Last Month, the Indian Ocean island, which is about 4,000 kilometers from Iran, was attacked.
Without explicitly naming Diego Garcia, Hegseth said: “Two days ago they [Iran] shot two failed missiles on a target 4,000km away. For years, they told the world that their missiles could only range [2,000] kilometres. Surprise. Yet again, Iran lie.”