Pentagon cuts academic ties with elite universities and think tanks |
The Pentagon is severing or limiting academic ties with nearly two dozen prominent universities and several major think tanks, citing concerns about “liberal ideologies” and what Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth described as “anti-American values” and “wokeness.” Beginning in September, service members will be barred from attending certain graduate programs and fellowships at institutions including Harvard (previously banned), MIT, Princeton, Yale, Brown, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, Columbia, Carnegie Mellon, and others. The Defense Department is also restricting ties with leading Washington think tanks such as the Brookings Institution, the Atlantic Council, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Currently, 93 military students are enrolled in graduate-level programs at the affected institutions, with the largest group at Harvard. Many of the programs focus on national and international security for mid- and senior-level officers. The department said it is considering shifting military education partnerships to state universities and conservative institutions such as Liberty University and Hillsdale College. The move is part of a broader Trump administration effort to reshape higher education and return education policy authority to the states, according to officials.