<![CDATA[Firearms]]><![CDATA[Military]]><![CDATA[Pete Hegseth]]><![CDATA[Second Amendment]]><![CDATA[Terrorism]]>Featured

Military Bases Are No Longer Gun-Free Zones – PJ Media

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has overturned the controversial rule banning firearms from military installations.

Up until now, it was nearly impossible for servicemen to obtain permission to carry personal firearms on military posts and bases.  That is about the change. “Not all enemies are foreign, nor are they all outside our borders,” said Hegseth in an April 2 video. “Some are domestic. Confirming your God-given right to self protection is what I’m signing into action today. And I’m proud to do so.”





There have been multiple murders or mass casualty events on bases in the last decade, numerous drone incursions on military property, and a growing trend of foreigners breaching military bases, so there is good reason to think servicemen should be able to carry firearms on installations. Besides which, the overwhelming majority of mass shootings occur in gun-free zones. But Hegseth above all based his argument on the Constitution.

“Our great republic was founded on a simple yet bold idea: our rights, as citizens, are not granted to us by government, but instead, by God,” the secretary said. “250 years ago, the Revolutionary War was fought to secure our God-given rights. The Second Amendment to our Constitution enshrines the right of all citizens to carry weapons to protect themselves, their families, and their fellow countrymen.”

And if any citizens can be trusted with guns, Hegseth argued, it is servicemen. “The War Department’s uniformed service members are trained at the highest and unwavering standards. These war fighters, entrusted with the safety of our nation, are no less entitled to exercise their God-given right to keep and bear arms than any other American,” he emphasized. 





Indeed, Hegseth stated, “Our warfighters defend the right of others to carry, they should be able to carry themselves. Recent events like what happened at Fort Stewart, Holloman Air Force Base, or Pensacola Naval Air Station have made clear that some threats are closer to home than we would like.”

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In 2019, a member of the Royal Saudi Air Force committed a terrorist attack at Pensacola’s Naval Air Station that killed three sailors and injured multiple others. In August 2025, Sgt. Quornelius Radford shot five fellow soldiers at Georgia’s Fort Stewart. Most recently, on March 17, civilian Ashanti Stewart killed herself after shooting and injuring a service member at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico.

Hegseth reflected, “In these instances, minutes are a lifetime. And our service members have the courage and training to make those precious short minutes count. Before today, it was virtually impossible — most people probably don’t know this — it was virtually impossible for War Department personnel to get permission to carry and store their own personal weapons, aligned with the state laws where we operate our installations. I mean, effectively, our bases across the country were gun free zones, unless you’re training, or unless you are a military policeman, you couldn’t carry.”





That is a potentially dangerous state of affairs, Hegseth argued. “You couldn’t bring your own firearm for your own personal protection onto post. Well, that’s no longer. The memo I’m signing today directs installation commanders to allow requests for personal protection, to carry a privately owned firearm, with the presumption that it is necessary for personal protection.” 

He clarified, “If a request is for some reason denied, the reason for that denial will be in writing and will explain in detail the basis for that direction. Again, the presumption is, service members will be able to have their Second Amendment right on post.” That way, if there are more attempted terrorists and mass shooters, servicemen will have their personal firearms ready.


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