**Supreme Military Rebranding: Trump Moves Forward With Department of Defense Name Change**
### What’s Going On
On September 5, 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that authorizes the Department of Defense to adopt the historic name “United States Department of War” as a **secondary title**.
Under the order, the Secretary of Defense—and the department’s communications—can use terms like “Secretary of War” and “Department of War,” though the legal name remains unchanged until Congress acts.
Earlier, a White House-backed report indicated the administration was “moving forward” with this change, discussing rebranding efforts even before the order’s formal signing.
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### Why It Matters
* **Symbolism over statute**: The order signals a shift in tone—a return to more aggressive, war-oriented rhetoric rather than a purely defensive posture. Trump stated that the old name “just sounded to me better” and aligned with past U.S. victory. ([Reuters][3])
* **Practical implications**: While the department retains “Defense” as its statutory name, the rebrand affects:
* Public communications
* Department websites (one was redirected to “war.gov”)
* Ceremonial usage of titles and signs
* **Congress still required**: Formal name changes of federal departments require legislation. Thus, the executive order sets a path but doesn’t finalize the change alone.
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### Reactions – Support and Criticism
* **Supporters** say the renaming restores a sense of clarity and strength. Secretary Pete Hegseth, who backs the move, described the renaming as aligning with a “warrior ethos” and moving away from what he called “tepid legality.”
* **Critics** argue the change is largely symbolic, potentially expensive, and distracts from more meaningful military priorities like equipment, readiness, or troop welfare. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) expressed concern that money might be better spent supporting military families rather than rebranding.
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### What’s Next
* **Implementation**: The department is already using the “Department of War” label in certain contexts. However, full switchover depends on Congress passing a law to officially change the name.
* **Budget & cost questions**: Changing signage, websites, uniforms, seals and documentation could cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Some cost estimates have raised concern.
* **Policy and posture**: Observers say the renaming is more than cosmetic—it may foreshadow a shift in U.S. military doctrine toward more offensive operations rather than largely defensive. The timing of recent U.S. military deployments supports that reading.
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### The Bigger Picture
This move reflects a broader theme of the Trump administration: reversing institutional changes from previous years, restoring older titles and names, and re-emphasizing strength, symbolism, and traditional national-security frameworks. While the renaming may seem like a branding exercise, many analysts believe it has strategic meaning—shifting how the U.S. military perceives itself and how it wants to be perceived abroad.
The name of the largest federal department is rarely changed—and the fact that this name change is being pushed signals a willingness to reshape not just language, but underlying military culture and posture.