Roughly 50,000 to 60,000 civilian jobs will be cut in the Department of Defense, but nearly 21,000 workers who took a voluntary resignation plan are leaving in the coming months, a senior DOD official told reporters Tuesday.
To reach the goal of a 5% to 8% cut in a civilian workforce of more than 900,000, the official said, the Pentagon aims to slash about 6,000 positions a month by simply not replacing workers who routinely leave.
A key concern is that service members may then be tapped to fill those civilian jobs. But the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to provide personnel details, said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth wants to ensure the cuts don't hurt military readiness.
The cuts are part of the broader effort by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), including Trump adviser Elon Musk, to slash the federal workforce and eliminate waste and abuse within U.S. agencies.
Acknowledging that "some" military veterans will be among the civilians let go, the official would not estimate how many but agreed it could be thousands.
The DOD is using three ways to accomplish the workforce cuts: voluntary resignations, firing probationary workers and cutting jobs as employees routinely leave. The official said the military services and Pentagon officials are going over the personnel on a case-by-case basis to ensure cuts don't affect critical national security jobs.
Plans to cut probationary workers — which the Pentagon said targeted about 5,400 of the roughly 54,000 in the department — are already on hold due to court challenges.
The official added that Hegseth is confident the staffing cuts can be done without negatively affecting military readiness.
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