America once made a conscious choice to step away from the language of war. In 1947, President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act, reorganizing our armed forces after World War II. Two years later, the Department of War was renamed the Department of Defense — a symbolic but vital shift.
“War” sounded imperial, aggressive, endless. “Defense” implied protection, restraint, unity.
Now, President Donald Trump proposes to drag us backward — resurrecting the “Department of War.” In his own words, Trump said recently: “Defense is too defensive. … It used to be called the Department of War and it had a stronger sound. We won everything.”
This is not just semantics. It is a declaration of posture. It tells the world America no longer pretends to defend; it prepares to wage. And here is the bitter irony: A man angling for the Nobel Peace Prize now elevates war as the organizing principle of American power. That is not the pathway of peace. That is the language of empire.
“A man angling for the Nobel Peace Prize now elevates war as the organizing principle of American power.”
Symbolism of language
Words matter. They shape how we see ourselves and how the world sees us. For generations, the United States had a Department of War — from 1789 through 1947. After the devastation of two world wars, America deliberately chose a different course.
“Defense” was not just a label; it was a commitment to restraint. As historians noted in the Washington Post, the 1949 renaming to “Defense” reflected America’s postwar reorganization and a commitment to restraint — not political correctness, as some now suggest.
To rename the department once again as “War” is not a neutral choice. It shifts the national psyche. “Defense” conjures protection — of children, homes, allies. “War” glorifies destruction, conquest and fear. Names don’t just reflect reality; they create it. If America starts calling its military machine the “Department of War,” the world will not hear prudence — it will hear aggression.
The hypocrisy of peace rhetoric
The contradiction could not be clearer. A president openly craving a Nobel Peace Prize presides over the resurrection of a Department of War. He speaks the language of peace on the world stage but the language of militarism at home. Which one is true?
This hypocrisy erodes credibility abroad, where allies will question whether America is preparing to defend freedom or preparing for endless conflict. It confuses citizens at home, many of whom desperately want investment in schools, health care and climate solutions rather than an ever-expanding war budget.
Peace is not weakness. It is strength measured by restraint. This administration’s doublespeak proves it has no interest in restraint.
Shame on the silence — and a call to act
Perhaps the most disheartening part of this entire charade is not the proposal itself, but the silence that surrounds it. Where is Congress? Where are the faith leaders, the civic leaders, the veterans who know firsthand that war is not glory but grief?
Too many are quiet. Too many are complicit. Meanwhile, in Washington, the push is already under way: Rep. Greg Steube has filed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that would officially rename the Pentagon back to the Department of War.
“It is as if the normalization of war has become so complete that even its explicit branding no longer shocks us.”
In an age of nonstop outrage, somehow renaming America’s central military institution back to “War” has barely stirred debate. It is as if the normalization of war has become so complete that even its explicit branding no longer shocks us.
But silence is not neutrality; it is permission. By saying nothing, lawmakers allow the rebranding of America’s mission from defense to aggression. By looking the other way, they signal that war is not only inevitable but desirable. That silence dishonors every soldier who fought believing they defended, not conquered.
If elected officials will not speak up, then citizens must. Faith leaders must reclaim their pulpits as moral beacons, reminding us that war is not holy and not inevitable. Veterans must testify that war is not a game but a grave. Teachers, parents, students — all of us — must tell our representatives that America will not be defined by the politics of destruction.
Why war is nothing to celebrate
War is not glory. War is graves. It is the sound of folded flags being handed to children too young to understand why their parent is never coming home. It is the trauma carried in the minds of veterans who fought not for conquest, but because they were told it was necessary. It is billions siphoned from schools and hospitals to fund weapons that never can heal a wound.
To rename America’s military as a Department of War is to trivialize this suffering. It is to package violence as strength and destruction as destiny. But war never has been destiny; it has always been failure — the collapse of diplomacy, the bankruptcy of imagination.
Consider what America has achieved when it pursued peace instead: The Marshall Plan rebuilding Europe, peace treaties ending generations of conflict, coalitions that protected human rights without firing a shot. These were not acts of weakness. They proved greatness comes not from the ability to wage war endlessly, but from the courage to prevent it.
“Greatness comes not from the ability to wage war endlessly, but from the courage to prevent it.”
America’s greatness is in its ideals
America always has been at its best not when it glorifies power, but when it elevates principle. What makes this nation great is not its arsenal, but its values: liberty, diversity, opportunity, justice. Our strength lies in the bold experiment that people from every faith, every race, every corner of the world can live together and shape a common destiny.
When Lincoln called on America’s “better angels,” he wasn’t summoning us to glorify violence. When Martin Luther King Jr. dreamed of freedom ringing across this land, he wasn’t picturing bombs falling overseas. America’s greatness always has been rooted in the pursuit of peace — peace grounded in justice, secured by fairness, guided by courage.
Renaming the Department of Defense as the Department of War abandons that heritage. It replaces vision with vengeance. It signals to the world that America no longer believes its own ideals are enough — that we must anchor our identity not in freedom, but in force.
This is not a branding exercise. It is a battle for America’s soul. It tells our children violence is virtue. It tells the world America has abandoned its ideals.
But words also can be resistance. “Defense” still means restraint. “Peace” still means hope. If we choose to speak them, to defend them, to demand that they remain our guiding principles, then we prove America has not surrendered to cynicism.
War is not play. War is not politics. War is not peace. It is the last resort when every other path has failed, and to glorify it is to betray the sacrifices of those who prayed never to see it again.
We must not be silent. We must not normalize this regression. America’s greatness is not measured by how quickly we run to war, but by how boldly we pursue peace.
If our leaders will not say it, then we must: This is not the direction of a great nation. This is a step backward into darkness. And we will not let America be defined by war.
Stuart C. Lord is a civic leader, CEO of Y Solve Foundry and a founding member of the Y Solve Lab and founder of the Declaration of Respect. Based in Boulder, Colo., he has spent his career advancing nonviolence, interfaith collaboration and ethical leadership. He is recognized for building bridges across communities and championing justice with a vision rooted in service and respect.


