Robert Besser
07 Mar 2025, 15:07 GMT+10
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Pentagon told its civilian employees that they must provide a list of five bullet points detailing their accomplishments from the previous week, after initially saying they did not need to respond to the demand by cost-cutting czar Elon Musk.
The memo, signed by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and dated February 27, follows days of confusion over whether federal workers needed to reply to the Musk-inspired email last weekend from the Office of Personnel Management, the U.S. government's human resources department.
Despite some agency heads telling staff they did not need to comply with the email, Musk was undeterred and said workers would have "another chance" to respond to his ultimatum that they justify their jobs or risk termination.
Musk, a tech billionaire who was the biggest donor to Trump's election campaign, is overseeing an unprecedented and rapid downsizing of the U.S. government, which has included dismantling entire departments and sacking tens of thousands of staff across the country.
Last weekend, the Pentagon told staff to ignore the initial OPM email sent on March 1. But the new memo said Pentagon civilian employees must reply to a new email they received on March 3.
"Submissions must exclude classified or sensitive information," the memo seen by Reuters said. It said that if employees did not reply, it may lead to "further review."
The Pentagon has some 950,000 civilian employees. Last week, the Pentagon said it would start cutting 5,400 jobs as part of Trump's drive to slash the federal workforce.
The Pentagon declined to comment.
Get a daily dose of Miami Mirror news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Miami Mirror.
More InformationDETROIT, Michigan: General Motors is hitting pause on production of its BrightDrop electric vans in Ontario, Canda, citing the need...
BERLIN, Germany: Talks between the EU and China could pave the way for a shift from tariffs to minimum price agreements on Chinese...
BEIJING, China: Tesla has halted new orders in China for its two U.S.-made premium models as trade tensions between Washington and...
NEW YORK, New York - Automakers and tech companies helped to lift U.S, stock indices Monday as stock markets around the world saw a...
NEW DELHI, India: India is pushing to fast-track a trade agreement with the United States following a temporary pause on new tariffs,...
HANOI, Vietnam: Vietnam is preparing a series of trade enforcement measures as it scrambles to shield itself from sweeping U.S. tariffs,...
WASHINGTON, D.C: U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has canceled several technology service contracts worth US$5.1 billion. These...
WASHINGTON, D.C: U.S. President Donald Trump said this week that farmers might be allowed to ask the government to keep some farmworkers...
BEIJING, China: As tensions with Washington deepen, Chinese President Xi Jinping is turning his focus to Southeast Asia, with a diplomatic...
PASADENA, California: Because many people are worried about dangerous chemicals in smoke, ash, and debris from recent wildfires, Los...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: President Donald Trump, who had often complained about weak water pressure in showers, has signed an order to remove...
NEW DELHI, India: Apple has ramped up shipments of iPhones from India to the United States, chartering aircraft to move hundreds of...