Restore the Military cover art

Restore the Military

Restore the Military

By: Doug Truax and Will Thibeau
Listen for free

Hosted by military veterans Doug Truax and Will Thibeau, Restore the Military podcast is designed to cut through Pentagon spin and focus on real legislative reform.© 2026 Restore the Military Art
Episodes
  • Episode 5: The Battle for Control of America's Military
    Jul 14 2026

    Dismantling the Pentagon Bureaucracy: Joint Staff Reform & the First Goldwater-Nichols Overhaul in 39 Years

    The Joint Staff was created in 1986 as a lean planning body to fix the command failures behind Desert One and Grenada. Today it's a 4,000-plus person bureaucracy that competes with the very Services it was built to coordinate — and it's never been comprehensively reformed. Until now.

    In this episode of Restore the Military, Doug Truax and Will Thibeau break down the FY 2027 NDAA provision that would cap Joint Staff personnel at 1,500, eliminate mandatory joint duty as a promotion requirement, return general and flag officer selection to the Service Secretaries, and stand up a bipartisan commission to conduct the first full review of Goldwater-Nichols in nearly four decades.

    They dig into:
    -Why the 1986 Joint Staff has grown into an institution that rivals the Office of the Secretary of War and the combatant commands for power and resources
    -How mandatory joint duty pulled the Pentagon's best operational officers out of command and into staff jobs — and what eliminating it would mean
    -What the reform package actually does: personnel caps, statutory limits under 10 U.S.C. § 155, relocation outside the Pentagon, and more
    -Why the Goldwater-Nichols commission may be the most consequential — and most survivable — piece of the whole package
    -The institutional playbook the Joint Staff will run to kill this in conference, and why a public White House signal is the deciding factor
    -Why an operating system built for 1986 warfare hasn't kept pace with cyber, space, autonomous systems, and great-power competition

    Goldwater-Nichols was the right answer in 1986. It's not the right answer in 2026 — and the institution has never reformed itself voluntarily. Congress has to do it.

    Show More Show Less
    19 mins
  • Episode 4: How America’s Military Academies Lost Their Way
    Jul 7 2026

    West Point was built to produce warriors. So was Annapolis. So was the Air Force Academy. At some point, the mission changed — and nobody voted for it.

    In this episode, Doug Truax (West Point graduate) and Will Thibeau break down exactly what has happened to the officer formation pipeline: critical race theory in academy curricula, ROTC programs held hostage by campus DEI mandates, and a military commissioning officers through institutions that openly hold it in contempt.

    Then they lay out the fix — including a proposed 12-week tactical commissioning pilot designed to compete the academies into reform without waiting for Congress to force it.

    The colonels and generals of 2045 are the second lieutenants of 2025. The pipeline either produces people who can win wars — or people who can't. This episode is about making sure it produces the former.

    Topics covered:
    • What West Point, Annapolis, and the Air Force Academy actually look like today
    • Why ROTC at civilian universities is an even bigger problem
    • The tactical commissioning pilot program explained
    • Legislative history: FY2024–FY2027 NDAA reforms
    • The institutional resistance playbook — and how to recognize it

    Show More Show Less
    20 mins
  • Episode 3: Fixing the Military's Broken Incentive System
    Jun 30 2026

    Is the military paying its warriors what they're worth?

    A Pentagon staff officer behind a desk and an infantry platoon leader who took fire yesterday earn the same base pay. In this episode, Doug Truax and Will Thibeau break down the Elite Warrior Incentive Program — a proposed structural overhaul of how the military compensates its combat arms personnel — and why the current pay table sends the wrong message to the people pulling the hardest assignments.

    In this episode:
    • The mid-career retention crisis hemorrhaging experienced NCOs and junior officers — and the $75K–$120K replacement cost the institution keeps explaining away
    • What a formal Elite Warrior Designation would actually require to earn and keep
    • The full incentive stack: special pay, deployment bonuses, VA priority enrollment, and expanded federal hiring preference
    • Why visible distinctions like the Ranger tab and SEAL trident drive aspiration — and how a pay differential does the same thing in the wallet
    • What it will take to get this through the FY2027 NDAA

    The pay table tells soldiers what the institution values. Right now, it says combat and bureaucracy are the same thing.

    Show More Show Less
    15 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet