“It
has been suggested that we should rename as many as 10 of our
Legendary
Military Bases, such as Fort Bragg in North Carolina,
Fort
Hood in Texas, Fort Benning in Georgia, etc. These Monumental
and
very Powerful Bases have become part of a Great American Heritage,
and
a history of Winning, Victory, and Freedom.
“The
United States of America trained and deployed our HEROES on these
Hallowed Grounds, and won two World Wars. Therefore, my
Administration
will
not even consider the renaming of these Magnificent and Fabled
Military Installations. Our history as the Greatest Nation in the
World will not be
tampered
with. Respect our Military!”
--
Donald Trump, June 10. 2020
Trump said this despite Army spokesperson said Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy saying they were "open to a bi-partisan discussion" about renaming the bases. Military officials told Politico that the recent nationwide protests re-opened the issue and “made us start looking more at ourselves and the things that we do, and how that is communicated to the force as well as the American public.”
In addition, the Senate
Armed Services Committee approved an amendment to the annual military
spending bill that would require the Defense Department to change the
names of military bases and assets named for Confederate leaders.
In an essay for the
Atlantic, retired Army Gen. David Petraeus – who served at
Fort Bragg – called the continued use of the name “a mistake.”
Petraeus wrote …
“These bases are,
after all, federal installations, home to soldiers who swear an oath
to support and defend the Constitution of the United States. The
irony of training at bases named for those who took up arms against
the United States, and for the right to enslave others, is
inescapable to anyone paying attention.”
(David
Petraeus. “Take the Confederate Names Off Our Army Bases.”
The
Atlantic. June 9, 2020.)
Of course, Trump is not
paying attention.
In truth, Trump's
description of bases named after Confederate heroes – “Part of a
Great American Heritage, and a
history of Winning, Victory, and Freedom” – has nothing to do
with their names,
names that exist as symbols of racism and division. The “heritage”
and “winning” associated with these names is dark and celebratory
of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy.
The issue is not to take
anything away from American service personnel who “trained” at
the bases. Instead, it is to uplift their standing as bases with
names befitting true U.S. military heroes. And, Lord knows, there are
plenty of these heroes with the right stuff – American patriots
deserving of that honor.
What Trump
defends as “Magnificent and Fabled Military Installations” are,
in his eyes, immune from change in defense of equality. One must ask:
“Is
keeping the name of a traitor on a military facility what makes it
“magnificent and fabled”?
“And
he (Trump) may well be ill-informed enough that he has no idea that,
far from connoting power and winning, some of these base names
indicate the opposite. Fort Pickett was named after an inept
commander who was charged with war crimes. Fort Bragg was named for
another incompetent general 'known for pettiness and cruelty.' (By
the way, GeneralBragg was also a well-know slave owner with a largely
unsuccessful record in the Civil War.)
“Fort
Gordon was named after a Ku Klux Klan leader. Every damn one of them
was a loser in a bad cause. And their names were attached to military
facilities not to honor their courage or skill but to support the big
lie of the neo-Confederacy, the whitewashing of the lost cause in
order to perpetuate Jim Crow and the terrorism that created and
maintained it.”
--
Ed Kilgore, political columnist for New York magazine
and
the managing editor of the Democratic Strategist
As
Petraeus says, the definition of “equality”
has “repeatedly demonstrated the capacity to broaden.” America
continues to learn as it struggles with the true meaning of this
concept. The General concludes ...
“We
do not live in a country to which Braxton Bragg, Henry L. Benning, or
Robert E. Lee can serve as an inspiration. Acknowledging this fact is
imperative. Should it fail to do so, the Army, which prides itself on
leading the way in perilous times, will be left to fight a rearguard
action against a more inclusive American future, one that fulfills
the nation’s founding promise.”
Fred
Kaplan, American author and journalist, says Trump is, as usual,
clueless about the history of the country he supposedly leads. And
rather than take the lead on a movement to redress the symbolism of
white supremacy, he once again prefers to bask in what he sees as the
buzzwords of his base – strength, heroes, and military. This even
as decorated veterans, who embody those values more authentically
than he ever will, are coming to terms with the sinful roots of
certain aspects of their tradition.
About
coming to terms with injustice, Kaplan concludes ...
“This
answer would now be unacceptable to anyone besides Trump. The valor
of an officer can no longer be separated from the criminal depravity
of his cause, and many of the still-honored Confederate officers
lacked so much as valor. Nor, more broadly, can history be minimized
as the inanimate stuff of street signs, statues, or military bases.
“History
is a living thing. Those signs, statues, and bases mark the honoring
and therefore the legitimizing of the causes that their namesakes
fought for—causes that should never have been honored in the United
States of America. It is long past time to attach them to names and
causes that are worthy.”
(Fred
Kaplan. “Trump’s Support for Confederate Base Names Has Nothing
to Do With Respecting the Military.” Slate. June 10, 2020.)
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