The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pentagon sets limits on transgende­r troops

-

WASHINGTON: The US Defence Department signed a memo on Tuesday that would enforce limitation­s on transgende­r people serving in the military, a policy that has been the subject of court challenges.

The policy will take effect on April 12 and will bar most transgende­r individual­s from serving if they require hormone treatments or transition surgery.

The memo, signed by David Norquist, currently the No.2 official at the Pentagon, will allow service secretarie­s to issue waivers on a case-by-case basis.

President Donald Trump announced in July 2017 a ban on transgende­r people serving in the military.

He later accepted Pentagon recommenda­tions to limit the ban to individual­s with a history of gender dysphoria, defined as ‘those who may require substantia­l medical treatment,’ and allowing some exceptions.

A series of court challenges had put the policy on hold. But the US Supreme Court in January lifted lower-court rulings that had blocked the policy, allowing it to go into effect.

Trump’s decision to bar many transgende­r troops reversed a landmark 2016 policy of his Democratic predecesso­r, Barack Obama, to let transgende­r people for the first time serve openly in the armed forces and receive medical care to transition genders.

Trump cited military focus and medical costs for rolling back the policy. A 2016 Pentagonco­mmissioned study found that any impact on cost or military readiness from having transgende­r troops would be marginal. It estimated there were around 2,450 transgende­r troops at the time.

Advocates for transgende­r people criticised the Trump policy.

“The Trump administra­tion is determined to bring back ‘don’t ask, don’t tell,’ a policy that forced service members to choose between serving their country and telling the truth about who they were,” Aaron Belkin, director of the Palm Center LGBT-rights think tank said. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia