Albany Times Union

Duty, Honor, Outrage

Change to West Point’s mission statement sparks controvers­y

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEST POINT, N.Y. — “Duty, Honor, Country” has been the motto of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point since 1898. That motto isn’t changing, but a decision to take those words out of the school’s lesser-known mission statement is still generating outrage.

Officials at the 222-year-old military academy 60 miles north of New York City recently reworked the one-sentence mission statement, which is updated periodical­ly, usually with little fanfare.

The school’s “Duty, Honor, Country,” motto first made its way into that mission statement in 1998.

The new version declares that the academy’s mission is “To build, educate, train, and inspire the Corps of Cadets to be commission­ed leaders of character committed to the Army Values and ready for a lifetime of service to the Army and Nation.”

“As we have done nine times in the past century, we have updated our mission statement to now include the Army Values,” academy spokespers­on Col. Terence Kelley said Thursday. Those values — spelled out in other documents — are loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity and personal courage, he said.

Still, some people saw the change in wording as nefarious.

“West Point is going woke. We’re watching the slow death of our country,” conservati­ve radio host Jeff Kuhner complained in a post on the social media platform X.

Rachel Campos-duffy, cohost of the Fox network’s “Fox & Friends Weekend,” wrote on the platform that West Point has gone “full globalist” and is “Purposely tanking recruitmen­t of young Americans patriots to make room for the illegal mercenarie­s.”

West Point Superinten­dent Lt. Gen. Steve Gilland said in a statement that “Duty, Honor, Country is foundation­al to the United States Military Academy’s culture and will always remain our motto.”

“It defines who we are as an institutio­n and as graduates of West Point,” he said. “These three hallowed words are the hallmark of the cadet experience and bind the Long Gray Line together across our great history.”

Kelley said the motto is carved in granite over the entrance to buildings, adorns cadets’ uniforms and is used as a greeting by plebes, as West Point freshmen are called, to upper-class cadets.

The mission statement is less ubiquitous, he said, though plebes are required to memorize it and it appears in the cadet handbook “Bugle Notes.”

 ?? Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/associated Press ?? “Duty, Honor, Country” has been the motto of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point since 1898. The motto isn’t changing, but a decision to take those words out of the school’s lesser-known mission statement is generating outrage in certain quarters.
Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/associated Press “Duty, Honor, Country” has been the motto of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point since 1898. The motto isn’t changing, but a decision to take those words out of the school’s lesser-known mission statement is generating outrage in certain quarters.

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