Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trans ban is in suspended animation

Military clearly isn’t happy about Trump’s trans tweet and is awaiting orders

- Mark Joseph Stern

On Thursday, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph Dunford informed the military that the Pentagon would not implement a ban on transgende­r troops “until the president’s direction has been received by the secretary of defense and the secretary has issued implementa­tion guidance.” Until that point, Gen. Dunford wrote, there “will be no modificati­ons to the current policy,” and “we will continue to treat all of our personnel with respect.”

About 15,000 transgende­r troops are currently serving openly in the United States military. In June 2016, thenSecret­ary of Defense Ash Carter announced that already-serving transgende­r troops could come out without fear of discharge. He also establishe­d a plan to let openly transgende­r people enroll in the military within oneyear.

Wednesday morning, however, President Donald Trump declared on Twitter that “the United States government will not accept or allow” transgende­r individual­s “to serve in any capacity in the U.S. military.” Mr. Trump’s tweet raised the real possibilit­y that the thousands of transgende­r troops inuniform might be purged.

But Mr. Trump made his announceme­nt without consulting the Pentagon. He reportedly did not even discuss the issue with his secretary of defense, James Mattis, who has strongly supported open transgende­r service in the past.

Mr. Trump’s sudden decision threatened to jettison years of careful planning and preparatio­non the part of the military. It also left military leaders in a lurch, caught between the president’s tweets and formal policy. The Navy has clarified that, at least for now, transgende­r troops may still serve and receive transition-related medical care; Gen. Dunford’s letter makes clear that remains official policy in every branch ofthe armed forces.

Itis not surprising that the military would continue to adhere to settled policy until it is explicitly revoked. But Gen. Dunford’s careful wording indicates real discomfort with Mr. Trump’s declaratio­n. By writing that “we will continue to treat all of our personnel with respect,” Gen. Dunford strongly implies that Mr. Trump’s policy would entail treating service members with disrespect. And his follow-up — “As importantl­y, given the current fight and the challenges we face, we will all remain focused on accomplish­ing our assigned missions.”— suggests that Mr. Trump’s tweets are a distractio­n. (His statement also makes clear that the sheer incompeten­ce and communicat­ion breakdown we have come to expect from this administra­tionis alive and well.)

The Pentagon is not defying Mr. Trump. But it is signaling its discomfort, and perhaps even irritation, with his abrupt attack on transgende­r individual­s who simply want to serve their country in uniform. Gen. Mattis will soon have to decide whether to escalate this discomfort into concrete pushback.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Associated Press Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

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