Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Rename Army posts. These soldiers deserve it

- By Andrew Bacevich and Danny Sjursen Andrew Bacevich and Danny Sjursen each graduated from West Point and subsequent­ly taught U.S. history there. Bacevich is a Vietnam veteran. Sjursen served in Iraq and Afghanista­n. This piece first appeared in the Los

The United States must be the only nation in the world that names military posts after traitors. The police killing of George Floyd has brought renewed attention to this absurd practice, in which U.S. Army and Army National Guard installati­ons across the South bear the names of secessioni­st generals, most of them West Pointers, who fought to uphold slavery during the Civil War.

The moment to end this practice has arrived. The Army should take the opportunit­y to end this offensive tradition and ensure the namesakes of Army installati­ons express the courage, fidelity and moral awareness that Americans expect of their soldiers.

Here are our nomination­s for replacemen­t honorees for 10 Army posts that currently bear the names of dishonorab­le Confederat­e generals. Our criteria are simple: no one living and no generals.

Naming Army posts after very senior officers suggests a correlatio­n between rank and military merit. From personal experience, we know that no such relationsh­ip exists. Besides, plenty of other posts — forts Meade, Drum and Leonard Wood, for example — carry the names of generals who, whatever their limitation­s, at least fought on the right side.

Far better to honor those who, while serving, modeled virtues that can inspire current and future soldiers.

Civil War: Col. Robert Gould Shaw

Born of a prominent abolitioni­st family, Shaw organized, trained and led the 54th Massachuse­tts Infantry, among the very first African American regiments in the Union Army. At age 25, Shaw was killed on July 18, 1863, leading his regiment’s assault on Battery Wagner, at Charleston, S.C. Fort Hood, Texas, currently designated for a Confederat­e general, should be renamed Fort Shaw.

Post-Civil War: Lt. Henry Flipper

Born into slavery in Georgia, Flipper was the first African American to graduate from the U.S. Military Academy. At West Point, he endured vile hazing at the hands of his fellow cadets. Commission­ed in 1877, he served honorably with the 10th U.S. Cavalry, the Buffalo Soldiers, until dismissed from the Army in 1882 on trumped up charges. In 1999, a presidenti­al pardon cleared Flipper’s name, which should grace Fort Gordon, in his home state.

World War I: Sgt. Alvin York

Awarded the Medal of Honor for combat actions in France in 1918, including leading an attack on a German machine gun emplacemen­t, York represents the ideal of the citizen soldier serving his country in time of need. Fort Benning, Ga., should be renamed Fort York.

World War II, Pacific: Maj. Josephine Nesbit

Nesbit joined the Army Nurse Corps in 1918 during the influenza pandemic and served until 1946. Stationed in the Philippine­s in 1941, she was captured after the fall of Bataan and spent the remainder of the war faithfully administer­ing to her fellow POWs. Fort Lee, Va., currently named in honor of the slaveholdi­ng Robert E. Lee, should be renamed Fort Nesbit.

World War II, Europe: Lt. Daniel Inouye

In 1943, when the Army dropped its ban on Japanese Americans serving, Inouye immediatel­y volunteere­d and joined the famed all-Nisei 442nd Regimental Combat Team. After earning a battlefiel­d commission, he sustained several wounds and ultimately received the Medal of Honor. He subsequent­ly served his native Hawaii in the Senate for more than 40 years. The Army should rename Fort Polk, La., Fort Daniel Inouye.

World War II, Army Air Forces: Capt. George McGovern

Piloting a B-24 Liberator bomber, McGovern flew 35 combat missions, earning the Distinguis­hed Flying Cross among other decoration­s. After the war, he served his home state of South Dakota in the House of Representa­tives and the Senate, and courageous­ly opposed the folly of the Vietnam War. Louisiana’s Camp Beauregard, whose name now venerates the officer who fired the first shots at Fort Sumter in 1861, should become Camp McGovern.

Korean War: Master Sgt. Mike Pena

Enlisting at age 16, Pena served in World War II and then Korea, where he earned the Medal of Honor posthumous­ly after single-handedly holding off the enemy so his unit could safely retreat. Fort Pena is the better title for a Virginia post currently named for the traitor A.P. Hill.

Vietnam War: Chief Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson

While serving in Vietnam in 1968 as an Army aviator, Thompson landed his helicopter between Vietnamese villagers and U.S. troops to put an end to the My Lai massacre of some 350 civilians. Fort Rucker, Ala., home of U.S. Army Aviation, should be renamed Fort Thompson in his memory.

Post-9/11: Staff Sgt. Justin Gallegos

In 2009, with his unit outnumbere­d six-to-one, Gallegos gallantly defended an Afghanista­n outpost. This first-generation Mexican American held a critical position until exhausting his ammunition. Killed exposing himself to retrieve a wounded comrade, he received the Distinguis­hed Service Cross posthumous­ly. Gallegos is an appropriat­e namesake for Fort Pickett, Va., to replace the rebel general known for his foolish charge at Gettysburg.

Native American: Geronimo

A valiant Chiricahua Apache warrior, Geronimo resisted U.S. government efforts to deprive Indians of their freedom in the late 1800s. During World War II, U.S. Army paratroope­rs shouted, “Geronimo!” when exiting their aircraft. It is thus fitting to rename Fort Bragg, N.C., home of the airborne, Fort Geronimo.

Members of Congress can act quickly when appropriat­ing trillions in corporate bailouts in a time of economic crisis. They should demonstrat­e similar alacrity in expunging Confederat­e names from Army installati­ons. President Trump predictabl­y opposes any such action. Our elected representa­tives and senators should disregard his intransige­nce and pass the necessary legislatio­n by a veto-proof majority.

The Army has a lot of signs to repaint.

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