The Commercial Appeal

Pentagon to release its latest transgende­r policy

- Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON – The Pentagon on Wednesday will sweep away Trumpera policies that largely banned transgende­r people from serving in the military, issuing new rules that offer them wider access to medical care and assistance with gender transition, defense officials told The Associated Press.

The new department regulation­s allow transgende­r people who meet military standards to enlist and serve openly in their self-identified gender, and they will be able to get medically necessary transition-related care authorized by law, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal decisions not yet made public.

The changes come after a twomonth Pentagon review aimed at developing guidelines for the new policy, which was announced by President Joe Biden just days after he took office in January.

Biden’s executive order overturned the Trump policy and immediatel­y prohibited any service member from being forced out of the military on the basis of gender identity. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin then gave the Pentagon two months to finalize the more detailed regulation­s that the military services will follow.

The new rules also prohibit discrimina­tion based on gender identity. Their expected release Wednesday coincides with Internatio­nal Transgende­r Day of Visibility.

Austin has also called for a reexaminat­ion of the records of service members who were discharged or denied reenlistme­nt because of gender identity issues under the previous policy.

Until a few years ago, service members could be discharged from the military for being transgende­r, but that changed during the Obama administra­tion.

In 2016, the Pentagon announced that transgende­r people already serving in the military would be allowed to serve openly, and that by July 2017, they would be allowed to enlist.

After Donald Trump took office, however, his administra­tion delayed the enlistment date and called for additional study. A few weeks later, Trump caught military leaders by surprise, tweeting that the government wouldn’t accept or allow transgende­r people to serve “in any capacity” in the military.

After a lengthy and complicate­d legal battle and additional reviews, the Defense Department in April 2019 approved a policy that fell short of an allout ban but barred transgende­r troops and recruits from transition­ing to another sex and required most individual­s to serve in what the administra­tion called their “birth gender.”

Under that policy, currently serving transgende­r troops and anyone who had signed an enlistment contract before the effective date could continue with plans for hormone treatments and gender transition if they had been diagnosed with gender dysphoria.

But after that date, no one with gender dysphoria who was taking hormones or had transition­ed to another gender was allowed to enlist. Troops that were already serving and were diagnosed with gender dysphoria were required to serve in the gender assigned at birth and were barred from taking hormones or getting transition surgery.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP FILE ?? “Equality flags” fly during a Capitol Hill event in support of transgende­r members of the military.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP FILE “Equality flags” fly during a Capitol Hill event in support of transgende­r members of the military.

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