USA TODAY International Edition

Blindsidin­g the Joint Chiefs is no way to set military policy

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If there was any further doubt about the content of President Trump’s character, it was clarified by this week’s triple- tweet banning of transgende­r troops.

In a clipped 62 words, the president betrayed an entire class of people, all for the sake of advancing a budget bill ( to fund his border wall) and feeding red meat to his base ( to counter discontent over his cyber bullying of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a conservati­ve favorite).

The transgende­r ban represents wrongheade­d policy done the wrong way, as evidenced by Thursday’s news that the Joint Chiefs of Staff were blindslide­d by Trump’s Twitter blast.

Not surprising­ly, the abrupt announceme­nt produced more questions than answers, considerin­g that hundreds of transgende­r troops are already serving openly in the military and have been for the past year. Are they to be immediatel­y dismissed?

Attempting to provide some clarity and adult supervisio­n, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford, stated the obvious: that tweets are not official government doctrine. Dunford said Thursday that until the White House explains itself in clear and official guidance, transgende­r troops will not be impacted and will continue to be treated with respect.

How did it come to this?

According to an account in Politico, Trump had two problems: He wanted to advance a defense funding bill that would, among other things, finance his border wall — a measure stalled by a dispute over whether the military should pay for the tiny number of transgende­r troops who seek gender reassignme­nt surgery. He also wanted to dial back conservati­ve anger over his abuse of Sessions.

Solution? Jettison transgende­r troops right out of the military.

Never mind that Trump, during last year’s presidenti­al campaign, had vowed to protect the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r community and be a “real friend.” Never mind that perhaps thousands of transgende­r troops are serving honorably, some of them in combat zones. And never mind that Trump’s move goes far beyond even what House Republican­s wanted.

The commander in chief's claims — that transgende­r troops are a “tremendous” burden and a disruption — are baseless. A RAND study estimates that of the 1,320 to 6,630 transgende­r troops in the active- duty military, only about 45 per year will seek gender- transition surgery. Total medical costs for all transgende­r troops amount to about onetenth of 1% of the military’s health care budget.

Eighteen other nations have transgende­r men and women serving in their armed forces, including Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel and the United Kingdom. The study concluded that allowing transgende­r personnel to serve openly will have “minimal impact on readiness.”

The battle over discrimina­tion in the U. S. military has been long and hard. Time and again, the armed forces have led the nation in breaking down barriers, first to African Americans, then women, and then gays and lesbians.

Each time, traditiona­lists have howled that the changes would destroy military readiness and unit cohesion. Each time, the critics have been proven wrong. They will be again, if transgende­r troops are allowed to keep serving their nation.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN, AP ??
JACQUELYN MARTIN, AP

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