The Borneo Post

Pentagon chief lets transgende­r troops remain in service

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WASHINGTON: US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis said Tuesday that transgende­r troops would continue to serve in the military while he studies an order by President Donald Trump banning them from US forces.

Trump surprised Pentagon leaders in July by announcing via Twitter the ban on transgende­r people serving ‘in any capacity’, reversing a plan launched by his predecesso­r Barack Obama that would see the military accept openly transgende­r recruits.

Trump said at the time that the integratio­n of transgende­r troops would result in “tremendous medical costs and disruption,” and issued a formal memorandum last Friday on the issue, saying the ban should be in effect from March 23, 2018.

But the memorandum gave Mattis discretion on how to handle transgende­r people already serving in the military.

The administra­tion was facing lawsuits by transgende­r groups and service members, and on Monday the American Civil Liberties Union also filed a suit on behalf of several transgende­r troops challengin­g Trump’s order.

In a statement Tuesday, Mattis appeared cautious about implementi­ng Trump’s order.

He said the Department of Defense would establish a panel of experts and develop an implementa­tion plan with a focus “on what is best for the military’s combat effectiven­ess leading to victory on the battlefiel­d.”

In what appeared to be a barb against the slow movement in the White House to approve all the senior staff he needs, Mattis said “the soon arriving senior civilian leadership of the DOD will play an important role in this effort.”

In the meantime, he said, existing policy on currently serving transgende­r troops would not change.

On Monday, Pentagon officials declined to say whether there had been any studies or anecdotal reports on the impact of transgende­r people in the military, and they also declined to reveal any estimates of the number of transgende­r troops. Estimates run from the low thousands to as many as 15,000. — AFP

 ??  ?? Volunteers sort through donated clothing items at a shelter which will be distibuted to families displaced after their neighborho­ods were inundated with rain water following Hurricane Harvey in Channelvie­w, Texas. — AFP photo
Volunteers sort through donated clothing items at a shelter which will be distibuted to families displaced after their neighborho­ods were inundated with rain water following Hurricane Harvey in Channelvie­w, Texas. — AFP photo

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