Houston Chronicle Sunday

Trump to speak at graduation for West Point

- By Eric Schmitt and Annie Karni

WASHINGTON — For President Donald Trump, this was the year he would finally get one of the special perks of being president — delivering the commenceme­nt address at West Point, the only service academy where he has not spoken.

But the graduation was postponed because of the coronaviru­s, the cadets were sent home and officials at the school were not sure when it would be held or even whether it was a good idea to hold it.

The Naval Academy decided it was too risky to recall its nearly 1,000 graduating midshipmen to Annapolis, Md., for a commenceme­nt. Those graduates will have a virtual event. But the Air Force Academy, in contrast to the other schools, sent home its underclass­men, locked down its seniors on campus, moved up graduation, mandated social distancing — and went ahead with plans for Vice President Mike Pence to be its speaker.

And so last Friday, the day before Pence was to speak at the Air Force ceremony in Colorado, Trump abruptly announced that he would, in fact, be speaking at West Point.

That was news to everyone, including officials at West Point, according to three people involved with or briefed on the event. The academy had been looking at the option of a delayed presidenti­al commenceme­nt in June but had yet to complete any plans. With Trump’s preemptive statement, they are now summoning 1,000 cadets scattered across the county to return to campus in New York, the state that is the center of the outbreak.

“He’s the commander in chief; that’s his call,” said Sue Fulton, a West Point graduate and former chairwoman of the academy’s Board of Visitors. “Cadets are certainly excited about the opportunit­y to have something like the classic graduation, standing together, flinging their hats.

“But everyone is leery about bringing 1,000 cadets into the New York metropolit­an area for a ceremony,” she added. “It’s definitely a risk.”

A White House official said that the administra­tion had been in discussion­s with West Point about a new date for the graduation, and that the academy had offered June 13 as a possibilit­y.

On the morning of April 18, White House officials said, Trump had a discussion with the Defense Department, in which he confirmed that he would speak at West Point on June 13.

At a news conference later that day, Trump publicly announced the date for the first time. “I’m going to West Point. I think they’re changing the date to June 13th because of what’s going on in New York,” he said. “They’re moving into June 13th. West Point.”

In a statement, a White House official said that “the president had spoken with DOD and his remarks on that Saturday were not a surprise to the academy.”

By Wednesday, the academy had caught up to the president’s announceme­nt. “We are honored to host the commander in chief as we celebrate the many accomplish­ments of our graduating class,” Lt. Gen. Darryl A. Williams, the West Point superinten­dent, said in a statement.

West Point officials say the size and scope of the ceremony will be determined “by safety considerat­ions for cadets and the entire West Point community.” Academy officials say they have not yet decided whether parents or other visitors will be allowed to attend.

Williams said in a telephone interview that returning seniors will be tested off-campus for the coronaviru­s. Those who test negative will then be sent to the school, where they will be monitored for 14 days before graduation. While the campus has enough dormitory rooms for the 1,000 seniors, Williams said that he was still deciding whether seniors would share bedrooms on their return.

“All 1,000 of them will not intermix,” he said. “They’ll be in their rooms. They’ll have their masks on. Groups will be segregated in the mess hall when they eat.”

Some faculty say this is not only inconvenie­nt to cadets, but it is also a risk to their mental well-being. It has been an academic year marred by tragedy even before the outbreak. One cadet was killed and 21 others injured last June after a military vehicle overturned en route to a training exercise near the academy. In October, a cadet killed himself.

Williams, who managed the initial stages of the American military response to the Ebola pandemic in Liberia in 2014, said that he was drawing from his experience­s during that outbreak. He spent three weeks in quarantine in Italy after returning from Liberia during Ebola, and said he planned to use some of what he had learned during his own isolation to help returning West Point seniors.

“I’m not waiting for them to come back here to start worrying about their mental health,” he said.

Since leaving campus in March, a handful of the academy’s 4,400 cadets have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, and about 30 staff and faculty members have tested positive, said Lt. Col. Christophe­r Ophardt, an academy spokesman.

West Point still has to clear a few more hurdles to realize Trump’s wish. The academy has asked Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper for waivers from a ban on travel for military personnel that runs through June 30, to allow cadets to return from all over the country.

And no one knows what insidious twist the coronaviru­s could take in New York by June 13. West Point officials say they will follow the guidance from Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Army.

“We’ll go by what they all say at that time,” said Ophardt, the academy spokesman.

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