Los Angeles Times

Pick for Army head is a first

After serving in top posts at the Pentagon, Eric Fanning would be the first openly gay leader of the service.

- By W.J. Hennigan and Christi Parsons

WASHINGTON — In a first for the Pentagon, President Obama will nominate Eric K. Fanning as secretary of the Army, making him the first openly gay civilian to head a U.S. military service.

Fanning, 47, who must be confirmed by the Senate, has held a series of high-profile posts at the Pentagon after a career in public service and TV journalism. He was named acting undersecre­tary of the Army in June after a stint as special assistant to Defense Secretary Ashton Carter.

The nomination is the latest and arguably most symbolic move by the Obama administra­tion to lift historic barriers against women and gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgende­r individual­s seeking to serve in the U.S. military.

His selection was applauded by gay rights groups that have fought for years to see the Pentagon open its ranks. Critics seized on the nomination as a sign that the White House is more concerned with political correctnes­s than leadership of the nation’s largest military branch.

If confirmed, Fanning would head an Army that faces sharp reductions in troop levels, budget cuts from Congress and fears of fresh conflict in the Middle East after more than a decade of grueling wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

“Eric brings many years of proven experience and exceptiona­l leadership to this new role,” Obama said in a statement. “I am grateful for his commitment to our men and women in uniform, and I am confident he will help lead America’s soldiers with distinctio­n.”

“I know he will strengthen our Army, build on its

best traditions, and prepare our ground forces to confront a new generation of challenges,” Carter said in a separate statement.

Fanning, who has never served in uniform, is expected to support efforts to build a leaner, more hightech Army, which Carter called “the force of the future.”

Born and raised in Michigan, Fanning graduated from Dartmouth College. He worked for the House Armed Services Committee, at the Pentagon and then at the White House in the 1990s before he became an associate producer at CBS News.

From 2001 to 2007, he worked for a group called Business Executives for National Security, then became deputy director of a commission focused on preventing proliferat­ion of weapons of mass destructio­n.

His star rose sharply after he joined the Obama administra­tion in 2009 as undersecre­tary of the Navy. He was named acting secretary of the Air Force in 2013, and then undersecre­tary of the Air Force. In March, he was named Carter’s chief of staff.

Under Carter, the military has sped up efforts to integrate women into combat and other roles previously reserved for men. The military services are poised to allow women to serve in most front-line combat jobs, including special operations forces, as early as this fall.

If confirmed, Fanning would work closely with the Army’s highest-ranking uniformed officer, Gen. Mark Milley, who has held the post since August.

Their immediate task is to fight for the budget. Under congressio­nally mandated cuts, the Army is set to shrink to 450,000 troops by 2018 — its smallest size since World War II.

Another 30,000 troops may be trimmed from the rolls if the automatic cuts, known as sequestrat­ion, return. The cuts will kick in if Congress fails to reach a new budget deal by Oct. 1.

Fanning ’s nomination received praise from the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBT organizati­on. The group’s president, Chad Griffin, called Fanning’s selection “deeply significan­t.”

“This is a sign of hope and a demonstrat­ion of continued progress towards fairness and equality in our nation’s armed forces,” he said.

Two months ago, the Pentagon took a major step toward easing its ban on transgende­r men and women in uniform, announcing a six-month study designed to clear the way.

In June, the Pentagon gave gay and lesbian service members full protection from discrimina­tion under an equal opportunit­y policy, meaning it will consider sexual orientatio­n in the same way as it considers race, religion, color, sex, age and national origin when investigat­ing complaints of discrimina­tion.

The moves came nearly four years after the Pentagon formally ended “don’t ask, don’t tell,” a 17-year-old law that barred gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military. If they revealed their sexual orientatio­n, they could be kicked out, according to the law.

Over the years, thousands of men and women in uniform were expelled. Openly gay civilian employees at the Defense Department faced similar discrimina­tion until 1995 because they often could not obtain security clearances required to work in national security agencies.

Naming the first gay Army secretary helps “set the tone at the top and provides an opportunit­y to bring better understand­ing about both the shared and the unique needs of LGBT individual­s in the military and their families,” said Matt Thorn, interim executive director of Out Serve Service members Legal Defense Network, a Washington-based organizati­on that seeks LGBT equality in the military.

 ?? Duncan Wood
Associated Press ?? ERIC FANNING’S nomination is a symbolic move to lift the barriers against women and gay individual­s.
Duncan Wood Associated Press ERIC FANNING’S nomination is a symbolic move to lift the barriers against women and gay individual­s.

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