Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ESPER CALLS for racial diversity in military.

- DAN LAMOTHE

Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Thursday that he will take several new steps to improve fairness for minority-group service members, acknowledg­ing that the military is “not immune to the forces of bias and prejudice.”

Esper announced his plan in a video message, taking no questions about how he reached the decision. He said the military has often led on diversity issues, but still has bias in it, “whether visible or invisible, conscious or unconsciou­s.”

“We know this bias burdens many of our service members, and has direct and indirect impact on the experience­s of our minority members, the cultural and ethnic diversity of the force, and representa­tion in our officer ranks,” Esper said. “These things have no place in our military; they have no place in our country.”

The defense secretary’s steps include immediatel­y establishi­ng the internal Defense Board on Diversity and Inclusion in the Military, which will develop “concrete, actionable recommenda­tions” to increase racial diversity and ensure equal opportunit­y, especially in an officer corps that is less diverse than the enlisted ranks.

Esper also will begin establishi­ng the Defense Advisory Committee on

Diversity and Inclusion, which will meet publicly and eventually replace the internal board, he said. It will be modeled after the influentia­l Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services, which has advocated for women in the military as the Pentagon has integrated women into roles that had been closed to them for decades.

In the short term, Esper also has directed military and civilian leaders at the Pentagon to propose ideas by the end of June that can be adopted immediatel­y to improve diversity, he said. He cited as an example the removal of photograph­s from promotion, school and commander selection boards.

The announceme­nts were made during a national reckoning after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s police custody last month, and as criticism rises of President Donald Trump’s advocacy for using active-duty troops to quell unrest. Esper and Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were against doing so.

Esper’s announceme­nt also comes after a backlash to him and Milley appearing alongside Trump on June 1 outside the White House, after protesters were removed from Lafayette Square with pepper spray and other crowd-control measures.

While the military integrated blacks and other people of color decades ago, several persistent race-related issues have come under scrutiny. They include a dearth of senior black officers, a disparity in which people of color are more likely to face court-martial than their white peers, and the names of 10 Army installati­ons that recognize Confederat­e military officers who fought for slavery.

The Marine Corps and Navy also announced plans this month to ban the display of Confederat­e battle flags on U.S. military installati­ons, but the other services have not followed suit after Trump said he would block any considerat­ion of renaming the installati­ons named for Confederat­es.

Numerous defense officials said last week that they were unclear how to proceed on related efforts after the president’s announceme­nt.

Milley, speaking last week in a recorded message to National Defense University students, called for military leaders to look for ways to improve equality, acknowledg­ing a “mixed record” on the issue. While the military has come to reflect the diversity of the nation, he said, only 7% of generals and admirals are black.

“We, too, have not come far enough,” he said. “We cannot afford to marginaliz­e large portions of our potential talent pool, or alienate certain demographi­c groups.”

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