In his tweets, Trump referred to the bases named after Confederate military figures, including Fort Bragg, Fort Hood and Fort Benning, as “Hallowed Grounds” where soldiers that won two world wars were trained. He added that the administration “will not even consider the renaming of these Magnificent and Fabled Military Installations.”
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 10, 2020
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany reiterated the president’s stance during a Wednesday press briefing, where she reread the tweets Trump had fired off only moments prior.
Trump’s words were met with widespread backlash by netizens, with many pointing out that the Confederate states, which had seceded from the Union, lost the American Civil War that took place between 1861 and 1865. Many others called Trump a “racist” and criticized the president for glorifying Confederate “traitors” that the US “defeated.”
Another wrote that “President Trump and the Republican Leadership are committed to glorifying people who committed treason to the Union in order to fight to hold men, women, children, and all of the descendants in bondage.”
— Chidi®️ (@ChidiNwatu) June 10, 2020
— David Rothschild (@DavMicRot) June 10, 2020
— Tami Burages (@tburages) June 10, 2020
— QuaranTwit Commander (@burritocover) June 10, 2020
— QuaranTwit Commander (@burritocover) June 10, 2020
— Bakari Sellers (@Bakari_Sellers) June 10, 2020
— Nicholas (@njd419) June 10, 2020
— Billy D - Dr. tRump will plow under every 1/3 👪 (@EugJHawk) June 10, 2020
During a roundtable discussion held hours after Trump made his stance known, the president refused to expand on his decision. A reporter’s question on why the Confederacy should be defended went unanswered by the president twice.
Trump’s statement comes just two days after an unnamed senior US Army official told Fox News that Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy was open to the idea of changing the facilities’ names.
“We must recognize history is important, but we must come together and have some sort of open discussion about race,” the official told Fox News on Monday. “This week highlighted the need to start understanding those feelings, and the Army secretary is open to considering changing the names of these bases named for Confederate generals.”
In a joint statement to the Army last week, McCarthy, Army Chief of Staff Gen. James McConville and Sergeant Major of the Army Michael Grinston said that the service needs “to work harder to earn the trust of mothers and fathers who hesitate to hand their sons and daughters in our care,” also noting that the “country has suffered an explosion of frustration over the racial divisions that still plague us as Americans.”
The US-based civil rights group National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has also long called for renaming military bases that honor Confederate soldiers, claiming that the Confederate flag glorifies “treason and a hateful history of white supremacy and black subjugation.”