Washington (AFP) - Pentagon chief Mark Esper on Friday effectively banned the display of the Confederate flag at all US military facilities, where the banner -- seen by many as racist -- is frequently displayed in barracks and common areas.
In a message to all US military officials, the Defense
Department posted a list of flags authorized to be flown at bases and aboard
war ships, in offices and conference halls, and in any spaces operated by the
military.
Left off that list was the Confederate battle flag, a
red banner with two diagonal blue stripes and 13 white stars symbolizing the
southern slave-holding states that seceded from the union or supported the
effort during the 1861-1865 American Civil War.
"The flags we fly must accord with the military
imperatives of good order and discipline, treating all our people with dignity
and respect, and rejecting divisive symbols," Esper wrote in a two-page
memorandum.
The carefully worded statement did not specifically
mention the Confederate flag, or the racial tensions that have simmered since
the killing of unarmed African American George Floyd in police custody in late
May.
It appeared crafted in a way to avoid open conflict
with US President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly waded into the debate over
the Confederate flag to argue that people who fly it are exercising their
freedom of speech.
Since the death of Floyd, the US military -- one of
the most racially diverse American institutions -- has conducted a sweeping
internal debate on racism.
For years, some soldiers have been fond of displaying
Confederate flags in their barracks, claiming the freedom of expression
enshrined in the US Constitution.
White southerners often fly the flag as a symbol of
their southern heritage and pride, but for most African Americans, it is a
potent symbol of slavery, racism and white supremacy.
Members of the Ku Klux Klan, a notorious white
supremacist hate group, often flew the flag.
By effectively banning the flag, Esper is
differentiating himself from Trump, who addressed the Confederate issue in a
CBS interview this week.
"I know people that like the Confederate flag and
they're not thinking about slavery," Trump told the network. "With
me, it's freedom of speech, very simple."
Esper and General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, have also spoken out in favor of renaming US military bases
currently named for Confederate generals, an idea the president opposes.

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