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Arlington’s national cemeteries have cleaned information about their web and training materials about the history of black and women’s service.
Some of the content unpublished from this site were on veterans who received the highest military recognition in the country, in accordance with the task and purpose of the military news.
Removal of content is part of the broader efforts of President Donald Trump to eliminate the practice of his own capital and inclusion (DEI) in the army and throughout the federal government.
Approximately 400,000 veterans are buried in the Army Cemetery, which was created after the US Civil War at the House of General South Robert E. Lee.
On the website of the cemetery, the internal links sent by users to the web page with information about the “noticeable graves” of dozens of black, Hispanic and veteran women were missing on Friday.
The pages contained short biographies about veterans such as General Colin La Powell, the first black chairman of the joint chief of staff, who is the highest rank in the army after the president.
They also talked about the life stories of the members of the Tuskean airports, the country’s first black military aviation.
Earlier this year, the Ministry of Defense had to resume training materials on revered air lovers after the national resume over their removal after Trump’s orders.
Information about hectares of Santa -Ghanna, the pilot of the Second World War and the military leader of the career, who is called the Hero of the War, was also removed.
Visitors to the site may also have problems searching for information, as the links to the main sections have disappeared. It no longer lists pages for the history of African Americans, Hispanic American History and History of Women.
The content still exists on some famous women buried there, including the former Justice of the Supreme Court of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and 14 veterans from the unit, recently presented in a movie nominated on Oscar, “six-round eight”, but it was found only from direct search.
Since the re -entry into the White House, President Donald Trump has signed several executive orders that ban Dei in the federal government.
The press secretary of the cemetery said in a statement that he was working on resumption of references and content and remained “committed to the exchange of military service and victim of the nation,” the Washington Post reports.
It adds that he wants to make sure that the content corresponding to Trump’s orders, as well as indicating the Secretary of the Defense of Pete Hegset.
Representative Adam Smith, Chief Democrat of the House of Representatives Committee, condemned the removal of content.
“The whole thing is deep,” Smith said in an interview with the New York Times.
“Even if you have concern about how Dei was engaged in a number of different places, I have never seen the problems with the military.”
In the second term, Trump made dramatic changes to the military, including the dismissal of the country’s chief general, CQ Brown, a black man who supported the diversity in the armed forces.
Hegset Secretary – a former leading Fox News and a veteran of the servicemen – pledged to eradicate all diversity initiatives and accused General Brown of “woken up”.
The US troops operate 2.03 million million operating in US military personnel, and 30% identify under minority groups such as black, Native American and 18%, such as Hispanic or Latin American, the Ministry of Defense said. One of the fifth of the female military.