The West Point Class of 2020 is one of the most diverse in the academy’s history. Of the 1,105 graduates, 12 are international cadets, 229 are women, 132 are African American, 103 are Asian/Pacific Islander, 101 are Hispanic and 10 are Native American, the academy says.
“Ideally, a president speaking at a West Point graduation would offer positive, non-partisan messages about leadership and service,” said Benjamin Haas, a former Army intelligence officer and West Point graduate who is now a human rights lawyer. “But Trump has no respect for civil-military norms, and he is notorious for politicizing the military. It would be wholly inappropriate for Trump to push domestic political messages or boast of his perception that the military supports him politically.
“And it would be indefensible,” he added, “for Trump to further pit the military against protesters seeking racial justice or to advance his wrongheaded feelings about Confederate-named Army bases.”
For the newly commissioned Army second lieutenants in the audience, what the president has to say has immediate implications.
The largest share of graduating cadets — more than 20 percent — will be heading to their first assignments at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, named after Gen. Braxton Bragg, and Fort Hood in Texas, which honors Gen. John Bell Hood, two other Confederate generals.
Source:https:politico.com/news