President
Donald Trump’s administration is set to deliver the Pentagon guidance in coming
days on how to implement his ban on transgender people serving in the
military,
The Wall Street Journal said Wednesday.
Trump last
month deployed a series of tweets that upended an Obama-era policy of more than
a year allowing transgender troops to serve openly, an announcement that came
with little apparent coordination with the Pentagon.
The
two-and-a-half page White House memo would let Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
“consider a service member’s ability to deploy in deciding whether to kick them
out of the military,” the WSJ said.
Citing US
officials familiar with the memo, the paper said the guidance instructs the
Pentagon not to admit new transgender people and to end payments for medical
treatment regimens for members already serving.
Since
Trump’s declaration several senior military officials have voiced unease over
the policy shift, with the head of the Coast Guard saying he would not “break
faith” with transgender personnel.
He said
there were 13 Coast Guard members who have come out as transgender, noting “all
of them are doing meaningful Coast Guard work today.”
A day after
the president’s bombshell announcement, General Joe Dunford, the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sent a short memo to senior officers and enlisted
leaders that the current policy should remain in effect until Trump gives
formal direction to the Pentagon and Mattis issues new guidance.
“In the
meantime, we will continue to treat all of our personnel with respect,” Dunford
wrote.
General Mark
Milley, Chief of Staff of the Army, had said he first learned of the change on
the news.
“We will
work through the implementation guidance when we get it, and then we will move
from there,” Milley said.
Five
transgender women in the US military are suing Trump and the Pentagon over the
announcement, saying they face uncertainty about their futures, including
whether they would be fired or lose post-military and retirement benefits.
Trump has
said he did the Pentagon a “great favor” by banning transgender troops, saying
the issue had been “complicated” and “confusing” for the military.
The number
of transgender troops among America’s 1.3 million active duty service members
is small, with estimates ranging from between 1,320 and 15,000.
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