Pentagon to ban all Confederate flags on military bases despite Trump's objections

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The Pentagon will prohibit the Confederate battle flag from US military installations despite Donald Trump's insistence that flying the symbol is "freedom of speech" amid a national reckoning over racist icons and political battles to remove the flag across the US.

According to a memo obtained by the Associated Press, Secretary of Defence Mark Esper says "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" – but he does not explicitly mention the Confederate battle flag, in an effort to avoid directly contradicting the president.

In recent weeks, the president has rejected calls to rename military bases named after Confederate generals and has defended the battle flag while threatening prison sentences for people who burn the American flag.

During a House Armed Services Committee hearing on 9 July, Secretary Esper said that "there is a process underway, by which we affirm what types of flags are authorised on US military bases."

"I want to make sure that we have an approach that is enduring and that could withstand legal challenge but that unites us and most importantly helps build cohesion and readiness," he said.

General Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the administration's senior military official, testified that "those generals fought for the institution of slavery" and condemned the Confederacy's attempt to secede from the US as "an act of treason".

"Those officers turned their back on their oath," he said.

A dozen military installations named after Confederate generals are facing renewed scrutiny as officials across the nation determine whether to preserve symbols of white supremacy that have lingered in US institutions for decades. Officials have considering renaming 10 bases, all in the southern US.

In June, the US Marines ordered the removal of Confederate flags from its bases, offices, naval vessels and other buildings and vehicles.

Mississippi's governor approved a landmark piece of legislation approved by a majority of lawmakers in the state to remove the symbol from the state's flag.

Most bases were renamed at the onset of World War I through World War II, within roughly the same period in which monuments to the Lost Cause of the Civil War – attempting to preserve the legacies of the men on their pedestals without addressing the racist violence they perpetuated – were erected through the US, decades after the war's end.

"I personally think that the original decisions to name those bases after Confederate generals ... were political decisions," Gen Milley said. "And they're going to be political decisions today."

Secretary Esper's memo calls for prohibited symbols to be placed in historical contexts in museums, works of art and educational settings.

In an April memo announcing the branch's intent to ban public displays of the flag, Marine Corps commandant Gen David Berger said he has "focused solely on building a uniquely capable war-fighting team whose members come from all walks of life and must learn to operate side-by-side" and argued that the symbol "has shown it has the power to inflame feelings of division" and must be removed.

"I am mindful that many people believe that flag to be a symbol of heritage or regional pride," he said. "But I am also mindful of the feelings of pain and rejection of those who inherited the cultural memory and present effects of the scourge of slavery in our country."

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