President Donald Trump said he would restore the names of military bases nominated by his predecessor Joe Biden, making the armed forces more inclusive and former Confederate officials to prevent the attempt to prevent the memory of the officials.
Trump said on Tuesday during a visit to Fort Brag in North Carolina to celebrate the 250th birthday of the US Army, “We are going to restore the names of Fort Picket, Fort Hood, Fort Gordon, Fort Rooker, Forte Polk, Fort AP Hill and Fort Robert E. Lee.”
He said, “We have won a lot of those forts. It’s not time to change. And I am superstitious, you know? I like to continue it, right, right,” he said.
Fort Brag is also a military facility named under Trump. Aadhaar was earlier nominated to honor a Confederate General, Brexon Brag, but was named to Fort Liberty under the administration of former President Biden, which was part of a comprehensive effort to honor the people who took up arms against the US government during the Civil War.
The attempt to change the name of military bases came to the hands of the police after a national recurrence in the race from the murder of George Floid in Miniapolis.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth renamed the Installation Fort Brag in February, but in honor of a separate Brag, this time Rolland L. Brag, reminiscent of the World War II veteran, who was bravely awarded for the Silver Star and Purple Heart during the Bull’s Battle.
The fort had become a flashpoint for Trump and his supporters, which are eliminating diversity, equity and inclusion practices within the federal government, and provide an example of how the new administration is moving forward to set up its seal on the armed forces and to demonstrate the powers of its presidential and promote its agenda.
Trump dedicated a large part of his comment to offer justification for his decision to deploy American troops in Los Angeles in response to his preceding and protesting against his exile policies, gathered 700 marines and raised national guard personnel already on the ground despite the objections of state and local leaders.
Trump said, “Everything you are seeing in California is a full -fledged attack on peace, on public system and a national sovereignty that affects foreign flags by rioters, which is aimed at continuing our country’s foreign invasion. We will not let this happen.”
American law typically prevents the use of the army, Navy, Air Force and Marine-Duty-American Army from executing domestic law enforcement. California is sueing the state administration, saying that Trump’s national guard deployment was illegal.
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Trump also demanded the army to bow down as a show of force in his first term, but was blocked by members of his cabinet. This time, the President has stocked his team with less resistant loyalists for those efforts.
Trump’s Fort Brag’s visit to the Fort Brag is part of a week of the festival with the aim of celebrating the army, which ends in a large -scale military parade at Washington, DC on Saturday, which also matches with its 79th birthday.
There will be a showcase for the ceremony on Saturday’s military parade army birthday in Washington. The parade is expected to include thousands of soldiers as well as 150 military vehicles and 50 aircraft, and the US Army estimates that the festival will cost between $ 25 million and $ 40 million.
Trump defended plans and costs on Monday, claiming that he and other donors would personally cover several expenses and prepare it as an opportunity to “celebrate our army”.
The President told reporters at the White House that “there would be tanks everywhere” and that “thousands and thousands of soldiers are going to march on the streets bravely.”
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without amending the text.