Black Medal Of Honor Recipient Removed From US Department Of Defense Website

Maj Gen Charles C Rogers. Photograph: US Department of Defense via Internet Archive

BY MAYA YANG

The US defense department webpage celebrating an army general who served in the Vietnam war and was awarded the countryā€™s highest military decoration has been removed and the letters ā€œDEIā€ added to the siteā€™s address.

On Saturday, US army Maj Gen Charles Calvin Rogersā€™s Medal of Honor webpage led to a ā€œ404ā€ error message. The URL was also changed, with the word ā€œmedalā€ changed to ā€œdeimedalā€.

Rogers, who was awarded the Medal of Honor by then president Richard Nixon in 1970, served in the Vietnam war, where he was wounded three times while leading the defense of a base.

According to the West Virginia military hall of fame, Rogers was the highest-ranking African American to receive the medal. After his death in 1990, Rogersā€™s remains were buried at the Arlington national cemetery in Washington DC, and in 1999 a bridge in Fayette county, where Rogers was born, was renamed the Charles C Rogers Bridge.

As of Sunday afternoon, a ā€œ404 ā€“ Page Not Foundā€ message appeared on the defense departmentā€™s webpage for Rogers, along with the message: ā€œThe page you are looking for might have been moved, renamed, or may be temporarily unavailable.ā€

A screenshot posted by the writer Brandon Friedman on Bluesky on Saturday evening showed the Google preview of an entry of Rogersā€™s profile on the defense departmentā€™s website.

Dated 1 November 2021, the entryā€™s Google preview reads: ā€œMedal of Honor Monday: Army Maj Gen. Charles Calvin Rogers.ā€ Below it are the words: ā€œArmy Maj Gen Charles Calvin Rogers served through all of it. As a Black man, he worked for gender and race equality while in the service.ā€

ā€œGoogle his name and the entry below comes up. When you click, youā€™ll see the page has been deleted and the URL changed to include ā€˜DEI medal,ā€™ā€ Friedman wrote.

The Guardian has asked the defense department for comment.

Since taking office in January, Donald Trump has moved his administration to roll back DEI ā€“ diversity, equity and inclusion ā€“ efforts across the federal government.

One executive order sought to terminate all ā€œmandates, policies, programs, preferences and activities in the federal governmentā€, which the Trump administration deems ā€œillegal DEI and ā€˜diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibilityā€™ (DEIA) programsā€.

In a win for the Trump administration on Friday, an appeals court lifted a block on executive orders that seek to end the federal governmentā€™s support for DEI programs.

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