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The Few, the Proud, the White: The Marine Corps Balks at Promoting Generals of Color
Source: New York Times
The Few, the Proud, the White: The Marine Corps Balks at Promoting Generals of Color
A respected, combat-tested Black colonel has been passed over three times for promotion to brigadier general. What does his fate say about the Corps?
By Helene Cooper
Aug. 31, 2020, 5:00 a.m. ET
WASHINGTON All things being equal, Col. Anthony Henderson has the military background that the Marine Corps says it prizes in a general: multiple combat tours, leadership experience and the respect of those he commanded and most who commanded him.
Yet three times he has been passed over for brigadier general, a prominent one-star rank that would put Colonel Henderson on the path to the top tier of Marine Corps leadership. Last year, the Navy secretary, Richard V. Spencer, even added a handwritten recommendation to Colonel Hendersons candidacy: Eminently qualified Marine we need now as BG, he wrote.
But never in its history has the Marine Corps had anyone other than a white man in a senior leadership post. Colonel Henderson is Black.
Tony Henderson has done everything you could do in the Marines except get a hand salute from Jesus Christ himself, said Milton D. Whitfield Sr., a former Marine gunnery sergeant who served for 21 years.
Proud and fierce in their identity, the Marines have a singular race problem that critics say is rooted in decades of resistance to change. As the nation reels this summer from protests challenging centuries-long perceptions of race, the Marines who have long cultivated a reputation as the United States strongest fighting force remain an institution where a handful of white men rule over 185,000 white, African-American, Hispanic and Asian men and women.
-snip-
A respected, combat-tested Black colonel has been passed over three times for promotion to brigadier general. What does his fate say about the Corps?
By Helene Cooper
Aug. 31, 2020, 5:00 a.m. ET
WASHINGTON All things being equal, Col. Anthony Henderson has the military background that the Marine Corps says it prizes in a general: multiple combat tours, leadership experience and the respect of those he commanded and most who commanded him.
Yet three times he has been passed over for brigadier general, a prominent one-star rank that would put Colonel Henderson on the path to the top tier of Marine Corps leadership. Last year, the Navy secretary, Richard V. Spencer, even added a handwritten recommendation to Colonel Hendersons candidacy: Eminently qualified Marine we need now as BG, he wrote.
But never in its history has the Marine Corps had anyone other than a white man in a senior leadership post. Colonel Henderson is Black.
Tony Henderson has done everything you could do in the Marines except get a hand salute from Jesus Christ himself, said Milton D. Whitfield Sr., a former Marine gunnery sergeant who served for 21 years.
Proud and fierce in their identity, the Marines have a singular race problem that critics say is rooted in decades of resistance to change. As the nation reels this summer from protests challenging centuries-long perceptions of race, the Marines who have long cultivated a reputation as the United States strongest fighting force remain an institution where a handful of white men rule over 185,000 white, African-American, Hispanic and Asian men and women.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/31/us/politics/marines-race-general.html
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The Few, the Proud, the White: The Marine Corps Balks at Promoting Generals of Color (Original Post)
Eugene
Aug 2020
OP
Alacritous Crier
(4,185 posts)1. And so...
another very clear example of systemic racism.
Docreed2003
(17,927 posts)2. Col Henderson is an incredible man and a true Marine
There is absolutely no excuse for him to have been passed over again and again like this and this must be rectified.