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Army considers renaming Fort Bragg, named after Confederate military commander

US Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy and Secretary of Defense Mark Esper are said to be open to holding a "bipartisan conversation" about renaming nearly a dozen major bases and installations that bear the names of Confederate military commanders, according to an Army official.

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By
Barbara Starr
and
Paul LeBlanc, CNN
CNN — After recent George Floyd protests and movements against racism, the Army is considering changing the names of any post named after a Confederate military commander.

Army installations named after Confederate leaders include Fort Bragg, Fort Hood in Texas and Fort A.P. Hill in Virginia.

Fort Bragg was named after Braxton Bragg, who commanded Confederate forces in the Army during the Civil War. For now, changing the names is just a conversation, according to Army leaders.

US Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy and Secretary of Defense Mark Esper are said to be open to holding a "bipartisan conversation" about renaming nearly a dozen major bases and installations that bear the names of Confederate military commanders, according to an Army official.

The official said that though McCarthy believes he has the potential authority to unilaterally rename the installations, there would need to be consultation with the White House, Congress and state and local governments.

In a statement Monday, the Army confirmed that McCarthy and Esper are "open to a bipartisan discussion on the topic" but added that "each Army installation is named for a soldier who holds a significant place in our military history."

"Accordingly, the historic names represent individuals, not causes or ideologies," the statement said.

The news come as the country continues to see widespread protests surrounding the death of George Floyd, a black man who was killed last month in police custody in Minneapolis.

Protesters have demanded justice for Floyd and have sought to draw attention to decades of police brutality toward black Americans as a result of what they say is institutionalized racism in law enforcement agencies.

As a result, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam announced earlier this month plans to remove a statue honoring Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Richmond's historic Monument Avenue.

And on Friday, the US Marine Corps announced it had ordered the removal of all public displays of the Confederate flag from Marine installations.

That includes eliminating any depictions of the flag from individual offices and storage spaces to naval vessels and government vehicles.

"The Marine Corps shall remove the Confederate battle flag from all installation public spaces and work areas in order to support our core values, ensure unit cohesion and security, and preserve good order and discipline," the order said.

The flag of the Confederacy, its symbols and the statues commemorating Confederate leaders have long divided the country. Critics call the flag a symbol that represents the war to uphold slavery, while supporters call it a sign of Southern pride and heritage.

The symbols have increasingly become a rallying call for white supremacists.

Still, Army bases across the country have continued to bear the names of Confederate military commanders even amid intense external pressure to rename them.

In 2015, the Pentagon declared that it was up to the individual military services to name their bases and said that is not likely to change following a shooting in a Charleston, South Carolina, church that left nine African-Americans dead.

Army Brig. Gen. Malcolm B. Frost said at the time that the naming of these bases "occurred in the spirit of reconciliation, not division."

This story and its headline have been updated with additional reporting on Monday evening.

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