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U.S. Army libraries target books with a focus on DEI or 'gender ideology' for removal

Army Corp of Cadets march on the field before the Army/Navy game on Dec. 14, 2024 in Landover, Md.
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Army Corp of Cadets march on the field before the Army/Navy game on Dec. 14, 2024 in Landover, Md.

A senior Army official ordered Army libraries, including West Point, to remove all books "with the explicit and sole purpose of directly and overtly promoting DEI, gender ideology, and critical race theory in a manner that subverts meritocracy and unity," according to a memo sent last week by acting Assistant Secretary of the Army Derrick Anderson. It says the list of documents should be provided to the Army's chief librarian by April 16th. The memo, dated April 9th, was viewed by NPR.

The memo was sent to the Army's Training and Doctrine Command, U.S. Army Special Operations Command, the Army's Judge Advocate General's Legal Center and School, the U.S. Military Academy and the Army War College.

"West Point is completing the directed review with the utmost professionalism and efficiency," West Point spokesman Col. Terence Kelley said in an email to NPR.

Since the memo was sent by Assistant Secretary Anderson, however, all Army libraries were told this week to only "flag" rather than remove any books, said a U.S. official not authorized to speak publicly, adding that a final decision for removing books will be made by top Army officials. The official said at this point no books have been removed from the West Point library, and the "flag" order extends to all Army libraries.

The move by West Point comes after the U.S. Naval Academy removed nearly 400 books from the Nimitz Library over similar concerns from Trump Administration officials. The books included Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, White Supremacy Groups, edited by Mitchell Young and The Second Coming of the KKK: The Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s and the American Political Tradition by Linda Gordon. Also, the works included Police Violence and Race: The effects of Racial Focusing Events on Attitudes About Race Relations," written in 2016 by Midshipman Gavin D. Jernigan.

Five days before the memo was sent out by the Army, two lawmakers said they had "grave concern" about the books removed from the Naval Academy in a letter to Army Secretary Dan Driscoll.

"We are interested in understanding if similar actions are occurring at West Point," wrote Rep. Adam Smith, the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee and Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, the top Democrat on the Military Personnel Subcommittee. "Moreover, this reported book ban — or any similar efforts that may be ongoing at the United States Military Academy — displays an alarming return to McCarthy era censorship."

Another letter about the book removals was sent to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has vowed to remove DEI material from the Pentagon, saying at a Pentagon town hall meeting in February that the term "diversity is our strength," is "the single dumbest phrase in military history."

"The decision of the Naval Academy to strip the Nimitz Library of diverse voices and viewpoints, especially those written by and/or about Black and LGBTQ people, constitutes unconstitutional censorship of politically disfavored ideas in direct conflict with a functioning democracy" wrote Jin Hee Lee, with the Legal Defense Fund, and Jennifer C. Pizer with the Lamda Legal Defense Fund in a letter sent Tuesday to Hegseth and Naval Academy superintendent Yvette M. Davids. "Such censorship is especially dangerous in an educational setting, where critical inquiry, intellectual diversity, and exposure to a wide array of perspectives are necessary to educate future citizen-leaders. While the Naval Academy is tasked with educating and cultivating cadets to be leaders of a pluralistic nation, it has done a disservice to cadets by preventing access to critical information."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Tom Bowman is a NPR National Desk reporter covering the Pentagon.
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