
By Phil Stewart
Washington (Reuters)-The US air weapon announced on Sunday that it will resume the teaching of trainees on the basis of a video about the first black pilot of the US military, known as Tuskegee Airmen, which has passed a review Compliance with President Donald Trump’s ban to ensure initiatives for diversity, justice and inclusion.
Trump, who took office on January 20, banned Dei in the entire US government and the US military. The new Defense Minister Pete Hegseth, who was sworn in on Friday, has declared the elimination of Dei from the military to be the top priority.
Reuters reported on Saturday that the video about the Tuskeegee Airms and another about civilian pilots who were trained by the US military during the Second World War and were not informed as “Women Air Force Service Pilots” or Wasps in the basic training Common base of San Antonio-Lackland until checking.
The move was first reported by the San Antonio Express-News.
The Air Force said on Sunday that both videos were taught.
“No plane or guard will miss this teaching block due to the revision, but the training of a group of trainees was delayed,” said Lieutenant General Brian Robinson, who heads the Air Education and Training Command.
The Tuskegee Airms included 450 pilots who fought in separate units abroad during the Second World War. Her success in the fight paved the way for President Harry Truman’s decision to abolish racial segregation in the armed forces in 1948.
DEI programs aim to promote opportunities for women, ethnic minorities and other traditionally underrepresented groups. Civil rights activists argue that such programs that are generally supported by the Democrats are necessary to tackle inequalities and structural racism for a long time.
They were attacked by conservatives who say that racial and gender initiatives are naturally discriminatory and did not put the benefits in the foreground.