TIME Military

U.S. Army Makes It Harder to Dismiss Transgender Troops

US-MILITARY-GENDER
NICHOLAS KAMM—AFP/Getty Images Transgender US Army Reseve Captain Sage Fox speaks during a conference entitled "Perspectives on Transgender Military Service from Around the Globe" organized by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Palm Center in Washington on October 20, 2014. Transgender military personnel from 18 countries who allow them to serve openly, gathered to talk about their experiences and discuss whether the US military could join them. After Separtating from the military as a man, Fox legally changed her gender, and was invited to join the reserves as a woman. AFP PHOTO/Nicholas KAMM (Photo credit should read NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)

As a larger change in policy to accept openly transgender troops looms

The U.S. Army just got one step closer to allowing transgender soldiers to serve openly.

The army announced Friday that it will elevate the authority to discharge transgender soldiers from local unit commanders to the Assistant Secretary of the Army, USA Today reports, a move that would make it more difficult for transgender soldiers to be discharged because of their gender identity. The move looks similar to actions taken in the final months of the Don’t Ask-Don’t Tell policy that prohibited gay soldiers from serving openly, according to a SPARTA, an organization of LGBT people who serve or have served in the U.S. military.

The army’s decision has no bearing on the other service branches such as the Navy and the Air Force.

“Today’s action by the Army helps over 6,000 transgender soldiers serving in silence” Allyson Robinson, a former Army captain and SPARTA Director of Policy, said in a statement. “While transgender service members welcome this step, they recognize it is only a stopgap measure aimed at making a failing policy fail less. What they and their commanders need is a comprehensive, Department-level policy review.”

The announcement came on the same day that a court ordered the Army to refer to Chelsea Manning, the convicted national security leaker, as a woman. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter recently made comments suggesting that the U.S. military was becoming increasingly open to the prospect of transgender service. “I’m very open-minded about [it] provided they can do what we need them to do for us,” he said, “And I don’t think anything but their suitability for service should preclude them.”

Changing the policy will require an official review by the Department of Defense.

Photos: 25 Transgender People Who Influenced American Culture

Laverne Cox Lana Wachowski Kye Allums Bruce Jenner Vanity Fair cover Caitlyn transgender Chelsea Manning Transgender Brandon Teena The electronic musician Wendy Carlos, formerly Walter, released Switched-On Bach in 1968, which won three Grammy awards and became one of the first classical albums to sell 500,000 copies. She went on to compose notable scores for films like A Clockwork Orange, The Shining, and Tron. Since coming out publicly in a 2012 Rolling Stone article, the musician Laura Jane Grace has been a vocal advocate for trans acceptance. In 2014, her band Against Me! released the album Transgender Dysphoria Blues. Carmen Carrera Transgender Christine Jorgensen Billy Tipton Transgender The American public grew up knowing Bono as the daughter of entertainers Sonny and Cher, before he came out as a transgender man in 2009. Bono, who first came out as a lesbian in ’90s, has been an active LGBT rights advocate for decades, writing and making films about his experiences and using platforms like reality show Dancing With the Stars to talk about LGBT issues. Candis Cayne Lynn Conway Caroline Cossey Before she came out in 2014, the Serbian-born model was already blurring lines in the fashion world. As the androgynous male model and muse for big names like Marc Jacobs. In 2015, Pejic became the first transgender model to appear in American Vogue. Lana Lawless Transgender Fallon Fox Beatie went public in 2008 as America’s first “pregnant father,” undergoing artificial insemination after his former wife proved infertile. The transgender man captured the nation’s attention after appearances on show’s such as Oprah, setting off cultural conversations about the social and legal status of transgender people in America. He has since had three children. Janet Mock Mike Penner Renee Richards Transgender Sylvia Rivera Geena Rocero was already a successful model before she gave a viral 2014 TED talk in which she came out publicly as transgender. “All of us are put in boxes by our family, by our religion, by our society, our moment in history, even our own bodies,” she said. “Some people have the courage to break free.” Her advocacy organization, Gender Proud, works to empower transgender communities around the world. Jenna Talackova
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