The head of the Virginia Military Institute resigned after top state leaders condemned the 鈥渁ppalling culture of ongoing structural racism鈥 at the oldest state-funded military college in the US.
The state government leaders, including Governor Ralph Northam, a VMI graduate, listed complaints that included black students facing long-standing and repeated instances of on-campus racism and threats of attacks and lynchings.
The officials 鈥撀爄ncluding the top leaders of the state legislature 鈥 announced both a state government review of VMI鈥檚 campus culture and an outside assessment of how it compares with that of other universities.
All Virginia universities need 鈥渢o聽be welcoming and inclusive, and to eschew outdated traditions that glamorise a history rooted in rebellion against the United States鈥, in a聽letter to John Boland, head of VMI鈥檚 governing board of visitors.
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Their complaint reflected VMI鈥檚 enduring ties to and veneration of the pro-slavery forces in the US聽Civil War. That includes a statue in the centre of campus of Stonewall Jackson, a leading Confederate general and professor in VMI鈥檚 early years.
Mr Boland, an attorney and VMI graduate, saying he welcomed the investigations and expected that they would find some instances of 鈥渋nappropriate behavior鈥 by students and faculty but no聽evidence of 鈥渟ystemic racism鈥.
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But the VMI superintendent, retired US聽Army General J. H. Binford Peay聽III, in his own , said he recognised that state leaders 鈥渉ad lost confidence in my leadership鈥 and agreed to聽resign immediately.
VMI is the first among five public 鈥渟enior military colleges鈥 in the US, which are similar to the federal military academies in that they grant bachelor鈥檚 degrees and require all physically fit students to take courses in military training.
An analysis in June by two visiting professors of strategic studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies said that the US military and its academies 鈥撀爉irroring the wider US society 鈥 have been of racism and white nationalism in the past few聽years.
The US defense secretary, Mark Esper, issued an order in July that in effect from all military facilities.
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VMI, with $19聽million (拢15聽million) in annual state funding, was Virginia鈥檚 last public college to integrate, admitting five black students in 1968 only on a court order. It began admitting women in聽1997.
African Americans now account for only 8聽per cent of VMI鈥檚 1,700 students, three of its 17 board members, and none of its top school officials.
Concerns surrounding VMI and General Peay extend beyond attitudes towards black people. Reported instances include a 2005 incident of students dressing as Nazis and mocking gay people that General Peay attributed to 鈥渃ollege kids who are trying to use humor鈥; a US聽Education Department investigation of General Peay鈥檚 allegedly unsympathetic handling of a 2011 sexual assault complaint against a VMI administrator; and a VMI professor in 2019 her father鈥檚 membership in the Ku聽Klux聽Klan.
General Peay also fought this year against demands from some students and alumni to , calling the slave-holding Confederate luminary 鈥渁聽military genius鈥 and a 鈥渟taunch Christian鈥.
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For many of General Peay鈥檚 17 years leading VMI, the institute required its first-year students to salute the Jackson statue. Mike Pence, the US vice-president, addressed VMI students in September, praising the institution for 181聽years of 鈥渢raining up citizen-soldiers who are educated, confident, capable leaders鈥.
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