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West Point is displaying a Ku Klux Klan plaque at entrance to Science building, Congressional Naming Commission finds

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By Ellie Kaufman, CNN

West Point, the United States Military Academy, has a plaque with the name Ku Klux Klan written out and a hooded figure displayed at the entrance to Bartlett Hall, the science center on the military academy’s campus, according to a new report from the Congressional Naming Commission.

The Commission, which was established by Congress to provide recommendations to the Department of Defense on renaming Confederate markers on US military installations, released their second of three final reports to Congress on Monday.

The report focused on Confederate markers at both West Point in New York and the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

The commission said the plaque “falls outside” of its purview, because the commission is solely tasked with identifying and providing recommendations on new names for Confederate markers at military installations.

The Ku Klux Klan was established after the Civil War by Confederate veterans. The group is still active and is classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The commission urged the Secretary of Defense “to address DoD assets that highlight the K.K.K.” and “create a standard disposition requirement for such assets,” the report states.

“The marker falls outside the remit of the Commission; however, there are clearly ties in the K.K.K. to the Confederacy,” the report states.

The US Military Academy’s public affairs office said they have received the naming commission’s report and are “reviewing the recommendations,” in a statement to CNN.

“We are reviewing the recommendations and will collaborate with the Department of the Army to implement changes, once approved,” the US Military Academy’s Public Affairs office said in a statement. “West Point’s mission is to develop leaders of character who internalize Army Values, the ideals of Duty, Honor, Country, and the Army Ethic. As a values-based institution, we are fully committed to creating a climate where everyone is treated with dignity and respect.”

The renaming of bases with Confederate monikers has been a years-long process. It first became a hot button political issue in the final months of the Trump administration, when then-President Donald Trump blasted the idea, accusing others of wanting to “throw those names away.”

The commission was established in the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act, which Trump vetoed. In the waning days of his administration, Congress delivered its first and only veto override during his tenure, approving the legislation with overwhelming bipartisan support.

Outside of the KKK plaque, the commission identified 12 assets with Confederate name associations that should be renamed at West Point and three assets at the US Naval Academy.

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CNN’s Meron Gerbi-Moges contributed to this report.

Article Topic Follows: CNN - US Politics

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