Veteran: DOD withholds docs on whether DEI hiring improves national security
The U.S. Department of Defense is under scrutiny for refusing to release records about exactly how spending on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion helps with national security.
The Center to Advance Security in America in May filed with the DOD a Freedom of Information Act Request, the legal pathway to obtain government documents. The FOIA sought to find out what DOD officials estimate is the real impact on national security of DEI spending, for which Congress approved $86.5 million in fiscal year 2023.
However, James Fitzpatrick, an Army Veteran who leads CASA, told The Center Square that the DOD has confirmed it received the FOIA request but still has not released any documents more than 100 days later.
โThe Department of Defense has stated that diversity, equity, and inclusion is the American militaryโs greatest strength but has rarely detailed how,โ reads the FOIA, which was obtained by The Center Square. โGiven the recent hiring freeze on DEI related positions, it must follow that national security has been affected in some way. The information obtained is necessary to evaluate the impact of DEI initiatives and financing on prioritizing efforts to advance national security.โ
The FOIA request specifically asks for documentation about how DOD estimates a recent hiring freeze on DEI hires will actually impact national security. DOD regularly estimates readiness and national security impacts, especially in its funding requests to Congress for various kinds of equipment, programs and more.
The most recent National Defense Authorization Act ordered a hiring freeze on new DEI positions while the Government Accountability Office reviews that spending.
CASA filed suit against the DOD Wednesday, a lawsuit that was exclusively obtained by The Center Square.
โIf diversity, equity and inclusion are truly the militaryโs greatest strengths, or there have been times where they have said it is critical to the success of the military, then if the DOD is imposing a DEI hiring freeze โฆ then there must be a corresponding lack of national security that goes along with it, if their position is spending more on DEI means military gets better and stronger,โ Fitzpatrick told The Center Square.
DOD officials and documents repeatedly emphasize the importance of diversity in defending the nation.
Under FOIA law, federal agencies are generally required to provide documents within about three weeks. THe DOD has staff dedicated to handling these requests.
โThey are legally required to produce records,โ Fitzpatrick said. โThey havenโt. They are well over the friendly threshold to provide records, and really they just need to engage in a conversation. By this point they very well should have reached out and said theyโve started the search.โ
DEI Pentagon spending has become increasingly common and controversial in recent years. DEI spending includes well-paid DEI hires, training programs on gender pronouns and white privilege for troops, and efforts to recruit non-white Americans for certain roles.
The DODโs fiscal year 2022-2023 โDepartment of Defense Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility Strategic Planโ typifies the kind of language federal officials use about the necessity of diversity spending.
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness began the report with a message, saying that โleveraging this strategic diversity and expanding access to attract, retain, and advance the best talent our nation has to offer are the only way DoD will be able to outthink, outmaneuver, and outfight any adversary or threat.
โThe 2022 National Defense Strategy highlights that for DoD to maintain the Joint Forceโs military advantage globally and prevent attacks against our homeland, we must build a resilient force by developing and combining our strengths to maximum effect and investing in our people,โ he continued. โAdvancing diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) across the Department is not about checking a box; itโs about obtaining the critical skills and experience to build the Total Force necessary to secure our nation for years to come.โ
DOD did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.