Trump chief of staff's Civil War comment
sparks criticism
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[November 01, 2017]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - White House
Chief of Staff John Kelly's comment that the U.S. Civil War was sparked
by a lack of "compromise" drew criticism and reignited a debate over
Confederate monuments and the role of slavery.
In an interview on Monday night with Fox News, Kelly was asked whether a
Virginia church should have removed plaques honoring Confederate General
Robert E. Lee and President George Washington, both Virginians. Kelly
said figures of the past could not be viewed through the lens of current
moral values.
"I think it's just very, very dangerous and it shows you ... how much of
a lack of appreciation of history and what history is," Kelly said. "I
will tell you that Robert E. Lee was an honorable man."
"The lack of an ability to compromise led to the Civil War, and men and
women of good faith on both sides made their stand where their
conscience had them make their stand," Kelly added.
The comment sparked an immediate backlash, with critics noting that the
United States had made a number of compromises on slavery before
tensions eventually erupted into the war between the North and the South
in 1861.
"Notion that Civil War resulted from a lack of compromise is belied by
all the compromises made on enslavement from America's founding,"
Ta-Nehisi Coates, an African-American writer, wrote on Twitter.
Others accused Kelly of encouraging white supremacists by saying Lee was
honorable.
"It's irresponsible & dangerous, especially when white supremacists feel
emboldened, to make fighting to maintain slavery sound courageous,"
Bernice King, the daughter of American civil rights activist Martin
Luther King Jr., wrote in a Twitter post.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders, asked on Tuesday about Kelly's
comment, told a news briefing: "General Kelly was simply making the
point that just because history isn't perfect, it doesn't mean that it's
not our history."
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White House Chief of Staff John Kelly speaks during a daily briefing
at the White House in Washington, U.S., October 19, 2017.
REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
Replying to another question about whether figures such as Nathan
Bedford Forrest, a Confederate general accused of war crimes and an
early leader of the Ku Klux Klan, deserved to be honored, Sanders
said: "The president has said that those are something that should
be left up to state and local governments, and that's not who I'm
here representing today."
President Donald Trump has said Confederate monuments, many of which
have been removed in recent years, should remain in place to
preserve the country's heritage.
He stirred tensions after a deadly rally by white nationalists in
Charlottesville, Virginia, by insisting that counterprotesters were
also to blame, drawing condemnation from some Republican leaders and
praise from white supremacists.
Kelly had a distinguished military career and led the Department of
Homeland Security before Trump tapped him to be chief of staff.
Kelly is viewed by some as a moderating influence in the turbulent
White House, but has also stepped into controversy. Earlier this
month, he attacked a Florida congresswoman who had characterized a
call between Trump and a military widow who lost her husband in
Niger as disrespectful.
(Reporting by Makini Brice; Editing by Doina Chiacu and Jonathan
Oatis)
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