In Washington, D.C., a retirement ceremony honored five transgender service members forcibly separated from the U.S. military under the Trump administration's second ban on transgender troops. Retired four-star Gen. Stanley McChrystal presided over the event hosted by the Human Rights Campaign, criticizing the policy as unfair and detrimental to mission readiness. The ceremony highlighted the personal and professional toll on those affected amid broader Pentagon reviews of diversity initiatives.
The ceremony took place in January in Washington, D.C., for Col. Bree Fram of the U.S. Air Force, Cmdr. Blake Dremann of the U.S. Navy, Lt. Col. Erin Krizek of the U.S. Air Force, Chief Petty Officer Jaida McGuire of the U.S. Coast Guard, and Sgt. 1st Class Cathrine Schmid of the U.S. Army. These individuals were separated due to a policy reinstating gender dysphoria as a disqualifying condition for service. During the first Trump administration, transgender troops were required to obtain a gender dysphoria diagnosis to remain in service, but following the 2024 reelection, new guidance reversed this, targeting those with such documentation for removal.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, known for his roles in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars including the capture of Saddam Hussein and the killing of al-Qaida leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, addressed the gathering. "First off, we shouldn't be here," he said, emphasizing that retirements should occur on military parade fields. In an NPR interview, McChrystal described the separations as "unfortunate and unfair," noting his service alongside transgender members.
A February 2025 memo from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth justified the policy by stating the need for "one force" without identity-based subgroups, arguing such divisions weaken readiness. Military attorney Priya Rashid criticized the process as predetermined, lacking due process and preventing updates to medical records, unlike other conditions. She highlighted costs, including $22,000 per separation board, and emotional impacts, including suicides linked to the separations.
Stealth transgender sailors, identified only as "W" and "A," described quiet support from colleagues to avoid detection, though it limits their career opportunities. Col. Fram, previously the highest-ranking transgender officer and a Space Force member with deployments to Iraq and Qatar, urged others to stand in solidarity and announced her congressional run. McChrystal warned that the policy could harm recruitment in potential major conflicts.