It was a history-making event: In a chapel at Fort Liberty, North Carolina, 2nd Lt. Khady Ndiaye stood proudly -- wearing a hijab 鈥 as she became the first Muslim woman commissioned by the U.S. Army as a chaplain candidate.

Presiding over the ceremony in June was Maj. Gen. Bill Green, the Army鈥檚 chief of chaplains. He said the chaplains serve more than 200 faith groups, 鈥渨hile caring for the entire Army family ... regardless of their personal beliefs."

That ethos 鈥 a commitment to religious diversity throughout a U.S. military with 1.3 million active-duty troops -- could be strained if Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 nominee for defense secretary, is confirmed as the next Pentagon leader.

Hegseth sometimes conveys his conservative Christian outlook in militaristic terms, has justified the medieval Crusades that pitted Christians against Muslims, and evokes the specter of Islamists seeking to impose their faith on non-Muslims. He has denounced the military鈥檚 initiatives to foster diversity, equity and inclusion, which include religion among other categories.

Today鈥檚 military 鈥渋s one of the most diverse institutions in American society, racially, ethnically and especially religiously,鈥 said Ronit Stahl, author of 鈥淓nlisting Faith: How the Military Chaplaincy Shaped Religion and State in Modern America.鈥

鈥淥verall, the military was an engine of religious inclusion and really thinking about how to manage religious pluralism, but it was not a smooth or easy process,鈥 said Stahl, a professor of history at the University of California at Berkeley. 鈥淭o have a secretary of defense who promulgates a worldview or operates within a worldview where not just Christianity, but a certain strand of Christianity, is the right religion, potentially changes the tenor of what an ethos of religious pluralism looks like in the military.鈥

The military chaplaincy has evolved as America has diversified. It originally functioned with mainline Protestant and Catholic chaplains, expanding during World War I to include such groups as Jews and Mormons.

Recent decades have seen the military鈥檚 first Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist chaplains. The military has also made accommodations such as allowing Sikhs to maintain their religiously mandated turbans and beards.

Today, about 70% of active-duty military identify as Christian 鈥 including about 20% Catholic and about half Protestant or other Christian, according to a 2019 congressional report. About a quarter of troops were listed as 鈥渙ther/unclassified/unknown,鈥 with small percentages of atheists/agonistics, Jews, Muslims and adherents of Eastern religions.

The Defense Department could not immediately confirm the figures. But they roughly match Americans鈥 .

Today, the Army鈥檚 careers-and-jobs website depicts its chaplaincy as 鈥渁 multi-faith program -- ministers, priests, imams, rabbis, and more.鈥

The mission for its chaplains: 鈥淥bserve the distinct doctrines of your faith while honoring other denominations and ensuring the right for others to observe their own.鈥

Rabbi Scott Klein. who serves as an Army chaplain within the 82nd Airborne Division and is garrison rabbi at Fort Liberty, said the military 鈥渉as made significant strides in fostering an interfaith environment.鈥

鈥淥ne area where I think we can continue to improve is in education and training,鈥 he said via email. 鈥淧roviding more opportunities for service members to learn about different faith traditions would further break down barriers and misconceptions.鈥

The U.S. Navy reports that it has 874 chaplains. Most have a range of Protestant affiliations, including 101 Southern Baptists. They also include 46 Catholics, 18 Latter-day Saints, 12 Jewish, 9 Eastern Orthodox, 4 Muslim and 1 Buddhist. Statistics from other branches were not immediately available.

Hegseth鈥檚 nomination requires confirmation from the Senate, where he鈥檚 facing over other controversies. He is subject to multiple allegations that have emerged in the media about alcohol intoxication at work events, sexual misconduct and potential financial mismanagement. He was flagged as a by a fellow service member in 2021.

Hegseth, an author and former Fox News host, is an Army 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Guard veteran of deployments to Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.

He has written of America as a Judeo-Christian nation, portraying the founders as Christians despite what historians say were their . He said Americans of any religion are welcome in a 鈥渞ighteous crusade for human freedom," though he often fuses Christian and American identity. 鈥淲e Christians 鈥 alongside our Jewish friends and their remarkable army in Israel 鈥 need to pick up the sword of unapologetic Americanism and defend ourselves," he wrote in his 2020 book, 鈥淎merican Crusade.鈥

Mikey Weinstein, president of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, said Hegseth 鈥減romotes the concept of fundamentalist Christian dominance and supremacy.鈥

Weinstein, an Air Force veteran, said military personnel have the right to practice and proclaim their faith 鈥 but within constitutional restrictions on the 鈥渢ime, place and manner鈥 of such expressions.

鈥淐hristian nationalists like Hegseth believe there are no limits on when they can deploy their faith,鈥 Weinstein said.

But other veterans are supporting Hegseth, including Damon Friedman, a retired 20-year Marine and Air Force veteran who now leads SOF Missions, a Florida-based program aiming to reduce veteran suicides.

Friedman, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, said he shares Hegseth鈥檚 Christian faith. That didn鈥檛 interfere with his duty to lead troops regardless of their religion, he said.

鈥淲e live in a free country. We get warriors of all faiths,鈥 said Friedman, a retired lieutenant colonel.

He favors Hegseth鈥檚 goal of rolling back diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, which he contended is causing the military to focus on members鈥 various identities rather than on solidarity in being a 鈥渨ar-fighting machine.鈥

鈥淲e just need to get back to being green,鈥 he said, referring to the primary uniform color.

Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tennessee, concurred.

鈥淲e need to get back to business, and I think Pete is just the person to do it,鈥 Hagerty said recently on ABC鈥檚 鈥淭his Week with George Stephanopoulos鈥 .

Some concerns about Hegseth center on his views toward Islam and the religious motivations he cites for supporting Israel.

He has spoken enthusiastically about the possibility of a restored Jewish temple on its ancient site in Jerusalem. Such a move would involve the geopolitically explosive step of displacing the Al-Aqsa Mosque 鈥 one of Islam鈥檚 holiest sites and a symbol of Palestinian aspirations.

Hegseth made his comments at a 2018 conference in Jerusalem. He rejected Palestinian aspirations for statehood, saying there is 鈥渘o such thing as the outcome of a two-state solution, there is one state.鈥

Hegseth bears a prominent tattoo proclaiming 鈥淒eus Vult,鈥 (鈥淕od Wills It鈥), the Latin phrase attributed to the 11th century pope who called the First Crusade. That launched two centuries of fierce, intermittent warfare between Christian and Muslim armies in and around the Holy Land.

Hegseth wrote in his book that he wasn鈥檛 romanticizing the Crusades and but said the 鈥減resent moment is much like the eleventh century.鈥 He called for Christians, Jews and the Israeli army to 鈥減ush Islamism back," culturally and when necessary militarily.

He defined Islamism as an ideology imposing Islam on others. He contended that moderate Muslims may be peaceful but are either 鈥渃omplicit in Islamism鈥檚 expansion or impotent to reverse it.鈥

The Council on American-Islamic Relations opposes Hegseth鈥檚 nomination.

鈥淚f President-Elect Trump is serious about pursuing peace abroad and putting American interests above the interests of foreign governments, he should reconsider Mr. Hegseth鈥檚 nomination,鈥 the Muslim advocacy organization said.

Thomas Lecaque, a professor of history at Grand View University, said the 鈥淒eus Vult鈥 expression is unambiguously militant.

鈥淭here is no version of 鈥橠eus Vult鈥 that means anything other than a call for violence,鈥 said Lecaque, who studies religious violence from the Crusades to modern America.

The Trump-Vance transition team did not return emails seeking comment. Emails to Hegseth and his attorney also did not receive replies.

Larry Wilkerson, a retired colonel with 31 years in the military and an advisory board member of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, said Hegseth is an alarming choice.

鈥淒iversity is a strength, but you鈥檝e got to know how to lead it,鈥 said Wilkerson, a former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 do it by forcing the majority鈥檚 or even a large minority鈥檚 views on them.鈥

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP鈥檚 with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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