In the weeks following George Floydâs death in 2020, a U.S. Air Force officerâcurrently awaiting promotion to brigadier generalâaccused his fellow âwhite colonelsâ of being the âbiggest barriersâ to addressing âracial injusticeâ in the military and being âblind to institutional racism.â
Col. Ben Jonssonâs 825-word commentary in the Air Force Times on July 1, 2020, recounts several examples of what he describes as âwhite defensivenessâ in the aftermath of Floydâs death. Jonsson concludes with an endorsement of critical race theory promoter Robin DiAngeloâs controversial book, âWhite Fragility: Why Itâs So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism.â
âDear white colonel, it is time to give a damn. Aim High,â Jonsson wrote.
Earlier this year, President Joe Biden nominated Jonsson for a promotion. Heâs currently one of more than 300 military officers awaiting U.S. Senate approval. Senate Democrats would like to rubber-stamp the promotionsâincluding Jonssonâsâusing an expedited Senate procedure known as unanimous consent, which bypasses consideration of each nominee individually.
Since March, however, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., has objected to numerous unanimous content requests from Democrats, preferring the Senate instead consider the promotions individually until the Defense Department rescinds its divisive taxpayer-funded abortion policy.
Thanks to Tubervilleâs hold, Jonssonâs promotion to Air Force brigadier general is receiving additional scrutiny. He is one of several military officers in line for a promotion who have espoused âwokeâ views that more closely align with the Leftâs diversity, equity, and inclusion agenda than traditional American values.
âCol. Jonsson exhibited a toxic embrace of DEI policies that have no place in the U.S. military,â said William Thibeau, director of the Claremont Instituteâs American Military Project. âHis public characterization of âwhite colonelsââ blindness is inherently divisive and sends shockwaves through his command. When Jonsson addresses a group of airmen by race, he creates the exact boogeyman of racial tension he supposedly seeks to eliminate.â
The U.S. Air Force Academy, where Jonsson most recently served as vice superintendent, directed The Daily Signalâs questions for Jonsson to Scott Air Force Base in Illinois, where he is currently stationed. Neither Jonsson nor the baseâs public affairs office responded prior to publication of this story.
DEI Harms Military Readiness
Last year, The Heritage Foundation commissioned the National Independent Panel on Military Service and Readiness to study the effects of DEI on military readiness (among other issues). Chaired by Rep. Mike Waltz, R-Fla., the panel recommended the Defense Department eliminate DEI programs and training. (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of Heritage.)

The views Jonsson expressed in his commentary are consistent with DEI principles now espoused by Defense Department leadership and embraced by all branches of the U.S. military.
At the Air Force Academy where Jonsson served as vice superintendent, a âDiversity & Inclusionâ slide presentation advised cadets to âuse gender-neutral language and avoid terms such as mom and dad.â It also urged cadets to avoid the term âcolorblindâ and instead be âcolor conscious.â
Under Jonssonâs leadership, the academy faced criticism for promoting DEI and CRT.
Writing under a pseudonym for the Washington Examiner, one cadet recently documented his experience with âdivisive teachingsâ at the Air Force Academy. âThe leftist ideologies, including critical race theory and diversity, equity, and inclusion trainings, being forced upon us by academy leadership have divided the cadet wing from within, in a profession where unity is essential,â he wrote.
It doesnât stop with training programs. Beginning during the Obama administration and accelerating on Bidenâs watch, the military built a vast DEI bureaucracy. Those who questioned it, such as U.S. Space Force Lt. Col. Matthew Lohmeier, faced discipline.
Heritageâs military panel warned that the full-scale embrace of DEI is compromising military readiness and warfighting capabilities. â[T]he precepts of DEI distract from developing a well-trained, merit-based military, and some manifestations of DEI, such as the teaching of postmodernist theories, run counter to the foundational principles that define the United States,â the panel stated.
Taking Aim at âWhite Colonelsâ
Jonsson used his Air Force Times commentary not to address the military readiness or warfighting capabilities but instead as an opportunity to lecture âwhite peopleâ about racism. He wrote:
As white colonels, you and I are the biggest barriers to change if we do not personally address racial injustice in our Air Force. Defensiveness is a predictable response by white people to any discussion of racial injustice. White colonels are no exception. We are largely blind to institutional racism, and we take offense to any suggestion that our system advantaged us at the expense of others.
At the time the commentary was published in July 2020, Jonsson was serving as vice commander of the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing at the Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, according to an article in the Tampa Bay Times and his LinkedIn profile.

In the commentary, he writes about making âwhite colonelsâ feel âuneasyâ and references at least seven observations of seeing âwhite defensiveness play outâ in the aftermath of Floydâs death.
They include:
- During a discussion with white colonels about the Floydâs death and the riots that followed, two of the attendees tried to âameliorateâ their âsocial discomfortâ with humor.
- A white colonel raised concerns about a black officerâs portrayal of racial injustice. âRather than considering the issue, we took a detour to question the methods and message,â Jonsson complained.
- On the topic of military discipline, another white colonel âdeflected meaningful discussion of racial injusticeâ when discussing the âdisproportionate rateâ of Article 15 disciplinary infractions given to black airmen.
- A white colonel questioned a black enlisted leaderâs account of an Article 15 disciplinary infraction for being boisterous, which âended further examination of the role of cultural difference on discipline decisions by supervisors.â
- Another white colonel defended the Air Forceâs culture, which Jonsson said âexcused himself from the need to dig into the underlying issue of racial disparity.â
- When the topic turned to questions of racial disparities in the military justice system, a white colonel questioned the data. Jonsson said that tactic âobviated the need to consider how the Inspector General data might reveal actual problems with our biases.â
- One white participant suggested focusing on racial difference would jeopardize the Air Forceâs mission. Jonsson called the critique a âfalse binary choiceâ that justifies âour lack of action in addressing or understanding race in our formations.â
Jonsson ends the commentary by endorsing a âgood primerâ by DiAngelo. Her book, âWhite Fragility,â soared in popularity after Floydâs death and the subsequent riots. As businesses, churches, and the military rushed to embrace DEI training, DiAngelo profited handsomely from the exposure.
âI Am George Floydâ
Institutions like the Air Force seized the moment to confront âthe persistent problems of racism,â according to the Air Force Times. In the days after Floydâs death, then-Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Dave Goldfein and Chief Master Sgt. Kaleth Wright hosted a virtual town hall at which Wright declared, âI am George Floyd.â
Goldfein, in a June 1, 2020, memo, called Floydâs death âa national tragedy.â He wrote: âWe can no longer walk by this problem. We must look inward at our Air Force, and at every echelon of command, so we emerge stronger as a profession of arms.â
Jonsson quoted Goldfeinâs words in his commentary, then added a message to his peers:
Dear white colonel, you and I set the culture, drive the calendar, and create the policies at most of our installations around the Air Force. If we do not take the time to learn, to show humility, to address our blind spots around race, and to agree that we are not as objective as we think and our system is not as fair as we think, then our Air Force will not rise above George Floydâs murder. But we can rise above it, we can break these invisible barriers, if we choose to engage and stop excusing ourselves.
Heritageâs military readiness panel concluded that concepts like CRTâwhich are acted upon by leaders like Jonssonâconflict with the militaryâs core principles.
âThe concept of CRT is anathema to the core principles of the U.S. military, an institution that depends on a team approach, one where every member must rely on one another and not have to worry that his leader or his subordinates doubt their abilities or decisions based on considerations of race, gender, or ethnicity,â the panel wrote.
Stalled in the Senate
With the Senate in recess until September, Jonssonâs promotion is on hold at least until thenâand quite possibly longer if Democrats continue to insist on using the expedited unanimous consent process.
Tuberville has so far withstood attacks from the Left and even members of his own party, including a lack of support from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

With the standoff now reaching its fifth month and new concerns emerging about the âwokeâ beliefs of the military officers who Democrats want the Senate to approve, the issue is moving beyond Tubervilleâs initial objection to the Defense Departmentâs policy of providing three weeks of paid leave and reimbursement of travel expenses for military personnel and dependents seeking abortions. An estimate from Rand Corp. predicts the number of abortions in the military eligible for taxpayer-covered expenses would skyrocket from 20 to more than 4,000 each year.
>>> 3,000 Military Veterans Reject Pentagonâs âLeft-Wing Social Agenda,â Support Tubervilleâs Fight
Previously, The Daily Signal reported on another military officer awaiting promotion: Navy Capt. (now Rear Adm.) Michael Donnelly. He served as commanding officer of the USS Ronald Reagan from April 2016 to September 2018. During that time period, Yeoman 2nd Class Joshua Kelley was performing as a drag queen at military-sanctioned events on the aircraft carrier under the name âHarpy Daniels.â
Thibeau, a U.S. Army veteran and graduate of Army Ranger School, said conservatives should carefully examine who theyâre promoting to leadership roles in the military.
âJonssonâs recommendation of such a dishonest book as âWhite Fragilityâ indicates his inability to lead without politicizing his service and the service of those in his command,â Thibeau said. âConservatives rightly reject DiAngeloâs book, and her accompanying philosophy, for corporations and universities. As such, conservatives in Congress should reject any military leader who introduces such content into the conduct of the U.S. Air Force.â
Mary Margaret Olohan contributed to this report.
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