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"We expect our professors to challenge the minds of future leaders, and we respect their academic independence," he added.

The comments are the latest development in an escalating spat between conservatives and the Pentagon over the military’s efforts to combat racism and extremism in the ranks, which also drew in the military's top officer, Gen. Mark Milley , the previous week.

In a Wednesday Washington Post op-ed , Lynne Chandler Garcia, an associate professor of political science at the Air Force Academy, defended the teaching of critical race theory at the nation’s military schools, writing that she herself teaches it to cadets because it's “vital” that future military leaders understand the history of racism and how it's shaped the country.

“Cadets, like all military members, take an oath to defend the Constitution with their lives — so it's crucial they have a sensitive understanding of that Constitution,” Garcia wrote.

The piece immediately drew condemnation from conservative legislators, who alleged that Garcia’s comments contradict Austin’s testimony the previous month.

“We do not teach critical race theory, we don’t embrace critical race theory and I think that’s a spurious conversation,” Austin told legislators in June. “We're focused on extremist behaviors, and not ideology, not people’s thoughts, not people’s political orientation.”

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) on Wednesday said that Garcia, based on her op-ed, has "no business" teaching the Constitution or political science to Air Force cadets, and called on her to start looking for a new job.

“Secretary Austin has testified at least twice that our military doesn't teach, instruct, or condone critical race theory,” Cotton said. “We should not be teaching and indoctrinating our cadets to believe that our military is a fundamentally racist institution.”

Rep. Michael Waltz (R-Fla.) also said there was a contradiction between Garcia’s comments and Austin’s testimony.

“Secretary Austin testified that DOD was not teaching Critical Race Theory yet we now know both West Point and the Air Force Academy are doing just that,” Waltz said in a statement to a news outlet Thursday. “Critical Race Theory isn’t a history lesson, it’s indoctrinating our future military leaders that America and the military are systemically racist. That’s unacceptable.”

One GOP lawmaker called on the Air Force to fire Garcia. Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.), a West Point graduate and previous President Donald Trump’s one-time choice for Army secretary, demanded her firing in a Thursday letter to acting Air Force Secretary John Roth.

“Professor García’s comments on Critical Race Theory are utterly unacceptable and incompatible with the mission of our United States Military Service Academies,” Green wrote. “Disparaging the United States as a racist country should disqualify anyone from teaching at one of our country’s most prestigious institutions.”

The controversy over discussion's involving race in the military has also ensnared Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Speaking alongside Austin in June before Congress, Milley dismissed as “offensive” GOP legislators’ characterization of military leaders as “woke” for studying the origins of racism, prompting outrage from the right. Trump afterwards waded into the fray, calling on Milley to resign.

The reaction to Garcia’s comments comes just weeks after legislators demanded that another military school, the U.S. Military Academy West Point, stop teaching critical race theory. In a letter to West Point Superintendent Lt. Gen. Darryl Williams, Waltz called the teachings “divisive” and “unacceptable” for future military leaders.

"I think it's incredibly divisive," Waltz told Fox News in June. "The underlying piece of critical race theory is that civilian institutions in this country are inherently misogynist, racist and colonialist, and therefore, it's our duty to resist them — that is fine for activists — but one of these cadets is going to be the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and being taught that the Constitution is critically flawed?"

"That, to me, is terrifying and destructive,” he said.

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