The Pentagon said Wednesday that in “rare cases” it may have deliberately or mistakenly removed some webpages in efforts to remove diversity, equity and inclusion content after a tribute to Jackie Robinson’s Army service was suddenly scrubbed from a Department of Defense’s website.
A DOD official told ABC News that the Robinson webpage, among other content recently removed from Pentagon websites, was “mistakenly removed” due to the search terms used to scrub DEI terms from platforms.
Jackie Robinson, in military uniform, signs a contract with the minor league club in Montreal, a farm team for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
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The official said Robinson’s page and others that were unpublished, including content honoring the Tuskegee Airmen, the Enola Gay, the Navajo Code Talkers, history-making female fighter pilots and the Marines at Iwo Jima, would be republished.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the webpage for Robinson, which was headlined “Sports Heroes Who Served: Baseball Great Jackie Robinson Was WWII Soldier,” had been restored and seemed to be identical to its original version, which included language noting the “racial abuse” he faced and that he was “the first Black person to serve as a vice president of a major U.S. corporation.”
“We were surprised to learn that a page on the Department of Defense’s website featuring Jackie Robinson among sports heroes who served in the military was taken down,” said David Robinson, son of Jackie and Rachel Robinson and a board member at the Jackie Robinson Foundation. “We take great pride in Jackie Robinson’s service to our country as a soldier and a sports hero, an icon whose courage, talent, strength of character and dedication contributed greatly to leveling the playing field not only in professional sports but throughout society.
“He worked tirelessly on behalf of equal opportunities, in education, business, civic engagement, and within the justice system,” he added. “A recipient of both the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal, he of course is an American hero.”
Another page that was removed and then reinstated included a story, published on 25, 2008, that honored the 60th anniversary of the integration of U.S. troops.
Pentagon deputy press secretary John Ullyot said in a statement to ABC News that “everyone at the Defense Department loves Jackie Robinson” as well as others whose webpages were removed and will be restored.

View of members of the United States Marine Corps 5th Division as they raise an American flag on Mount Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo Jima, February 23, 1945.
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Ullyot added that the DOD salutes many of these military heroes and does “not view or highlight them through the prism of immutable characteristics, such as race, ethnicity, or sex.”
“We do so only by recognizing their patriotism and dedication to the warfighting mission like ever other American who has worn the uniform,” Ullyot said, saying DEI initiatives “divide the force.”
“We are pleased by the rapid compliance across the Department with the directive removing DEI content from all platforms,” he added. “In the rare cases that content is removed — either deliberately or by mistake — that is out of the clearly outlined scope of the directive, we instruct the components and they correct the content so it recognizes our heroes for their dedicated service alongside their fellow Americans, period.”
It was not clear which terms in the Robinson story, published by DOD News, led to its removal.
Pentagon Press Secretary John Ullyot listens as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth answers a reporter’s question while meeting with UK Defense Secretary John Healey at the Pentagon with members of their respective teams, on March 6, 2025 in Arlington, Virginia.
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Ahead of the DOD saying the webpage removal was a mistake, Jackie Robinson Foundation Chairman Leonard Coleman, the former National League president, told ESPN that Robinson “represents America at its best.”
“Removing an icon and Presidential Medal of Freedom and Congressional Gold Medal recipient from government websites represents America at its worst,” he added.
According to an online archive of the story, which was a part of a series on “Sports Heroes Who Served,” Robinson was “assigned to a segregated Army cavalry unit in Fort Riley, Kansas,” after being drafted in 1942.
It recounted Robinson’s arrest in 1944 after an Army bus driver ordered Robinson “to move to the back of the bus, but Robinson refused.”
The story, which has been restored, noted that Robinson in his baseball career “did experience a lot of hatred from fans and other baseball players who felt that Black players should not be allowed in Major League Baseball.”
Still, Pentagon press secretary Sean Parnell defended the removal of DEI from the DOD, saying the Biden administration’s “zealous and destructive commitment to DEI … divided our nation, weakened our force … [and] reduced our country’s finest to their immutable characteristics.”
Parnell said the process of removing and archiving DEI-related material was “arduous” and that, because of “AI tools and other software,” some came down “incorrectly.”
But he also acknowledged some content could be “maliciously removed” and that, in those cases, the Pentagon would swiftly restore the content. “History is not DEI,” Parnell assured.
Though some webpages were restored, an Air Force webpage honoring Colin Powell, which was headlined “First Black Joint Chiefs chairman also was the youngest,” is a disactivated URL that has been changed to include the term “DEI.”
The Pentagon in its statement did not mention Powell’s webpage as one of the pages removed by mistake.