An Intolerant Minority
March 19 2007
Counterbias.com
WALTER BRASCH
Capt.
Joan Darrah (USN-ret.) was the Navy’s first female intelligence officer.
Lt. Col. William Winnewisser (USA-ret.) was a battalion commander,
executive officer of the Army Operations Center at the Pentagon, and a
White House social aide.
Lt. Col. Hank Thomas (USMC-ret.) was an infantry and intelligence
officer who served two tours of duty in Vietnam; he later served as
assistant secretary for international affairs in the Reagan
administration.
Lt. Col. Steve Loomis, wounded in action in Vietnam, was awarded the
Bronze Star with a “V” for valor.
Capt. Joe Lopez, a West Point graduate, and Blackhawk pilot, earned an
Air Medal in Iraq.
Capt. Rebecca Kanis, a West Point graduate, was a company commander in
Special Operations at the time she resigned her commission after nine
years of service.
Capt. Phil Adams, a Naval Academy graduate, spent eight years as a
Marine infantry officer.
1 Lt. Gina Foringer, during her four years of service, was a convoy
commander in Somalia when she was wounded in action.
SSgt. Eric Alva, who lost a leg in Iraq, served 13 years in the Marines
before receiving a medical discharge.
Each of them has a stack of medals and commendations; each of them is
gay or lesbian. And every one of them is immoral, according the Gen.
Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Allowing gays and
lesbians to serve in the military “says that we, by policy, would be
condoning what I believe is immoral activity,” Gen. Pace told the
editorial board of the Chicago Tribune. When Pace’s comments went
public, he was forced to issue a written statement, but never apologized
for his opinion about gays: “In expressing my support for the current
policy, I also offered some personal opinions about moral conduct. I
should have focused more on my support of the policy and less on my
personal moral views.”
That policy is “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” established in 1993 during Bill
Clinton’s first term as president, and later enhanced to include “don’t
pursue, don’t harass.” It was a “compromise.” The military would accept
gays, and not ask them their sexual preferences as long as they don’t
speak out in favor of homosexuality, acknowledge their lives, or enter
into any relationships with members of the same sex.
Harry Truman, by executive order, had dictated the end of segregation in
the military. Clinton planned to do the same for those who are involved
in same sex relationships. Opposing him were all of the military’s “big
guns,” including Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs. When
Powell, a Black, was asked by gay-rights groups, and thousands of
others, how he could support discrimination against gays while
acknowledging that desegregation of the military allowed his own career
to flourish, Powell merely said that the two were not the same. It was
Powell, however, who crafted the revised policy.
Among the reasons the military claimed why gays couldn’t serve was
because their presence would hurt troop morale and undermine combat
effectiveness; gays could be security risks—they were likely to be
blackmailed or compromised, said military commanders. The Navy’s
Crittenden Report in 1957 discounted that reasoning. During the early
1980s, the Department of Defense issued an official declaration opposing
gays in the military; the 124-word inflammatory new policy was designed
to justify reasons why gays must not be allowed to serve. However, an
independent RAND Corp. report in July 1993 found no logic to exclude
gays from service, and concluded that military readiness would not be
affected by having gays in service.
Congressional support to eliminate the ban came from several prominent
Democrats, and one highly-respected Republican—Sen. Barry Goldwater
(1909-1998). Goldwater, a pilot who retired as an Air Force major
general, had numerous times had spoken out against the emerging
dominance of the Religious Right in Republican politics. Although there
is no clear-cut evidence that President Bush is homophobic, there is
significant evidence that the continuation of the ban against gays in
the military has been strengthened by the resurgence of the influence of
the religious right wing during the Bush–Cheney Administration.
Because the military is a hierarchy, with constant jockeying for duty
stations and promotion, there is no question that the Chairman’s views
about what he believes is the immorality of homosexual behavior will
influence every person in his command.
About 65,000 gays, lesbians, bisexuals, or transgenders now serve in the
military, all of them officially hiding their non-military lives,
according to the Urban Institute and Servicemembers Legal Defense
Network (SLDN). Almost 9,500 members of the military, including hundreds
in critical combat specialties, including 50 Arabic language
specialists, have been forced out of the military between 1993 and 2005,
according to SLDN.
In 2003, on the 10th anniversary of the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy,
Brig. Gen. Keith Kerr (USA-ret.), RADM Alan Steinman (USCG-ret.), and
Brig. Gen. Virgil Richard (USA-ret.), in a signed op-ed column in the
New York Times, all stated they were gay. In an op-ed column for the
New York Times, Gen. John M. Shalikashvili, former chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he believed “if gay men and lesbians
served openly . . . they would not undermine the efficacy of the armed
forces.”
State and federal laws prohibit discrimination against a person’s sexual
orientation; the FBI, CIA, Secret Service, Drug Enforcement Agency, and
National Security Agency all have openly gay agents; The armed forces,
says Gen. Wesley Clark, former NATO commander and Democratic
presidential candidate in 2004, “are the last institution in America
that discriminates against people; it should be the first that doesn’t.”
Israel, which unarguably has one of the world’s most elite and effective
military operations, officially bans discrimination against gays,
lesbians, bisexuals, and transgenders. Israel “has more gay rights than
all of the U.S.,” says Denny Meyer, a former Vietnam era Army sergeant
first class who is also editor of the Gay Military Times. Almost
30 nations—including most countries of the European Union—have no
problems with anyone’s sexual orientation. The United Kingdom, whose
soldiers serve with Americans in Afghanistan and Iraq, is even “actively
recruiting” gays and lesbians, says Meyer. Of the 26 NATO nations, only
the United States, Portugal, and Turkey don’t allow gays to openly serve
in the military. And Turkey, says Meyer, “is close to allowing gays to
serve.”
Almost three-fourths of all military personnel say they are
“comfortable” with having gays and lesbians in their units, according to
a Zogby poll in December. About one-fourth of all military persons say
they know that a member of their unit is gay—and it has no effect upon
them.
Former Sen. Chuck Robb, who served 34 years in active and reserve duty
as a Marine officer, in 2002 said that “the threat to morale,” which
some believe will occur if there is a policy to permit gays in the
military, “comes not from the orientation of a few, but from the closed
minds of many.”
About 79 percent of all Americans believe the military should allow gays
to serve openly, according to a Boston Globe poll conducted in
May 2005; a FOX News poll two years earlier revealed that 64 percent of
all Americans had no problem with allowing gays to serve openly. About
two-thirds of all Catholics and slightly more than half of all
Protestants believe in the rights of gays to serve, according to a Pew
Research Center study of March 2006.
Rep. Martin Meehan (D-Mass.), with 114 cosponsors, including
conservative Republicans, on Feb. 28 introduced the Military Readiness
Enhancement Act (H.R. 1246) that would end “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” and
replace it with absolute nondiscrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation. With most of the world’s best military units not worried
about the presence of gays in their ranks, with large majorities of both
military and civilian personnel believing gays should be allowed to
serve openly, and with a Democratic Congress that claims it plans to
make necessary social changes, now is the time strike down the hostility
of an intolerant minority and to eliminate one more form of
officially-sanctioned discrimination.
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Assisting on this column
were the American Veterans for Equal Rights (AVER) and Servicemens Legal
Defense Network (SLDN). For further information, contact the AVER (www.averny.tripod.com),
SLDN (www.sldn.org),
Human Rights Campaign Foundation (www.hrc.org),
and The Gay Military Times [www.thegaymilitarytimes.com.
Dr. Brasch’s latest books are America’s Unpatriotic Acts: The Federal
Government’s Violation of Constitutional and Civil Rights and
‘Unacceptable’: The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina.