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Paul Varnell is a freelance writer and can be reached at pvarnell@aol.com.


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OPINION

Chipping away at military’s gay ban
GOP candidates defend ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ despite growing opposition.


Friday, December 07, 2007



ON NOV. 30, a group of 28 retired generals and admirals released a letter urging Congress to repeal the law mandating the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy regarding gays.

Pointing to studies suggesting that there are more than one million gay and lesbian veterans and 65,000 gays currently in the armed forces, the generals and admirals point out, “They have served our nation honorably.”

This letter in itself, of course, will not move Congress to act but it chips away a little more at the legitimacy of the law and it can provide additional support for politicians who are willing to speak out about the issue.

The letter followed by just two days a Nov. 28 CNN forum for GOP presidential contenders in which all the candidates (except Giuliani) expressed support for the current policy, arguing that it is “working” or that it would be disruptive to integrate open gays into the military. Sen. John McCain said specifically that senior generals had told him that the policy is “working.”

Is the policy working? Well, a lot of deplorable policies have “worked,” depending on your goal, but that doesn’t mean that they are the best policies or that other policies would not work better. Racial segregation in the military “worked.” For that matter, racial segregation in the whole Southern society “worked” too. At least for white people. Stalin’s concentration camps “worked.”

Islamic “honor killings” of women who have been raped “work” too, I suppose, if you are not the victim. But do many people want to defend those policies as the best policy?

Remember those Arabic-language students a couple of years ago who, despite the military’s crying need for Arabic-language translators, were discharged because they were gay? Is that an example of the policy “working”? What about all the other skills gays may have been taught that are lost when they are discharged from the military? More examples of the policy “working”?

WHAT IS PARTICULARLY interesting is that people on both sides point to the same fact — that the U.S. is at war — to support their position. In an op-ed for the New York Times last January, Gen. John Shalikashvili wrote, “Our military has been stretched thin by our deployment in the Middle East and we must welcome the service of any American who is willing and able to do the job.”

By contrast, the Republicans all say that it would be a distraction to allow open gays into the military during wartime. As former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee put it, morale and unit cohesion are paramount in the military and the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy protects both. But Huckabee is not well informed. First, gays are already in the military, an increasing number open about their orientation.

Second, a Rand Corporation study several years ago concluded that what counts is not “unit cohesion” but “mission cohesion” — a common commitment to completing the task at hand. And you might think that a military at war has a more important and easily identifiable mission than a military at peace. So integrating gays during a war would be the best time to do it.

Third, the British military began allowing openly gay personnel to serve several years ago and found, to its expressed surprise, that there were virtually no problems. And fourth, small surveys of military personnel have shown an increasing acceptance of open gays in the military.

THE MILITARY ITSELF seems to be ignoring the policy. The New York Times points out that discharges of gays dropped by 50 percent between 2001 and 2006 — from 1,227 to 612. Military recruiters themselves, hard-pressed to meet their quotas, sometimes ignore the gay ban.

Nevertheless, Republican candidates clutch at any possible rationale for keeping gays out of the military even if it has no basis in fact or prudence. I have no doubt that if the nation were at peace they would all say that because we didn’t need more military personnel there was no real need for allowing open gays. (Giuliani, to his credit, has said that if it were peacetime, he would work to rescind the ban.)

No doubt for most of the Republicans, their position is rooted in a religiously motivated hostility to gays. But no doubt too they are aware that most GOP primary voters have similar views, so they are boxed into an inflexible position.

 

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The following comments were posted by our readers and were not edited by the Washington Blade.  We ask that you treat others with respect; any post deemed offensive will be removed.

jeri . on 12/7/07  5:07 PM:
IMHO,there is no "rational" explanation. the greatest opposition to members of the GLBT serving in the military is based in simple homophobia. it has been determined that those who most vehemently oppose homosexual behavior are themselves latent homosexuals, too fearful to come out of their self imposed "closets". "we have met the enemey and they are us." - pogo **** DADT is a national disgrace, especially for a nation founded on the principles of personal freedom and equality. DADT is an insult to those who would sacrfice their own personal freedom, their personal safety, and even their lives to defend those principles for us all. for some inexplicable reason the miltary was also excluded (along with the transgender community) from the ENDA. (both 3685 and 2015) shame on our community! "no one can make you feel inferior without your consent" -eleanor roosevelt by failing to defend our GLBT members in the military, we justify the logic of those who would demean us.

 

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