NEW YORK - As the U.S. military prepares for war overseas,
one of its most nettlesome personnel policies is under escalating
criticism at home.
Ten years after President Clinton proposed it, the "don't ask,
don't tell" policy remains in place - an awkward compromise that
allows gay men and lesbians to serve in uniform as long as they
keep quiet about their sexual orientation.
Some people yearn to reinstate the previous policy, which made
clear that homosexuals were not welcome in the ranks. From the
opposite flank, there is greater pressure than ever to allow gays
to serve openly; gay-rights groups argue that the military's war
readiness is undercut by a policy that alienates gay soldiers or
forces them from the ranks.
The Bush administration and the Pentagon say there are no
imminent plans to abandon "don't ask, don't tell."
"As Winston Churchill said of democracy, it's the worst system
possible except for any other," said Charles Moskos, a
Northwestern University sociologist who helped devise the policy.
"The military says it's working OK; it's the best option
available. I think it's here indefinitely."
Timed to coincide with the military buildup around Iraq, the
campaign against the policy has included these recent initiatives:
-Human Rights Watch, the largest U.S.-based human rights
organization, issued a report denouncing "don't ask, don't tell,"
urging President Bush to repudiate it, and assailing the military
as "a bastion of officially sanctioned discrimination against
homosexuals."
-Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, an advocacy group for
gays and lesbians in the military, launched a "Freedom to Serve"
campaign aimed at overturning the policy. The network also reports
an upsurge of requests for advice and support from gay
servicemembers deployed near Iraq.
-The Human Rights Campaign, a leading gay rights group, compiled
first-person accounts from dozens of gay and lesbian veterans
describing the challenges of serving dutifully in an unwelcoming
environment.
"I loved the Navy - it was good to me, but I was very bitter my
last few years," said one of those veterans, Nick Marulli, who
served from 1977 to '97. "It was difficult having to live in two
worlds."
To guard against a discharge that would jeopardize his pension,
Marulli avoided telling even close friends in the service that he
was gay. He is convinced that gays could serve openly, without
problems, if political and military leaders backed the change.
"The military is about discipline, it's about the example set
by leaders," said Marulli, 44, now a computer instructor from
Crofton, Md. "If the command says, 'This is our policy, you're
going to live by it and respect it,' people would jump in line and
say, 'Yes, sir."'
The Pentagon considers the policy a mandate from Congress, and
says its duty is to implement it.
"There are no plans to change or modify the policy at this
time," the Defense Department said in a statement. "The
department continues to work tirelessly to administer that law in a
manner that is both fair and consistent ... treating all
servicemembers with dignity and respect."
Secretary of State Colin Powell, former chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, defended the policy in a recent interview with
teenage reporters for the magazine Teen Ink.
Though most forms of discrimination against gays are wrong,
Powell said, "I think it's a different matter with respect to the
military, because you're essentially told who you're going to live
with, who you're going to sleep next to."
Clinton referred to "don't ask, don't tell" as an "honorable
compromise," but it was a difficult one, emerging only after
vehement opposition forced him to abandon a 1992 campaign pledge to
allow gays to serve openly.
Under the policy, gays and lesbians are supposed to keep quiet
about their sexual orientation, while enjoying freedom from
harassment or unprovoked investigations. They can be discharged for
speaking publicly about being gay or engaging in homosexual acts.
Robert Maginnis, a retired Army colonel and military analyst,
believes gays should be excluded altogether from the armed forces
on grounds that their presence can make heterosexual soldiers
uncomfortable. But he says the Bush administration's low-profile
approach - letting the policy remain intact - makes sense.
"Politically, they're doing what they have to do - be quiet
about it in the midst of the war on terror and the impending war
with Iraq," Maginnis said.
However, groups that want gays allowed to serve openly are
citing national security and impending war as reasons to make the
change. For example, there was an outcry from gay-rights supporters
when the military confirmed in November that nine Army linguists,
including six trained to speak Arabic, had been dismissed because
they were gay.
C. Dixon Osburn, executive director of Servicemembers Legal
Defense Network, estimated that at least 7,500 gays and lesbians
were already deployed in the Middle East, out of 230,000 U.S.
troops, in preparation for war.
"They're willing to put their lives on the line to defend
freedom when they're denied freedom at home," he said. "They
can't talk to their loved ones on the phone, they can't embrace
them when they get on aircraft carriers to sail off to war."
Such arguments irk Elaine Donnelly, president of an advocacy
group called the Center for Military Readiness which opposes
liberalization of military personnel policies. She says the
military should ask recruits if they are gay and exclude those who
say "yes."
"Gay activists and their allies in the media are trying to wrap
their radical agenda in the flag of 'national security' and
'military necessity,"' Donnelly asserted in a recent policy
statement. "In the interests of national security, social
engineering must be brought to an end."
Since the policy was implemented, more than 8,500 servicemembers
have been discharged under its provisions, according to the
Pentagon.
In some cases, the discharges were involuntary and followed
contentious investigations. In many cases, gays and lesbians
initiated the discharge process, complaining of harassment or the
stress of concealing their sexual orientation.
"I was under immense scrutiny just for not having a
boyfriend," said Lara Ballard, an Army artillery officer from
1991-95. "People don't realize how much deception is entailed -
you need to come up with a constant acting performance."
Ballard, 33, a Tennessee native who is now a government lawyer
in Washington, disagrees with military commanders' assertion that
cohesion and morale would suffer if gays served openly.
"A lot of things can affect cohesion - you can have neo-Nazis,
born-again Christians and witchcraft practitioners in one unit,"
but the soldiers still cooperate, she said. "They're professional,
they can learn to get along."
Michael Kilmer, 32, triggered his discharge from a Seattle-based
Coast Guard unit in 2001 when, on the verge of becoming an officer,
he decided to disclose that he was gay.
He wanted the promotion, but on his terms. "Unfortunately, the
'don't ask, don't tell' policy does not permit me to serve the
Coast Guard with integrity," he wrote to his commanders.
"I really thought I had a chance at changing the policy," said
Kilmer, who earned numerous commendations during a 14-year career.
"But I have no ill feelings against the Coast Guard. If they
allowed us to serve, I'd go back."
The Pentagon has pledged to expand training aimed at eliminating
anti-gay harassment, but Osburn described the efforts as
insufficient. "It's hard to implement a policy fairly that at its
root is base discrimination," he said.
Osburn is convinced gays will someday be allowed to serve
openly, as they do in most NATO countries, but says the change
could be 10 years away.
A supporter of the goal, Sen. Mark Dayton, D-Minn., noted that
the military gradually overcame resistance to full participation by
blacks and women.
"Progress came slowly and haltingly, but they were accepted and
embraced eventually, and we have a better military and better
society because of it," Dayton said. "The same thing should
happen with gays and lesbians."
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