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Officers Discharged Under Gay Policy
Associated Press
January 25, 2006
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- Hundreds of officers and health care professionals have been
discharged in the past 10 years under the Pentagon's policy on gays, a
loss that while relatively small in numbers involves troops who are
expensive for the military to educate and train.
The 350 or so affected are a tiny fraction of the 1.4 million members
of the uniformed services and about 3.5 percent of the more than 10,000
people discharged under the ''Don't Ask, Don't Tell'' policy since its
inception in 1994.
But many were military school graduates or service members who went to
medical school at the taxpayers' expense -- troops not as easily
replaced by a nation at war that is struggling to fill its enlistment
quotas.
''You don't just go out on the street tomorrow and pluck someone from
the general population who has an Air Force education, someone trained
as a physician, someone who bleeds Air Force blue, who is willing to
serve, and that you can put in Iraq tomorrow,'' said Beth Schissel, who
graduated from the Air Force Academy in 1989 and went on to medical
school.
Schissel was forced out of the military after she acknowledged that she was gay.
According to figures compiled by the Pentagon and released by the
Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military, Schissel is
one of 244 medical and health professionals discharged from 1994
through 2003 under the policy that allows gays and lesbians to serve as
long as they abstain from homosexual activity and do not disclose their
sexual orientation. Congress approved the policy in 1993.
There were 137 officers discharged during that period. The database
compiled by the Pentagon does not include names, but it appears that
about 30 of the medical personnel who were discharged may also be
included in the list of officers.
The center -- a research unit of the Institute for Social, Behavioral
& Economic Research of the University of California -- promotes
analysis of the issue of gays in the military.
''These discharges comprise a very small percentage of the total and
should be viewed in that context,'' said Lt. Col. Ellen Krenke, a
Pentagon spokeswoman. She added that troops discharged under the law
can continue to serve their country by becoming a private military
contractor or working for other federal agencies.
Opponents of the policy on gays acknowledge that the number of those
discharged is small. But they say the policy exacerbates a shortage of
medical specialists in the military when they are needed the most.
Late last year Army officials acknowledged in a congressional hearing
that they are seeing shortfalls in key medical specialties.
''What advantage is the military getting by firing brain surgeons at
the very time our wounded soldiers aren't receiving the medical care
they need?'' said Aaron Belkin, associate professor of political
science at the University of California at Santa Barbara.
Overall, the number of discharges has gone down in recent years.
''When we're at war, commanders know that gay personnel are just as
important as any other personnel,'' said Nathaniel Frank, senior
research fellow at the Center. He said that in some instances
commanders knew someone in their unit was gay but ignored it.
The overall discharges peaked in 2000 and 2001, on the heels of the
1999 murder of Pfc. Barry Winchell, who was bludgeoned to death by a
fellow soldier at Fort Campbell, Ky., who believed Winchell was gay.
About one-sixth of the discharges in 2001 were at that base.
Officials did not provide estimates on the cost of a military education
or one for medical personnel. However, according to the private
American Medical Student Association, average annual tuition and fees
at public and private U.S. medical schools in 2002 were $14,577 and
$30,960, respectively.
Early last year the Government Accountability Office, the investigative
arm of Congress, estimated it cost the Pentagon nearly $200 million to
recruit and train replacements for the nearly 9,500 troops that had to
leave the military because of the policy. The losses included hundreds
of highly skilled troops, including translators, between 1994 through
2003.
Opponents of the policy are backing legislation in the House sponsored
by Rep. Marty Meehan, D-Mass., that would repeal the law. But that bill
-- with 107 co-sponsors -- is considered a longshot in the
Republican-controlled House.
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