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Sharp Drop in Gays Discharged From Military Tied to War Need
Ann Scott Tyson, Washington Post
March 14, 2007
The number
of homosexuals discharged from the U.S. military under the "don't ask,
don't tell" policy dropped significantly in 2006, according to Pentagon
figures released yesterday -- continuing a sharp decline since the
Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts began and leading critics to charge that
the military is retaining gay men and lesbians because it needs them in
a time of war.
According to preliminary Pentagon data, 612 homosexuals were discharged
in fiscal 2006, fewer than half the 1,227 discharged in 2001. On
average, more than 1,000 service members were discharged each year from
1997 to 2001 -- but in the past five years the average has fallen below
730. The data were provided to The Washington Post in response to a
request.
"It is hypocritical that the Pentagon seems to retain gay and lesbian
service members when they need them most, and fires them when it
believes they are expendable," said Steve E. Ralls, a spokesman for the
Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, a nonprofit that opposes the
policy.
Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sparked
an outcry among gay-advocacy groups on Monday when he said he considers
homosexual acts "immoral" and therefore opposes lifting the "don't ask,
don't tell" rule and allowing homosexuals to serve openly. "We should
not condone immoral acts," Pace told the Chicago Tribune in an
interview.
Yesterday, Pace said it would have been better to refrain from offering
opinions. "I should have focused more on my support of the policy and
less on my personal moral views," he said in a statement, noting that
the policy itself "does not make a judgment about the morality of
individual acts."
President Bush "thought it was appropriate" for Pace to qualify his
remarks, presidential counselor Dan Bartlett said yesterday. Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates also suggested yesterday that Pace's
"immoral" remark was inappropriate. "Personal opinion really doesn't
have a place here. What's important is that we have a law, a statute
that governs 'don't ask, don't tell,' " Gates said when asked about his
own views on the policy during an interview with the Pentagon Channel.
Pace drew fire yesterday from congressional Democrats, who have
recently renewed a push to repeal the policy, as well as from some
Republicans and gay-advocacy groups.
"General Pace's statements aren't in line with either the majority of
the public or the military," said Rep. Martin T. Meehan (D-Mass.), who
last month reintroduced legislation that would repeal the policy on
grounds that it is unfair, expensive and harmful to military readiness.
"We are turning away good troops to enforce a costly policy of
discrimination, " he said in a statement. Meehan's legislation has more
than 100 co-sponsors and is supported by several prominent retired
generals, including a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
retired Army Gen. John M. Shalikashvili. Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) said
in a statement yesterday: "I respectfully, but strongly, disagree with
the Chairman's view that homosexuality is immoral."
More than 10,870 military personnel have been discharged under the
policy since President Bill Clinton signed it into law in 1993. The law
requires that gay service members keep their sexual orientation private
and do not engage in homosexual acts, and it prohibits commanders from
asking about sexual orientation.
The dismissed have included Arabic speakers and other linguists,
intelligence experts and medical personnel -- all of whom are in short
supply. In 2005, for example, 49 medical workers were discharged.
"The military can't afford to lose these people, dozens and dozens of
well-trained men and women who would ordinarily be doing their job,"
Ralls said. He said the reduction in discharges since 2001 indicates
that the military is applying its policy selectively now because the
conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have lowered support for joining the
military among youths and their parents.
There are an estimated 65,000 gay men and lesbians serving in the
military today, according to census-based research by the Williams
Institute at the University of California at Los Angeles, Ralls said.
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