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Former General Backs Gay Policy Change in Military
By The Associated Press
January 03, 2007
The Army general who was Joint
Chiefs chairman when the Pentagon adopted its "don't ask, don't tell" policy on
gays says he no longer opposes allowing them to serve
openly.
John Shalikashvili, who retired in
1997 after four years as the nation's top military officer, had argued that
allowing gays to serve openly would hurt troop morale and recruitment and
undermine the cohesion of combat units. He said he has changed his mind after
meeting with gay servicemen.
"These conversations showed me
just how much the military has changed, and that gays and lesbians can be
accepted by their peers," Shalikashvili wrote in an opinion piece in Tuesday's
New York Times.
His view could carry weight at a
time when advocates of lifting the restriction on gay service members argue that
the military—under the strain of fighting two wars—can ill-afford to exclude any
qualified volunteers.
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| It's not clear, however, how much
enthusiasm Congress will have for pressing the matter. While many Democrats have
denounced the policy as discriminatory, many Republicans have supported it, and
members may be reluctant to revisit such a divisive issue. Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., a possible presidential contender in 2008, recently called the military
policy "very effective."
Rep. Marty Meehan on Tuesday
hailed Shalikashvili's article and said he would try this year to revive
legislation forcing the military to eliminate the policy. In 2005, Meehan,
D-Mass., introduced a similar bill, which eventually attracted 122 cosponsors,
including Republican Chris Shays of Connecticut and Independent Bernard Sanders
of Vermont.
"There is no place in this country
for discrimination, be it on the basis of race, creed or sexual orientation, and
there is certainly no place for institutional discrimination codified in federal
statute," Meehan said in a statement.
The current policy, based on
legislation passed by Congress in 1993 after a firestorm of debate, states that
gays and lesbians may serve in the military only if they keep their sexual
orientation private. Commanders may not ask, and gay service members may not
tell. Over the years thousands have been dismissed under this
policy.
Shalikashvili is not the first
former senior military officer to change his mind about gays in the military,
though he is perhaps the most prominent. John Hutson, a retired two-star Navy
admiral who was the Navy's top lawyer, said Tuesday he thinks the nation has
undergone so much cultural change over the past decade that allowing gays to
serve openly in the military would enhance rather than weaken the cohesion of
fighting units.
"I think it will absolutely
happen," Hutson said in a telephone interview, but probably not during the Bush
administration.
Shalikashvili said he expects
fierce debate over gays in the military this year as Congress considers
President Bush's call for expanding the size of the Army, which is stretched
thin by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Shalikashvili cautioned, however,
against pushing for repeal of the ban early in the new Congress, which he said
should be focused on urgent priorities like developing a better strategy in Iraq
and healing divisions over the war.
"Fighting early in this Congress
to lift the ban on openly gay service members is not likely to add to that
healing and it risks alienating people whose support is needed to get this
country on the right track," he wrote in the Times
article.
In explaining his shift on the
issue, Shalikashvili also cited a new Zogby poll, commissioned by the Michael D.
Palm Center at the University of California at Santa Barbara, of 545 U.S. troops
who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. It reported that three quarters said they
were comfortable around gay men and lesbians.
The poll, published in December,
also said 37 percent opposed allowing gays to serve openly, while 26 percent
said they should be allowed and 37 percent were unsure or neutral. Of those who
said they were certain that a member of their unit was gay or lesbian,
two-thirds did not believe it hurt morale. (AP)
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By George Chauncey |
Why Marriage?
The History Shaping Today's Debate Over Gay Equality
Why has marriage emerged as the most explosive issue in the gay struggle for equality?
The author shows the shifting attitudes toward gays, from the growth in acceptance to the many campaigns against gay rights that led to today's demand for a constitutional amendment. What's at stake for both sides is illuminated.
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