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Gays in the military, part two

by David Adesnik | July 5, 2009
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(Part one is here.)

Michael Goldfarb has an interesting suggestion: Why not allow gay servicemembers to serve openly in roles that wouldn’t threaten unit cohesion? After all, women are allowed to serve in some roles but not in others. Why not extend that logic to gays and lesbians? Michael writes:

It’s madness for the service to discharge gay translators and the like. But the military leadership still seems to believe that the core of the policy must be preserved in order to maintain the effectiveness of combat units — politicians from both parties are unlikely to question that assessment. 

Forgive the double entendre, but I wonder if the threat to unit cohesion is any different on the front lines than it is in the rear. The scenario often brought up with regard to gays in the military is “What if he’s looking at me in the shower?” No one I know asks, “What if he’s looking at me instead of firing back at those insurgents over there?” In that regard, the analogy to women doesn’t hold; there is a physical reason that women are restricted from serving in combat units (although when you’re fighting an insurgency, any unit can find itself in combat).

Leaving aside the logic, I’d be more than glad to support a repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” for non-combat units, if there’s a consensus behind that approach in the military. If gays can serve openly in non-combat units, I’m fairly confident that their service will earn them the right, in the not too distant future, to serve in combat units as well.


2 Comments - add your own

E.D. Kain — July 6, 2009 at 4:42 pm

Not a bad idea, actually. I wonder, though, what happens to gay soldiers in combat units? Do they get transferred? I suppose that’s much more sensible than discharging them…

Mikeybackwards — July 6, 2009 at 7:28 pm

How about treating them like most of the industrialized world does? Let them serve openly. Make clear the policies on fraternization and conduct, and enforce those policies. Of course since we can’t seem to deal with sexual assault of women serving in non-combat roles, that would also require dealing with that issue as well.

Gays are Americans, and lest anyone forget (although I believe far too many have already) this country owes its existence to a gay service member. Specifically Baron Friedrich von Steuben, who was forced into exile after an affair with another nobleman’s son came to this country and was credited with creating an army from the forces at Valley Forge. He was credited with saving the Continental Army by George Washington and ultimately was awarded a $2,500/year pension (worth approximately $75,000/year in current dollars) and a grant of 16,000 acres in upstate New York.

We see the consequences of the current policy in the recent murder of a gay black serviceman in San Diego.

The time has come to expect better of our military as well as allowing all Americans who are willing and able to serve to do so with distinction.

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