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- <text id=93TT2449>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: Sex, Lies and the Military
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARMED FORCES, Page 29
- Sex, Lies and The Military
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>For gays and lesbians, life in the armed forces means unflagging
- vigilance and some tactical deception
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE - With reporting by David S. Jackson/San
- Francisco and Sarah Tippit/Orlando
- </p>
- <p> It's done sotto voce, but somehow word gets passed. The
- Air Force is the most hospitable armed branch; the Marines and
- Army are the pits. Entertainment and medical jobs are the
- safest; artillery and infantry units the roughest. If possible,
- head for bases around San Francisco or Washington; steer clear
- of South Korea and Hawaii. Join groups like Alcoholics
- Anonymous; for those in the Navy, especially, they are safe
- enclaves. Buy Bob Damron's Address Book; it lists gay bars near
- military installations both at home and abroad. But be careful:
- such clubs are off limits and are often scouted by bands of
- military police known as "courtesy patrols." Be alert for
- changing code words. If someone says, "Don't go straight, go
- forward" or asks, "Are you a friend of Dorothy's?" you'll know
- you've found the Emerald City.
- </p>
- <p> For gay men and lesbians, military service means a life of
- unflagging vigilance and tactical deception. The adversary they
- fear most does not speak a foreign tongue. Rather, the enemy
- lies as close as the next bunk. At military bases across the
- country, homosexuals describe an existence that at best is
- tentative, guarded and supported by discreet networks. At worst,
- it can mean snickering colleagues, witch hunts and dangerous
- "blanket parties," during which the victims are held beneath
- covers, then beaten senseless. Until now, the military's
- homosexuals have had to live with the uneasy knowledge that
- exposure of their secret could mean expulsion.
- </p>
- <p> Over the past decade, homosexuals have been discharged
- from the armed services at the rate of about 1,500 a year.
- Rarely does the expulsion involve any of the acts so commonly
- cited as a threat by those who oppose gays in the military:
- harassment of straight colleagues, fondling or staring in the
- showers, nocturnal visits to unsuspecting bunkmates. "In every
- case I know of, someone told someone about a person's sexual
- orientation or that person was asked a question during a
- security clearance," says Kevin Cathcart, executive director of
- the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, a gay civil rights
- group. Sometimes the outings are coerced. Confronted by
- investigators, gays are often told to name names if they want
- an honorable rather than a general discharge.
- </p>
- <p> Since 1982, the military has encouraged--indeed,
- demanded--such scrutiny. Defense Department Directive 1332.14
- states: "Homosexuality is incompatible with military service."
- No overt act is required to set this ban in motion. A mere
- "propensity to engage in homosexual conduct" is enough to invite
- discharge. The military has many other rules on sexual conduct
- that apply to everyone--gay or straight. Officers are not
- permitted to fraternize with enlistees. Sex is barred on bases
- except for married personnel in their living quarters. Even
- off-site sex is regulated. Under the Uniform Code of Military
- Justice, anal and oral intercourse are prohibited anywhere,
- anytime, by anybody. But each of these rules speaks to conduct,
- not sexual orientation--and the last rule goes largely
- unenforced.
- </p>
- <p> The ban against homosexuals is applied capriciously,
- resulting in both considerable harassment and occasional
- discretion. The experience of Janet, an Army medic and private
- first class, is typical of the former. Janet was drinking off
- duty at Hula's, a gay hangout in Hawaii, when she was stopped
- by a courtesy patrol. "From that time on," she says, "I felt
- they were watching me." Inspectors would burst into her room at
- 2 a.m., seeking to catch her in a compromising position. Though
- she was never caught in flagrante delicto, her sergeant accused
- her of being gay because she had no boyfriends. Janet's
- assignments deteriorated. Most punishing was a three-month
- posting to the field for maneuvers that involved 10,000 men--and Janet.
- </p>
- <p> At the other extreme was the experience of Eliseo
- Martinez, a former Marine sergeant who came out of the closet
- halfway through his six-year tour at the El Toro Marine Corps
- Air Station in California. One day one of his men called another
- a "faggot." Martinez suggested to the name-caller that he seemed
- insecure about his own sexuality. Later, Martinez was called in
- by his commanding officer, who requested details of the clash,
- then asked if he could pose a question. "Are you gay?" he
- asked. "Yes, sir," Martinez replied. "Well," the commander said,
- "you're still doing a good job, Marine." The issue never came
- up again.
- </p>
- <p> More typically, matters are not confronted directly.
- Antigay servicemen single out targets, spreading rumors behind
- their back, carving butt pirate and die faggot on their lockers
- and spraying their beds with sexual lubricant. To avoid
- becoming a target, gay men sometimes play along, trying to mask
- their pain. They smirk gamely at gay jokes and go to lengths to
- cloak their true identity. Some invent girlfriends or wives, or
- even date women. Blatant lies about sexual orientation,
- however, risk perjury charges if a homosexual comes under
- investigation. Most, therefore, simply disclose nothing about
- their personal life. "The result is you don't waste much time
- and you appear to be very serious about your assignments," says
- a gay Army attorney.
- </p>
- <p> Female personnel tend to be more tolerant of their lesbian
- colleagues. "You aren't hearing it from women because women are
- more accepting about lesbians," says Mary Ann Humphrey, a former
- captain in the Army reserves who was discharged in 1987. "Their
- womanhood is not threatened like a man's manhood is when he's
- around a gay man." Perhaps women's experience with male sexual
- harassment has made them less skittish about other forms of
- torment. Or perhaps it is simply less taboo for women to hug and
- kiss in public.
- </p>
- <p> That doesn't mean lesbians have it easy. According to
- Humphrey, who wrote a history of homosexuals in the U.S.
- military titled My Country, My Right to Serve, women are
- expelled 10 times as often as men for their sexual orientation.
- Amy, a medical corpsman at the Naval Training Center in Orlando,
- Florida, feels so threatened that she pretends to date a male
- gay friend of hers. "I grab crotches, I make sexual innuendos,''
- she says. "The more they suspect, the more I try to cover up."
- Recently, a married male officer made overtures. She did not
- file a sexual-harassment report because she feared "an
- investigation will ensue and my homosexuality will come out."
- </p>
- <p> Homosexuals who try to maintain a relationship proceed
- with utmost caution. Bill, a Navy medical corpsman, has a
- civilian lover. When they are together in Bill's apartment
- complex, which is populated by a lot of Navy personnel, they are
- careful not to touch or exchange intimate glances. Bill is a
- veteran of the double life. He visits straight bars with his
- straight friends, "dates" a lesbian friend, and once hired a
- prostitute while in port in the Philippines. "I just took her
- to my hotel, and we talked," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the ban is lifted, homosexuals are still likely to
- practice self-censorship to protect their careers. Civilian work
- settings, where many if not most gays still keep quiet about
- their sexual orientation, offer an apt model. "Hundreds of
- corporations have policies that protect gay men and lesbians
- against discrimination," says Jay Lucas, a Philadelphia
- employment consultant. "But that doesn't mean the culture has
- changed." John, a Navy petty officer in San Diego, sounds a
- common refrain. To come out of the closet, he says, "would be
- professional suicide because your superiors will find ways not
- to promote you." A change in policy does not guarantee that
- harassment will immediately stop: some gay servicemen reported
- last week that insults and physical attacks have increased since
- President Clinton began speaking out against the ban.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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