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- <text id=91TT1825>
- <title>
- Aug. 19, 1991: Defense:Marching Out of The Closet
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 19, 1991 Hostages:Why Now? Who's Next?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 14
- DEFENSE
- Marching Out of The Closet
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Should gays be allowed to serve in America's armed forces? The
- Pentagon has ousted 1,000 of them since Desert Storm, but it is
- finding it harder than ever to argue that the answer is no.
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Scott Brown/Los Angeles, Tom Curry/
- New York and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> For 13 years in the Army and Army Reserve, Captain Dusty
- Pruitt, an ordained minister, taught soldiers to defend
- themselves against chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. Her
- expertise could have been vital in the war against Saddam
- Hussein. But during Operation Desert Storm, Pruitt was neither
- protecting nor ministering to soldiers in the Persian Gulf. Her
- battleground was the Ninth Circuit Court in California, where
- she was busy fighting to overturn the Army's 1986 decision to
- discharge her because she is a lesbian. "It's sad," she says,
- "that the military wastes time bothering people about what they
- do in their private lives rather than what they do on duty."
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S. military, few patterns are as enduring as the
- habit of barring qualified men and women from serving their
- country when they are needed, on the grounds that they are not
- wanted. Over the centuries, the brass have used strikingly
- similar arguments to bar racial minorities, women and
- homosexuals from marching into battle with white heterosexual
- males.
- </p>
- <p> The presence of these outsiders, officials have warned,
- would risk security, weaken discipline and jeopardize the chain
- of command. In 1941 a special committee wrote an impassioned
- letter to the Secretary of the Navy pleading that he consider
- "the close and intimate conditions of life aboard ship, the
- necessity for the highest possible degree of unity and
- esprit-de-corps, and the requirements of morale," before
- allowing black seamen to fight alongside white sailors.
- </p>
- <p> Under the weight of justice and reason, these barriers
- have fallen one by one. The armed services were integrated by
- Harry Truman in 1948. Two weeks ago, the Senate voted to allow
- female pilots to fly in battle, though women soldiers are barred
- from serving in infantry combat units. But the discriminatory
- language and attitudes still echo when it comes to gays and
- lesbians. According to the Department of Defense, "homosexuality
- is incompatible with military service. The presence in the
- military environment of persons who engage in homosexual conduct
- or who, by their statements, demonstrate a propensity to engage
- in homosexual conduct, seriously impairs the accomplishment of
- the military mission." The prohibition applies not only to those
- who admit to homosexual activity, but also to those who merely
- profess homosexual inclinations.
- </p>
- <p> The Pentagon found its rationale under severe attack last
- week when the Advocate, a Los Angeles gay magazine, claimed
- that a prominent Defense Department official was homosexual.
- The Advocate said that while it does not generally condone
- "outing," it wanted to call attention to the hypocrisy of the
- Pentagon's policy on gays. Despite their fine performance in the
- war, nearly 1,000 gay and lesbian soldiers have been
- investigated and discharged this year. The flurry of criticism
- has Pentagon officials squirming to justify a policy whose
- existence and enforcement seem so at odds with the realities of
- American society.
- </p>
- <p> Defense Secretary Dick Cheney was in no mood to defend the
- ban, calling it "an old chestnut" that he inherited from
- previous Administrations. But he also said he would make no move
- to overturn it. When asked how he could retain a high-ranking
- aide who is allegedly gay while forcing the dismissal of many
- homosexuals from the uniformed services, Cheney invoked a
- confusing double standard. Gays, he explained, could serve in
- civilian jobs, where they would not necessarily pose a security
- risk. Yet a closet homosexual with access to classified
- information would surely be more vulnerable to blackmail than
- a lowly enlisted man.
- </p>
- <p> Officials fall back on the notion that allowing
- homosexuals to serve on ships or in the trenches would undermine
- the services' order and morale. Strangely enough, that rationale
- seems to apply only in peacetime. When Operation Desert Storm
- was launched, the Pentagon suspended most investigations of
- suspected homosexuals because they were needed on the front
- lines. Hundreds of admitted gay soldiers and reservists went off
- to the gulf. In some cases they were told that once the fighting
- was over, they would face discharge if they made it back home.
- </p>
- <p> To gay and lesbian soldiers, the Pentagon prohibition
- reflects only deep-seated prejudice. "It's based on the
- assumption that all homosexuals are sex maniacs and somehow
- incapable of acting maturely," says Joe Steffan, a star student
- who resigned from the Naval Academy in 1987 two weeks before
- final exams, after his superiors heard that he was gay.
- According to Allan Berube, author of Coming Out Under Fire,
- 100,000 to 200,000 of the 2 million members of the U.S. armed
- forces are gay, lesbian or bisexual. Most elude detection by
- being discreet. "The question is not, `What happens if we let
- gays in the military?'" says Berube. "At least 99% stay and
- serve."
- </p>
- <p> The effort to weed them out can be brutally effective. In
- January 1943, on the recommendations of military psychiatrists
- who redefined homosexuality as a medical disorder rather than
- a criminal activity, the armed forces decreed that gays could
- be discharged simply for having homosexual tendencies. Since
- then, between 80,000 and 100,000 gays and lesbians have been
- ousted from the military.
- </p>
- <p> In some cities near military bases, vice-squad detectives
- routinely help military police hunt down soldiers at gay and
- lesbian bars. Interrogations can last 12 hours, during which
- suspects are threatened with exposure to their parents,
- dishonorable discharge, and in the case of some lesbians, loss
- of custody of their children. Many suspects are pressured to
- reveal the names of other gay servicemen and -women. The
- interrogators, says Bridget Wilson of the Military Law Task
- Force in San Diego, which helps defend gay and lesbian service
- members, "are routinely dishonest, routinely incompetent and
- routinely lie to and terrorize service members in an attempt to
- get them to name other names."
- </p>
- <p> Women are much more likely to come under fire than men,
- gay rights advocates charge, in part because the presence of
- women in the services has never been fully accepted. Wilson
- thinks the greater discharge rates of lesbians reflects the
- belief that "women in the military are thought to be either
- whores or dykes. So if you're not a whore you must be a dyke."
- Though any hint of homosexual activity means close scrutiny, gay
- military personnel say a good deal of wayward heterosexual
- activity is tolerated, even tacitly approved, by the military
- hierarchy. At the end of the gulf war, a Nevada brothel called
- the Mustang Ranch offered free passes to returning soldiers.
- "For some reason," says Wilson, "going to a whorehouse in their
- dress blues is not a problem."
- </p>
- <p> By and large, the presence of gay soldiers is not a major
- issue within the ranks. Younger soldiers tend to view the
- prohibition as a relic of bygone bigotry. "People have asked me,
- `How would you feel if you were in the same trench as a gay
- person?'" says Aric Nissen, 20, a University of Minnesota
- junior and political-science major enrolled in ROTC. "My
- response is that I feel it's one more person we could use to
- help us get out of the trench." Joe Steffan found that while
- homophobic jokes were standard fare at Annapolis, "a lot of that
- is a facade. During my last few days, people I barely knew were
- coming up to me, shaking my hand and saying, `I'm really sorry
- this is happening, and I really don't agree with this policy,'
- and I was stunned at how much understanding was underneath that
- facade of homophobia."
- </p>
- <p> John Gwynn, 31, says that even before he resigned his
- commission, he felt most of his fellow officers on his nuclear
- submarine knew that he lived a double life. The submarine corps
- is highly educated, he notes, "and that seems to fight the
- ignorance." Of the 160 men on his boat, Gwynn suspects that at
- least five were known to be gay. But he felt that he was safe
- from being forced out of the closet. "It's different for
- officers--you're one of the boys, and [the officers] can't
- deny that they liked you. The sub is less anonymous and more
- like a club. As long as they weren't told, it didn't become an
- ugly incident."
- </p>
- <p> But many gay soldiers continue to play it safe, lying
- about their sexual preference, fabricating heterosexual lovers,
- laughing at gay slurs, even entering into camouflage marriages.
- "It was frightening and horrible having to watch yourself all
- the time," recalls Dusty Pruitt. "The closet is a horrible place
- to be, and the military is in a deep closet."
- </p>
- <p> Even before the gulf war, there were some stirrings for
- change from within the military establishment. Two years ago,
- the Pentagon commissioned a study that concluded that the
- antigay policy was irrational. The report, which never got
- beyond draft form, was rejected as "technically flawed" and for
- exceeding its authority, but the results were leaked by
- sympathetic Congressmen. A second report, which was never
- submitted, found that gay soldiers were less likely to drink,
- take drugs, or have disciplinary problems than nongay soldiers.
- </p>
- <p> Some high-ranking officials may be ready for a change.
- After Mary Ann Humphrey, an Army Reserve captain, was discharged
- for being a lesbian, she wrote a book called My Country, My
- Right to Serve and sent a copy to General Calvin Waller, who was
- General Norman Schwarzkopf's deputy in the gulf war. "I trust
- that you and all of the other individuals who have experienced
- such discrimination will one day have your day in court," he
- wrote back. "It appears that society is about to accept that
- every person should have the freedoms and privileges that are
- granted under our great Constitution. Keep the faith!"
- </p>
- <p> The pressure is also growing among organizations that do
- business with the military. Major college groups have urged that
- the policy be reviewed, after ROTC cadets were refused their
- commissions when they admitted to their superiors that they were
- gay. Faculty members have discovered that they can be denied
- military research grants if they come under suspicion of
- homosexuality during security-clearance investigations.
- </p>
- <p> The policy can be overturned only by an act of Congress,
- a decision by the Secretary of Defense or a Supreme Court
- ruling. So far, the court has upheld the ban in all the cases
- it has agreed to hear, and despite public support for reversal,
- few politicians seem ready to take up the cause. Nonetheless,
- last week's furor revived a basic question: Can any country with
- volunteer armed forces afford to exclude talented people on the
- basis of fear?
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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