Trashing Good Soldiers
Los Angeles Times Editorial
Sunday 26 June 2004
While military leaders are extending tours for troops
already exhausted after months in Iraq and calling up more units for active
duty, a new study finds that 770 otherwise qualified soldiers were drummed out
of the services last year because of their sexual orientation. The hypocrisy
of the 1993 compromise that allows homosexuals in the military as long as they
stay in the closet was obvious from its adoption. The damage this policy is
now doing to stretched-thin units and to gay men and women who want to serve
is inexcusable.
About 10,000 military personnel have been discharged
under "don't ask, don't tell" since it took effect. The policy forbids
gay soldiers to declare their sexual orientation or to act on it. In many cases,
commanders and fellow soldiers have forced these declarations by spying on off-duty
colleagues, rummaging through their personal journals or simply by taunting
them into an admission. Discharge automatically follows.
In their study, researchers at UC Santa Barbara analyzed
federal discharge data from between 1998 and 2003. They found that among the
6,273 soldiers the nation fired during those years under this policy of legalized
discrimination were these highly trained men and women: 88 linguists, including
several Arab-language specialists; 49 nuclear, biological and chemical warfare
experts; 90 nuclear power engineers; 150 rocket, missile and other artillery
specialists; and 340 infantrymen.
Jadon Hartsuff is among them. The Los Angeles-area man
was learning Mandarin Chinese at Monterey's Defense Language Institute last
summer, training to be an Army interrogator. After enduring questions from his
sergeant and humiliating rumors, the 26-year-old admitted he was gay. He was
put on a cleaning detail until his mandatory discharge, on Halloween.
He now works in food sales and marketing - another man
whose talent and skills the Army has wasted.
The rationale for this mean-spirited policy is that
openly homosexual soldiers would undermine unit cohesion. Straight men and women
would fear sexual intimidation from their gay colleagues, eroding the trust
necessary among buddies in combat.
The potential for coercion was always a flimsy excuse
for what is really homophobia. And in the wake of the very real coercion, sexual
humiliation and abuse that heterosexual U.S. soldiers perpetrated on Iraqi detainees
in Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison, it makes no sense at all.
Dedicated to justice, civil rights, health of body
and of world