I’ve been talking about the “Military Readiness Enhancement Act,” which would undo the government’s experiment with “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” for a while now, but as it turns out, the need for the change may be less obvious than I had assumed. In fact, with recruiting down and casualties high, the policy isn’t being enforced much anyway.
Consider Sgt. Robert Stout of Utica, Ohio — an Iraq war veteran and Purple Heart recipient — who went to Capitol Hill in July. A veritable war hero, Stout seems like the kind of constituent lawmakers would be anxious to meet, but neither of his two senators (Republicans George Voinovich and Mike Dewine) would speak with him. That’s a shame — if they had, they would have heard about someone who’d already been allowed to serve despite “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” which in Stout’s case, the military simply chose to ignore.
Stout was in the Army for five years and served in Iraq as a combat engineer for about 10 months. In May 2004, he was patrolling an area about an hour southeast of Samarra when he was injured by a grenade blast.
“The only thing I remember is I heard a loud bang,” Stout said, “and it felt like somebody poured water all over my face.” The “water” was actually blood, and after two months of rehabilitation, Stout returned to Iraq with some shrapnel left in his body.
“A couple pieces are still in the arm,” Stout said. “Couple pieces in the neck, and I got a couple scrapes on my face and legs.” Stout says he was already sick of living a lie, and in April 2005, his wounds prompted him to out himself to The Associated Press. “The fact that I can fight, I can bleed, I can die just as good as every other straight man or woman in that military should not bar me from enlistment,” he said.
Even though his admission violated “don’t ask, don’t tell,” — he quite literally and publicly “told” — Stout was permitted to remain in the military until his normal discharge seven weeks later, as long as he signed a document.
“I would go ahead and sign a paper saying I would not engage in homosexual acts, make homosexual comments, or engage in homosexual marriage, and they would let me discharge naturally,” Stout said.
What a concept. A courageous and able-bodied soldier was permitted to serve his country in war, despite being gay, if he promised to behave himself. Can someone explain to me why this couldn’t work throughout the military?
It turns out all gays needed in order to serve their country in uniform was a war. Consider the trend of what the military calls “homosexual separations”:
1997 — 997
1998 — 1,145
1999 — 1,034
2000 — 1,212
2001 — 1,227
2002 — 885
2003 — 770
2004 — 653
What an amazing coincidence. The Pentagon was dismissing gay soldiers at an amazing rate in Bush’s first year in office, but after wars broke out in the Middle East, suddenly the rate dropped to all-time lows.
Discrimination, apparently, is only a luxury in peacetime.