"Don't Ask, Don't Tell": Pentagon Discharged 250 Service Members in 2010
source: http://blogs.abcnews.com/george/2011/03/dont-ask-dont-tell-pentagon-discharged-250-service-m...
-
-
- EthicalVegan
- added this
Reporting and Analysis from Anchor of Good Morning America and ABC News Chief Political Correspondent
George Stephanopoulos is anchor of ABC's "Good Morning America." He is also the network's chief political correspondent, reporting on political and policy stories for all ABC News broadcasts and platforms.
'Don’t Ask, Don't Tell': Pentagon Discharged 250 Service Members in 2010
March 25, 2011 12:28 PM
ABC News’ Devin Dwyer reports: In the months leading up to Congress’ repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” late last year, the Department of Defense discharged 250 service members for violating the ban on openly gay troops, a Pentagon spokeswoman confirmed to ABC News.
The figure, first reported by gay rights group Servicemembers United, covers the period Oct. 1, 2009, to Sept. 30, 2010. President Obama signed the repeal into law on Dec. 22, 2010.
While the total number discharged is an all-time annual low, gay advocates said it reflects the continued impact of the policy despite efforts to make its enforcement more humane and the discharge approval process more rigorous.
In March 2010, Defense Secretary Robert Gates imposed new guidelines to raise the bar on who or what could initiate an inquiry into allegations of misconduct by a gay or lesbian service member.
In October 2010, Gates went further, issuing a memo that said any discharges under DADT must be approved by the civilian Secretary of the military service branch involved in coordination with other top officials.
Pentagon spokeswoman Eileen Lainez confirmed that no discharges have been approved since that time.
“It's a deliberative process," Lainez said. “We are following the law as we are obligated to do.”
“Don’t ask don’t tell” technically remains in effect until 60 days after Gates, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen and the president certify that it can be safely rescinded.
“The decision to certify will be made when they determine DoD is ready to make this change consistent with the standards of military readiness, military effectiveness, unit cohesion, and recruiting and retention of the Armed Forces, and that conditions have been met for all the services, commands and unit,” Lainez said.
In 2010, most of the discharges under DADT -- 93 -- came from the Army. The Air Force discharged 64, the Marine Corps discharged 39, and the Navy discharged 54, according to Servicemembers United, which tracks the data.
Since the policy first took effect in 1993, at least 14,316 service members have been discharged for being openly gay.
“These numbers underscore the need to accelerate the timeline for training and repeal,” said Army veteran and Servicemembers Legal Defense Network Director Aubrey Sarvis. “The reality is that investigations continue and service members are still in danger of being discharged.”
ABC News’ Luis Martinez contributed to this report
-
- groups:
- News and Politics, Politics, Random, Current Tonight, 12 more
-
- tags:
- Human Rights, LGBT, Gay Rights, Gays In The Military, 5 more
-
-
bailey78
-
What I want to know is out of the two hundred and fifty people that got the Boot How many wanted just that? I'm all for letting those that want to serve to get the Honor to do so.
- 2 years ago
-
bailey78
-
-
EthicalVegan
-
http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2011-03-25-army-chaplains-gay_N.htm
USA Today...
Army readies chaplains before 'Don't Ask' repeal
Adelle M. Banks, Religion News ServiceUpdated 1h 20m ago
WASHINGTON — The Army has started training chaplains on the repeal of the ban on openly gay military members, saying those who are unable to follow the forthcoming policy can seek a voluntary departure.
A chaplain prays over a wounded American soldier at the military hospital at Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan.
File photo by John Moore, Getty Images
"The Chaplains Corps' First Amendment freedoms and its duty to care for all will not change," reads a slide in the PowerPoint presentation, released to Religion News Service Thursday. "Soldiers will continue to respect and serve with others who may hold different views and beliefs."
Critics familiar with the Army presentation, however, say the military is essentially telling chaplains who are theologically conservative that they are not welcome.
"U.S. Army now warning chaplains: If you don't like the homosexual agenda, get out!" reads a headline on the website of Mass Resistance, an anti-gay group based in Waltham, Mass.
President Obama signed a law repealing Don't Ask/Don't Tell last December, but the new policy will not take effect until 60 days after Obama and military leaders are assured that it will not harm military readiness.
Lt. Col. Carleton Birch, a spokesman for the Army chief of chaplains, said about half of the military service's 2,900 chaplains have received the training, which started in February and is likely to conclude in April.
"Our training is an opportunity for our senior chaplains to have an honest and open conversation about the repeal policy, its effects on them and their ministry," Birch said. "And it's going very well. ... In no way are we giving the message, shape up or ship out."
Birch said only one Army chaplain has left the service over the pending repeal of Don't Ask/Don't Tell.
Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, an independent group that strongly opposes gays serving openly in the military, predicts more departures when the policy is lifted.
"The training is engaging in a form of strategic deception," she said. "I think active-duty people are being reassured nothing will change. That is an unrealistic expectation."
Donnelly, whose center received the presentation from a source and has distributed it among supporters, hopes an upcoming House subcommittee hearing will address questions about the effects of the policy change on chaplains.
"Many may be saying that now they will not leave voluntarily," she said, "but that doesn't account for those who would be forced out involuntarily when all of these conflicts become more apparent."
The Army slides include various vignettes, including a soldier who complains after a chaplain calls homosexuality a sin during a chapel service. Notes that accompany the presentation specify that sermons cannot be restricted "even with regard to socially controversial topics."
Birch said the vignette does not represent any change in policy.
"In my 23 years as a soldier in the Army, I've never heard a sermon specifically on homosexuality," he said. "So even though they have the right to do that, that doesn't mean that it's going on every Sunday in our chapels."
The other military services also have begun training of chaplains, with the Navy starting in February and planning to complete it by June. The Air Force started its training in March and hopes to finish by May.
Maj. Joel Harper, a spokesman for the Air Force, said none of that military service's 520 active-duty chaplains has asked to leave over the expected repeal. He called the training "informative in nature" about how the policy changes will affect them.
"It is not an attempt to change anyone's opinion about the subject," he said.
- 2 years ago
-
EthicalVegan
