My friend Bridget Altenburg is livid.
Why?
The Army recently dismissed another Arab linguist because he was
gay.
I know, I know: a lot of us were angry about that. But Bridget
served in the Army for five years after attending West Point. She
was a captain and an engineer. She led a unit of 35 soldiers in
Bosnia who rebuilt bridges so that Bosnians could vote for their
new government; she served as an aide to a three-star general in
Kosovo and was perhaps the only woman at the time who was serving
as an aide in a hazardous fire zone.
Bridget loved the Army and she did good work there and she would
have kept serving. But like the linguist, Bridget is gay. So like
the linguist, she had to go.
Bridget wasn't kicked out. She never told-she was never
asked.
The general she was an aide to likely knew she was gay and
didn't care. Her unit didn't care. But Bridget cared. She had come
out to herself while serving and she just couldn't lie any
more.
So when her five-year commitment was up, she left. The Army lost
another good soldier.
Men and women like Bridget are the secret losses of the Armed
Services. We hear about the egregious losses-the newest Arab
linguist to be dismissed didn't tell anyone he was gay, he was
likely outed by a jealous lover.
But we don't hear much about people like Bridget, whose good
character makes them want to serve their country but also makes it
impossible for them to do so.
The obvious "don't ask, don't tell" losses, of course, are bad
enough. Not just bad-ridiculous. Silly.
Bridget points out that the U.S. soldier currently being held in
Iraq for rape and murder was given a waiver for his past criminal
history.
"So, you can join the military if you're a criminal, but not if
you're gay? It doesn't make sense," Bridget says.
And she's right.
She's also right about the very real worry of military
readiness. The armed forces have dismissed 11,000 soldiers through
"don't ask," about 800 of them with critical skills-and 300 with
crucial language skills. The military needs Arab linguists, of
course, so it replaces the gay ones with civilians who don't have
as thorough a background check or any type of military commitment,
yet have access to critical military information.
Makes you feel safer, doesn't it?
Over 700 soldiers were dismissed for being gay last year
alone-in the middle of a war in which the armed forces are not
making their recruitment goals.
But those 11,000 discharged gay soldiers don't include people
like Bridget, who couldn't bear lying any longer.
"It makes no sense," she says. "'Don't ask, don't tell' doesn't
make sense from a military readiness standpoint. It doesn't make
sense from a unit cohesion standpoint-nothing disrupts unit
cohesion like lying. Being in the Army isn't like some nine-to-five
job at Wal-Mart. You bunk with these people. They know you. If
you're lying, they know."
And the myth that gay men and lesbians would start hitting on
people in their units?
"That hasn't happened with any of our allies who let openly gay
soldiers serve-England, Israel," Bridget says. "What do legislators
think, that Americans are hornier than people in other
countries?"
Besides, she points out, the military has rules about conduct,
which should apply equally to gay and straight people. There is no
sex in the barracks. Superiors can't date those under them. "If the
head of a unit hit on a soldier, he or she could be brought up on
charges-not because he or she is gay, but because it's against
military law," Bridget says.
There are plenty of ways, she says, to make sure this
gay-sex-everywhere nightmare doesn't happen.
But that's not what the law is about, of course.
The law isn't about sense. It's not about unit cohesion. It's
not about military readiness. It's about discrimination.
And while the military is discriminating, it's losing people we
need to fight for us, like that Arab linguist. And it's losing
people like Bridget, who leave exemplary military careers because
they are exactly the sorts of people the military wants-men and
women who aren't comfortable lying.
"I don't know why I was livid when I heard about that linguist,"
Bridget says. "It's the same stuff that keeps happening over and
over. It's a farce."