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CHRIS JOHNSON
Friday, July 25, 2008
A
congressional
hearing
on
the
U.S.
military’s
“Don’t
Ask,
Don’t
Tell”
policy
turned
into
a
small
battle
zone
Wednesday
as
opponents
of
the
policy
in
Congress
harangued
its
defenders
with
harsh
questioning.
Witnesses
on
both
sides
of
the
issue
made
their
case
before
the
personnel
subcommittee
of
the
House
Armed
Services
Committee.
Three
former
service
members
opposed
current
military
policy,
which
prevents
gays
from
serving
openly.
These
witnesses
were
retired
Marine
Corps
Staff
Sgt.
Eric
Alva,
who
is
gay
and
the
first
U.S.
service
member
wounded
in
Operation
Iraqi
Freedom.
Alva
lost
his
right
leg
as
a
result
of
his
injury.
Other
witnesses
opposing
current
policy
were
retired
Capt.
Joan
Darrah,
a
former
naval
intelligence
officer
and
lesbian,
and
retired
Army
Maj.
Gen.
Vance
Coleman,
who
is
straight
and
a
former
division
commander
for
the
Army.
Two
witnesses
opposed
gays
in
the
military:
Elaine
Donnelly,
president
of
the
Center
for
Military
Readiness,
and
retired
Army
Sgt.
Maj.
Brian
Jones,
who
formerly
served
in
special
operations.
Lawmakers
supporting
an
end
to
“Don’t
Ask,
Don’t
Tell”
had
tough
questions
for
Donnelly
and
Jones.
Rep.
Patrick
Murphy
(D-Penn.),
a
former
Army
private,
said
he
was
“insulted”
that
Donnelly
did
not
believe
that
service
members
were
“less
professional”
than
other
workers
and
could
not
handle
gays
among
their
ranks.
He
disputed
the
notion
that
letting
gays
serve
openly
would
encourage
sexual
misconduct
in
the
military.
“We’re
talking
about
orientation
and
not
misconduct
here,”
he
said.
Rep.
Carol
Shea-Porter
(D-N.H.),
said
she
was
embarrassed
that
the
prohibition
of
open
service
was
on
the
books.
She
apologized
to
the
gay
service
members
on
the
panel
for
how
she
said
the
U.S.
government
“uses
the
wrong
yard
stick
to
measure
your
sense
of
worth
and
devotion
to
the
country.”
“I
may
be
straight,
but
I’m
not
narrow,”
she
said.
“I
think
this
policy
here
is
very,
very
narrow.”
Donnelly
cited
a
number
of
reasons
for
her
opposition
to
gays
in
the
military.
She
drew
a
distinction
between
the
law
passed
by
Congress
in
1993
banning
open
service
and
the
“Don’t
Ask,
Don’t
Tell”
policy
issued
by
then-President
Clinton
to
enforce
the
law.
Donnelly
said
she
supports
the
law
but
opposes
the
policy.
Donnelly
recommended
that
recruiters
ask
enlistees
about
their
sexual
orientation
when
they
enter
service
so
that
they
can
be
removed
if
they
are
gay.
Donnelly
maintained
that
nothing
in
the
law
prevents
recruiters
from
asking
questions
about
sexual
orientation.
Donnelly
said
straight
service
members
would
be
exposed
to
harassment
if
gay
service
members
were
allowed
to
serve
openly.
She
frequently
cited
a
1974
incident
in
a
letter
she
says
she
received
from
Cynthia
Yost,
a
former
Army
medical
corpsman.
Yost
said
a
group
of
black
lesbians
sexually
assaulted
her,
but
she
didn’t
report
the
incident
to
keep
her
record
clean.
Donnelly
said
letting
gays
serve
openly
in
the
military
would
increase
the
incidents
of
sexual
assault
by
three
times,
although
provided
no
reasoning
for
how
she
came
to
this
number.
In
her
opening
statement,
Darrah
discussed
her
opposition
to
military
policy
toward
gays
and
how
she
lived
under
“Don’t
Ask,
Don’t
Tell”
while
serving
in
the
Navy
for
more
than
29
years.
She
told
the
story
of
her
experience
during
the
Sept.
11
terrorist
attacks.
On
that
day,
Darrah
was
attending
the
weekly
8:30
a.m.
intelligence
briefing
and
watched
CNN
as
planes
hit
the
World
Trade
Center.
The
meeting
was
adjourned
at
9:30
a.m.
and
Darrah
proceeded
to
the
Pentagon
bus
stop.
A
few
minutes
later,
American
Flight
77
slammed
into
the
Pentagon,
destroying
the
space
she
was
in
earlier.
Seven
of
Darrah’s
co-workers
were
killed.
Darrah
realized
that
if
she
had
died,
her
partner
of
11
years
would
have
been
the
last
to
know
because
she
was
not
on
any
emergency
contact
information.
“It
was
the
events
of
Sept.
11
that
made
me
realize
that
‘Don’t
Ask,
Don’t
Tell’
was
taking
a
much
greater
toll
than
I
had
ever
admitted,”
she
said.
The
event
caused
Darrah
to
refocus
her
priorities
and
on
June
1,
2002,
one
year
earlier
than
she
had
planned,
she
retired.
A
poll
published
by
the
Washington
Post
last
week
found
that
75
percent
of
Americans
think
gays
should
be
allowed
to
serve
openly
in
the
military.
The
number
is
up
from
62
percent
in
2001
and
44
percent
in
1993.
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