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Britain: British policymakers had been wrestling for years with whether to scrap a long-standing ban on gays in the military
-- but the pivotal decision was made abroad, by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. The court ruled in 1999 that Britain had violated the rights of four former service members who were dismissed from the military for being gay and lesbian. King's College professor Christopher Dandeker said there had been significant opposition to the change among military officers. There were predictions
-- not borne out -- that unit cohesion would suffer and that large numbers of personnel would leave the military if gays could serve. Once the ban was lifted, Dandeker said, the opposition dwindled, and the government of Prime Minister Tony Blair embraced the chance to be seen as a beacon of tolerance. Lord Alan West, former head of the Royal Navy and now Britain's terrorism minister, served before and after the ban was lifted. "It's much better where we are now," West said in an interview at the House of Lords. "For countries that don't do that
-- I don't believe it's got anything to do with how efficient or capable their forces will be. It's to do with other prejudices, I'm afraid." As for Britain's trans-Atlantic ally: "I think the Americans really need to make the move," West said. Peter Tatchell, a London-based gay-rights activist often critical of the government, praises the military's handling of the change. "Since the ban has been lifted, there hasn't been a word of complaint from senior military staff," he said. "They've said that having gay and lesbian people in the services has had no damaging effect at all." Mandy McBain joined the Royal Navy at age 19, in 1986, at the most junior rank possible. Now a lieutenant commander, she remembers what it was like to serve when being a lesbian had to be a secret. "It's exhausting," she said. "It's quite incredible to look back and see how much time and energy I spent leading a double life." In one past assignment, she processed the paperwork of comrades being dismissed because of their sexuality. "That," she said quietly, "I found very difficult." Military expert Amyas Godfrey of the Royal United Services Institute, a London think tank, was serving with the British Army in Northern Ireland when the policy changed. "I remember our commanding officer at the time called the entire battalion together and said,
'This is how it is going to be now. We are not going to discriminate. We are not going to bully. If someone in your group says that he is gay, you treat them as normal,'" Godfrey recalled. "And that, really, was the implementation of it. For all the years I served after that, it was never an issue." ___ United States: For those in the U.S. military community who oppose letting gays serve openly, there's a widely shared sentiment that America has nothing to learn from the roughly two-dozen nations that have no bans. "Who's the only superpower military out there?" argued Maj. Brian Maue, a professor at the U.S. Air Force Academy, in a debate in June at the McCormick Freedom Museum in Chicago. "This is hardly convincing to say,
'Ah, the others are doing it. We should too.'" Maue -- who says he's been speaking out on his own, not as a military spokesman
-- suggests that repeal of "don't ask, don't tell" would prompt straight service members to complain of privacy violations and "dignity infractions." "An openly gay military would be the heterosexual equivalent to forcing women to constantly share bathrooms, locker rooms and bedrooms with men," he wrote in a New York Times online forum. Retired Army Lt. Col. Robert Maginnis, another supporter of the ban, contends that some field commanders in nations that allow gays to serve openly have resorted to "tacit discrimination"
-- excluding them from front-line units for fear that problems would surface in rugged, close-quarters living conditions. Maginnis also cited America's multiple overseas missions. "You have a large part of the world with no tolerance for open homosexuality, and if we were to deploy there, it would be a serious problem," he said. Repealing the ban would trigger the departure of some career service members who object to homosexuality and deter some people from enlisting, said Maginnis. "It doesn't matter what general population thinks
-- it's what the young people who have a propensity to enlist think." Prominent advocates of open service for gays and lesbians acknowledge there would be some hitches, but predict the overall change would be smooth and professional. "There's been very little trouble in the nations that lifted their ban on gays," said professor David Segal, director of the University of Maryland's Center for Research on Military Organization. "My guess is there will be slightly more in the U.S.
-- we have a somewhat higher level of intolerance." However, Segal doubted the change would spur a large exodus from the military or hamper recruitment. "There will be some gay bashing at the unit level, and that will be a problem in the short run for NCOs and junior officers," he said. "But they will deal with it, just as they dealt with racial integration and gender integration." Nathaniel Frank, a research fellow at the University of California, Santa Barbara's Palm Center and author of a book on "don't ask, don't tell," says his studies of allied nations suggest that lifting the ban in the U.S. would not impair overall military effectiveness. "There will be some forms of de facto discrimination and prejudice
-- a policy change is not going to wipe that out of people's hearts and minds overnight," he said. "But more and more people in the military are seeing it doesn't serve them to have this policy in place." There's no question, Frank said, that the U.S. military is unique -- the most powerful in the world. But he said it should be embarrassing that "our allies can tell the truth about gay soldiers and the U.S. stands with China, Iran, North Korea among the nations that can't." The key to a smooth transition, Frank added, is emphatic direction from top commanders and the adoption of a code of conduct that would deter disciplinary problems by spelling out unacceptable behavior. Dan Choi, the gay lieutenant facing dismissal from the Army, says the current "don't ask" policy is disruptive
-- forcing the gays who are serving to be furtive and dishonest. "Closeting is what causes instability," he said. "It's the most toxic poison." As for the U.S. being different from its allies, Choi agrees. "We are exceptional -- because we take the lead on things," he said. "To me, it's an insult to the idea of American exceptionalism to say we're somehow scared of gays."
[Associated
Press;
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