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Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, said she believes opponents of repeal inside the military represent "the tip-of-the-spear troops whose views should be given heavier weight, but won't be." The group opposes lifting the ban. Because the leaks have emphasized support rather than opposition to repeal, the Pentagon "seems to be actively trying to manage perceptions in order to distract attention from details in the report that will contradict the headline President Obama wants," she said. Gay rights advocates called the objections raised against repeal groundless. "No one should be surprised if a vocal minority, for a short window, might object, as a minority did when segregation in the ranks ended and women were admitted to the service academies," said Aubrey Sarvis, executive director of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network. "In the military, you get over your objections or you get out."
Gay rights groups previously had dismissed the Pentagon study because of its methodology. Servicemembers United said this summer that the survey was "biased, derogatory and inflammatory" because it assumed troops would object to serving alongside someone who was openly gay. Nicholson said he still believes the study was biased, but its results prove that there is little resistance to changing the law among troops. "Had the survey been completely unbiased, it is likely that we would be seeing even higher numbers in our favor," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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