Pentagon
bars discrimination against gays, lesbians in uniform
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[June 10, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Defense
Secretary Ash Carter said on Tuesday the Pentagon has updated its equal
opportunity policy to bar discrimination based on sexual orientation,
putting it in the same category as discrimination based on race,
religion, color, age and sex.
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The change in policy, announced by Carter at a gay and lesbian
pride celebration, gives U.S. military troops a broader range of
choices in pursuing complaints if they believe they have been
discriminated against based on sexual orientation.
The change brought the rules into conformity with the 2011 decision
to end the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, which allowed
gays and lesbians to serve in the military only if they did not
openly acknowledge their sexual orientation.
"The Department of Defense has made a lasting commitment to living
the values we defend, to treating everyone equally, because we need
to be a meritocracy," Carter said in announcing the decision.
"We have to focus relentlessly on our mission, which means the thing
that matters most about a person is what they can contribute to
national defense," he added. "This is a commitment we must
continually renew."
Civilian employees of the Defense Department were already protected
against discrimination based on sexual orientation under equal
opportunity laws. But uniformed personnel were covered under
separate rules affected by the department's long-time ban on gays
and lesbians serving openly in the military.
That ban was lifted in 2011 and a Supreme Court ruling in 2013
provided some federal benefits to same-sex couples married in states
where gay marriage is legal. The Pentagon has been working to bring
its policies into line with the changes.
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"With this policy revision, we are now ensuring that service members
are afforded protection against discrimination in the Department's
military equal opportunity program," said Navy Lieutenant Commander
Nate Christensen, a Pentagon spokesman.
Christensen said the military equal opportunity program gives troops
greater access to a broader range of options for resolving
discrimination complaints and gives commanders access to equal
opportunity advisers during the complaint process.
(Reporting by David Alexander; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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