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Gays have always been there and always will be. What difference would it make if they could be open about their identity? Probably not much.
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One poll found that most service personnel know or think that a member of their unit is gay, and most of these say the knowledge doesn't affect cohesion. For that matter, Gen. John Shalikashvili, former head of the Joint Chiefs, points out that the ban on gays was suspended "without problems" during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
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The service chiefs who want to keep the "don't ask" policy seem to think foreign militaries' experience has no relevance to our military. In recent decades, more than two dozen countries have decided to admit gays, including Israel and Britain, and the problems that critics feared have not materialized. No one has explained why the U.S. military is incapable of handling a challenge that so many others have met.
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[P]ostponing a change until the nation is at peace could mean a delay of many years. And wartime seems a particularly bad moment to sacrifice the training and dedication of so many service members who happen to be gay.
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Decades ago, many people in the U.S. military didn't welcome integrating blacks or women into their ranks. Today, it's hard for young people to wonder why all the fuss. Someday, long after "don't ask, don't tell" is history, posterity will wonder the same thing.
Gays have always been there and always will be. What difference would it make if they could be open about their identity? Probably not much.
*
One poll found that most service personnel know or think that a member of their unit is gay, and most of these say the knowledge doesn't affect cohesion. For that matter, Gen. John Shalikashvili, former head of the Joint Chiefs, points out that the ban on gays was suspended "without problems" during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
*
The service chiefs who want to keep the "don't ask" policy seem to think foreign militaries' experience has no relevance to our military. In recent decades, more than two dozen countries have decided to admit gays, including Israel and Britain, and the problems that critics feared have not materialized. No one has explained why the U.S. military is incapable of handling a challenge that so many others have met.
*
[P]ostponing a change until the nation is at peace could mean a delay of many years. And wartime seems a particularly bad moment to sacrifice the training and dedication of so many service members who happen to be gay.
*
Decades ago, many people in the U.S. military didn't welcome integrating blacks or women into their ranks. Today, it's hard for young people to wonder why all the fuss. Someday, long after "don't ask, don't tell" is history, posterity will wonder the same thing.
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