Policy on gays seen hurting military
Others with same skills are recalled
By Bryan Bender, Globe Staff | July 9, 2004
WASHINGTON -- New military statistics show that many soldiers with the same skills as former service members the Pentagon is now recalling to active duty in the war on terror have been discharged from the military over the last five years under the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy that prohibits gays from serving openly.
The military data show that in some areas where there are critical shortfalls, such as intelligence, military police, and infantry skills, the Clinton-era policy that allows the dismissal of gays whose sexual orientation is disclosed has deprived the military of some of the same skills it is now seeking by returning members of the Individual Ready Reserve to service.
Critics said that the figures proved the decade-old policy has undermined military readiness and hurt national security at a time when the Pentagon is struggling to meet requirements in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other battlegrounds in the war on terrorism.
"It's tragic that at a time when the Army is desperate for skilled soldiers, an outdated and discriminatory policy is forcing the discharge of hundreds of specialists," US Representative Marty Meehan, a Lowell, Mass., Democrat and longtime critic of the policy barring gays from serving openly in the military, said yesterday. "Twenty-six foreign militaries have lifted antigay bans. It is time for the Bush administration to fully integrate the military."
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/07/09/policy_on_gays_seen_hurting_military/