After Joint
Chiefs of Staff chairman Peter Pace called homosexuality
immoral, seven retired officers came out. Their new duty?
Showing America how honorable gay service members are.
“For the
first 36 hours we couldn’t keep up with all of the
e-mails and telephone calls,” remembers retired
Army chaplain Col. Paul W. Dodd. He’s talking
about the explosion of outrage that swept the ranks of gay
and gay-friendly veterans after Gen. Peter Pace, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, opined that
“homosexual acts” are “immoral”
and thus unacceptable in the military.
With his
incendiary comments, made during a March 12 interview with
the Chicago Tribune’s editorial board,
Pace went beyond the language of policy to the
personal. He insulted the honor of gay soldiers.
Dodd—who received the Legion of Merit, the
Meritorious Service Medal, and numerous other awards
in his 21 years of active duty and 10 years in the
Army Reserve and National Guard—decided to mount a
counteroffensive.
So did half a
dozen of his buddies. On March 16, Dodd and six other
highly decorated retired military officers came out publicly
to protest Pace’s remarks as well as his
support for the military’s ban on openly gay
service members.
The magnificent
seven—the nickname is hard to
resist—aren’t the first gay vets to
speak out. But their perfectly timed action reflects well on
the savvy of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network,
where all seven officers serve as honorary board
members. Based in Washington, D.C., SLDN is dedicated
to the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t
tell.” And with his incautious comment, Pace
handed the advocacy group a premium target.

“If he had
just said ‘don’t ask, don’t
tell’ is a good policy, it would have been a
nonevent,” says Capt. Joan E. Darrah, who served on
the staff of the Director of Naval Intelligence and
has also been lauded (Legion of Merit awards: three;
Navy Commendation medals: three). “But saying we
were immoral has energized people.”
The seven
officers were corresponding among themselves about jointly
coming out even before the Pace incident, but they wanted to
wait until they could make the greatest impact.
As SLDN
communications director Steve Ralls puts it, the Joint
Chiefs chairman “created a media
opportunity.” In the days following Pace’s
remarks SLDN was flooded with protests from service members
both retired and on active duty. “Some of the
most poignant messages we received were from families
of gays and lesbians serving,” Ralls says.
“They felt his comments were a slap in the face
of their loved ones, some of them in Iraq.”
The officers
pulled no punches in their statement. “Does General
Pace believe we are immoral, or that our service was
unacceptable?” it reads. “Does he
appreciate the sacrifice and dedication of every patriot in
our armed forces, regardless of their sexual
orientation? General Pace…owes an apology to
our men and women on the frontlines and their
families.”
Pace chose not to
apologize, offering instead the feeble explanation that
he should have spoken strictly about “don’t
ask, don’t tell” as a
policy—which he claims is working well—and not
his personal views on gay people.
The officers form
an impressive fighting unit. All seven completed most
or all of their service before the 1993 advent of
“don’t ask, don’t tell”
and had remained firmly closeted throughout their military
careers. Some of them had been married and have
children and grandchildren. Now, in the private
sector, they serve with distinction as executives,
academics, and counselors.
Capt. Robert
Dockendorff, 69, a former Navy Reserve supply officer who
was stationed on the Cambodian border during the Vietnam
War, is a former president of the Harvey Milk LGBT
Democratic Club in San Francisco. Capt. Mike Rankin,
70, served as a Navy medical officer for 24 years, including
a 10-year stint as chief of psychiatry at the Oakland VA
Medical Center. He is now a professor at George
Washington University’s medical school. Capt.
Sandy Geiselman, 56, served as White House liaison to the
secretary of the Navy.
The
officers’ joint coming-out is part of an ongoing
effort in Washington to repeal “don't ask,
don’t tell,” a campaign that seems to be
gaining ground despite—or perhaps because
of—Pace’s loathsome remarks.
“Ironically, in giving his ‘defense’ of
the policy, he’s moved us closer to repeal than
anyone in a long time,” says Ralls, who expects
hearings on the policy to take place in the House of
Representatives later this spring.
And although
Democratic representative Marty Meehan of Massachusetts is
leaving public office to become chancellor of the University
of Massachusetts at Lowell, the bill he authored and
spearheaded—the Military Enhancement Readiness
Act, which includes a provision repealing
“don’t ask, don’t
tell”—continues to gather steam, in part
thanks to Eric Alva, the first U.S. service member
injured in the Iraq War, who made headlines by coming
out earlier this year.
These seven
officers enter the battle as the latest—but surely
not the last—reinforcements. “I remember
being thrilled when [Col.] Margarethe Cammermeyer came
out,” Darrah says of the highest-ranking military
officer discharged to date for being gay. “You always
think you’re the only person doing this. Then
you start to realize lots of good people are the same
way you are. I feel badly for them, but the only people who
can fight this fight are people who are no longer in
the military.”
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