The Pentagon's
top general said Tuesday he should not have voiced his
personal view that homosexuality is immoral and should have
just stated his support for the military's ''don't
ask, don't tell'' policy in an interview that has
drawn criticism from lawmakers and gay rights groups.
The written
statement by Marine Corps general Peter Pace, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, did not apologize for his
stance on homosexuality. In a newspaper interview
Monday, Pace likened homosexual acts to adultery and
said the military should not condone it by allowing
gays to serve openly in the armed forces.
After a flurry of
condemnation Tuesday, Pace issued a statement
acknowledging that the Defense Department's ''don't ask,
don't tell'' policy on gays is a sensitive subject and
said: ''I should have focused more on my support of
the policy and less on my personal moral views.''
The military lets
gay men and lesbians serve if they keep their sexual
orientation private. Commanders may not ask, and service
members may not tell. More than 10,000 troops,
including more than 50 specialists in Arabic, have
been discharged since President Clinton signed it into law
in 1994.
In an interview
with the Pentagon Channel, the military's in-house
television station, Defense secretary Robert Gates declined
to answer a question on his opinion of the policy but
made what seemed to be a mild rebuke of Pace.
''Now look, you
know I think personal opinion really doesn't have a place
here,'' Gates said. ''What's important is that we have a
law, a statute that governs 'don't ask, don't tell.'''
He added:
''That's the policy of this department, and it's my
responsibility to execute that policy as effectively as we
can. As long as the law is what it is, that's what
we'll do.''
In an interview
Monday with the Chicago Tribune, Pace was asked
about the policy. He said he supports it, that it allows
gays to serve, and that it does not make ''a judgment
about individual acts.''
He also said: ''I
believe that homosexual acts between individuals are
immoral and that we should not condone immoral acts. I do
not believe that the armed forces of the United States
are well served by saying through our policies that
it's OK to be immoral in any way.''
Lawmakers of both
parties criticized Pace's remarks.
''We need the
most talented people; we need the language skills. We need
patriotic Americans who exist across the board in our
population,'' said House speaker Nancy Pelosi. ''We
don't need moral judgment from the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs.''
Republican
senator John Warner of Virginia, one of Congress's most
respected authorities on military matters and a former Navy
secretary, said, ''I respectfully but strongly
disagree with the chairman's view that homosexuality
is immoral.''
Also chastising
Pace was Democratic representative Martin Meehan of
Massachusetts, who has introduced legislation repealing the
policy. ''Our military is struggling to find and keep
the soldiers we need,'' Meehan said of the strain
caused by fighting two wars. ''We are turning away
good troops to enforce a costly policy of discrimination.''
In a sign of how
politically sensitive the issue remains, Democratic
leaders have yet to schedule debate on Meehan's bill.
White House
spokesman Tony Snow said President Bush ''has always said
that the most important thing is that we ought not to
prejudge one another. But when it comes to government
policy, it's been in place for a long time and we will
continue to execute it according to the letter of the
law.''
Presidential
contender Sen. John McCain, who spoke to reporters outside a
fund-raiser in Beverly Hills, Calif., said Pace ''should be
given a chance to explain himself.'' Asked for his own
view on homosexuality in the military, McCain said he
believes the ''don't ask, don't tell'' policy is
''successful and should be maintained.''
Pace, a native of
New York City, and a 1967 graduate of the U.S. Naval
Academy, said in the interview that he based his views on
his upbringing.
''As an
individual, I would not want [acceptance of gay behavior] to
be our policy, just like I would not want it to be our
policy that if we were to find out that so-and-so was
sleeping with somebody else's wife, that we would just
look the other way, which we do not. We prosecute that
kind of immoral behavior,'' he said, according to the audio
and a transcript released by his staff.
Two gay advocacy
groups strongly condemned Pace's remarks.
''General Pace's
comments are outrageous, insensitive, and disrespectful
to the 65,000 lesbian and gay troops now serving in our
armed forces,'' said the Servicemembers Legal Defense
Network, which has represented some of the thousands
dismissed from the military for their sexual
orientation.
''Their sexual
orientation has nothing to do with their capability to
serve in the U.S. military,'' said Luis Vizcaino, spokesman
for the gay rights group Human Rights Campaign.
''Don't ask,
don't tell'' was passed by Congress after a firestorm of
debate in which it was argued that allowing gays to serve
openly would hurt troop morale and recruitment and
undermine the cohesion of combat units. (Pauline
Jelinek, AP)
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