Even if no one is
asking, Army sergeant Darren Manzella has been telling
anyone who'll listen that he's gay -- without serious
retribution so far from the military.
Even if no one is
asking, Army sergeant Darren Manzella has been telling
anyone who'll listen that he's gay -- without serious
retribution so far from the military. Manzella, a
medic who served in Iraq and Kuwait, has acknowledged
his sexual orientation in national media interviews and
again on Tuesday in a Washington news conference.
''This is who I
am. This is my life,'' said Manzella, who received a
combat medical badge for his service in Iraq. ''It has never
affected my job performance before. I don't think it
will make a difference now. And to be honest since
then, I don't see a difference because of my
homosexuality.''
Aubrey Sarvis,
executive director of Servicemembers Legal Defense
Network, said Manzella's case demonstrates the military is
arbitrarily enforcing its ''don't ask, don't tell''
policy now that the country is at war.
The ''don't ask,
don't tell'' policy prohibits active-duty service
members from openly acknowledging that they are gay or
lesbian.
Manzella still
could be investigated now that he has left the
battlefield. Every time he has said he is gay publicly can
be counted as a violation of the policy, one of his
attorneys said.
Manzella first
told a military supervisor about his sexual orientation in
August 2006 while he was stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, and
working in division headquarters. Three weeks after
Manzella made the revelation, his battalion commander
told him an investigation had been closed without
finding ''proof of homosexuality.''
A month later,
Manzella was redeployed for the war in Iraq.
Paul Boyce Jr.,
an Army spokesman, said he was unaware of an
investigation of Manzella being opened or closed. He said
the investigation would have been done by Manzella's
Fort Hood unit, and officials there are on leave and
unavailable to discuss the case.
''This particular
soldier's unit only recently returned from the war to
Fort Hood, Texas, so it's premature to speculate on any
future actions until the young man's situation can be
considered by his chain of command,'' Boyce said in a
statement.
Manzella,
originally from Portland, N.Y., returned from the Middle
East last month and went on leave shortly before
Christmas. He will return to the 1st Cavalry Division
at Ford Hood at the end of the month.
A bill to
eliminate the military's sexual orientation policy, filed by
Rep. Ellen Tauscher, a California Democrat, is pending in
Congress. Sarvis said the bill is unlikely to get out
of committee during this election year, but hearings
could be held.
Elaine Donnelly,
president of the Center for Military Readiness, said
Manzella's commanders should have discharged him when they
learned he was gay. Her group opposes allowing gays to
join the military. (AP)
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