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<text id=93TT2449>
<title>
Feb. 08, 1993: Sex, Lies and the Military
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARMED FORCES, Page 29
Sex, Lies and The Military
</hdr>
<body>
<p>For gays and lesbians, life in the armed forces means unflagging
vigilance and some tactical deception
</p>
<p>By JILL SMOLOWE - With reporting by David S. Jackson/San
Francisco and Sarah Tippit/Orlando
</p>
<p> It's done sotto voce, but somehow word gets passed. The
Air Force is the most hospitable armed branch; the Marines and
Army are the pits. Entertainment and medical jobs are the
safest; artillery and infantry units the roughest. If possible,
head for bases around San Francisco or Washington; steer clear
of South Korea and Hawaii. Join groups like Alcoholics
Anonymous; for those in the Navy, especially, they are safe
enclaves. Buy Bob Damron's Address Book; it lists gay bars near
military installations both at home and abroad. But be careful:
such clubs are off limits and are often scouted by bands of
military police known as "courtesy patrols." Be alert for
changing code words. If someone says, "Don't go straight, go
forward" or asks, "Are you a friend of Dorothy's?" you'll know
you've found the Emerald City.
</p>
<p> For gay men and lesbians, military service means a life of
unflagging vigilance and tactical deception. The adversary they
fear most does not speak a foreign tongue. Rather, the enemy
lies as close as the next bunk. At military bases across the
country, homosexuals describe an existence that at best is
tentative, guarded and supported by discreet networks. At worst,
it can mean snickering colleagues, witch hunts and dangerous
"blanket parties," during which the victims are held beneath
covers, then beaten senseless. Until now, the military's
homosexuals have had to live with the uneasy knowledge that
exposure of their secret could mean expulsion.
</p>
<p> Over the past decade, homosexuals have been discharged
from the armed services at the rate of about 1,500 a year.
Rarely does the expulsion involve any of the acts so commonly
cited as a threat by those who oppose gays in the military:
harassment of straight colleagues, fondling or staring in the
showers, nocturnal visits to unsuspecting bunkmates. "In every
case I know of, someone told someone about a person's sexual
orientation or that person was asked a question during a
security clearance," says Kevin Cathcart, executive director of
the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, a gay civil rights
group. Sometimes the outings are coerced. Confronted by
investigators, gays are often told to name names if they want
an honorable rather than a general discharge.
</p>
<p> Since 1982, the military has encouraged--indeed,
demanded--such scrutiny. Defense Department Directive 1332.14
states: "Homosexuality is incompatible with military service."
No overt act is required to set this ban in motion. A mere
"propensity to engage in homosexual conduct" is enough to invite
discharge. The military has many other rules on sexual conduct
that apply to everyone--gay or straight. Officers are not
permitted to fraternize with enlistees. Sex is barred on bases
except for married personnel in their living quarters. Even
off-site sex is regulated. Under the Uniform Code of Military
Justice, anal and oral intercourse are prohibited anywhere,
anytime, by anybody. But each of these rules speaks to conduct,
not sexual orientation--and the last rule goes largely
unenforced.
</p>
<p> The ban against homosexuals is applied capriciously,
resulting in both considerable harassment and occasional
discretion. The experience of Janet, an Army medic and private
first class, is typical of the former. Janet was drinking off
duty at Hula's, a gay hangout in Hawaii, when she was stopped
by a courtesy patrol. "From that time on," she says, "I felt
they were watching me." Inspectors would burst into her room at
2 a.m., seeking to catch her in a compromising position. Though
she was never caught in flagrante delicto, her sergeant accused
her of being gay because she had no boyfriends. Janet's
assignments deteriorated. Most punishing was a three-month
posting to the field for maneuvers that involved 10,000 men--and Janet.
</p>
<p> At the other extreme was the experience of Eliseo
Martinez, a former Marine sergeant who came out of the closet
halfway through his six-year tour at the El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station in California. One day one of his men called another
a "faggot." Martinez suggested to the name-caller that he seemed
insecure about his own sexuality. Later, Martinez was called in
by his commanding officer, who requested details of the clash,
then asked if he could pose a question. "Are you gay?" he
asked. "Yes, sir," Martinez replied. "Well," the commander said,
"you're still doing a good job, Marine." The issue never came
up again.
</p>
<p> More typically, matters are not confronted directly.
Antigay servicemen single out targets, spreading rumors behind
their back, carving butt pirate and die faggot on their lockers
and spraying their beds with sexual lubricant. To avoid
becoming a target, gay men sometimes play along, trying to mask
their pain. They smirk gamely at gay jokes and go to lengths to
cloak their true identity. Some invent girlfriends or wives, or
even date women. Blatant lies about sexual orientation,
however, risk perjury charges if a homosexual comes under
investigation. Most, therefore, simply disclose nothing about
their personal life. "The result is you don't waste much time
and you appear to be very serious about your assignments," says
a gay Army attorney.
</p>
<p> Female personnel tend to be more tolerant of their lesbian
colleagues. "You aren't hearing it from women because women are
more accepting about lesbians," says Mary Ann Humphrey, a former
captain in the Army reserves who was discharged in 1987. "Their
womanhood is not threatened like a man's manhood is when he's
around a gay man." Perhaps women's experience with male sexual
harassment has made them less skittish about other forms of
torment. Or perhaps it is simply less taboo for women to hug and
kiss in public.
</p>
<p> That doesn't mean lesbians have it easy. According to
Humphrey, who wrote a history of homosexuals in the U.S.
military titled My Country, My Right to Serve, women are
expelled 10 times as often as men for their sexual orientation.
Amy, a medical corpsman at the Naval Training Center in Orlando,
Florida, feels so threatened that she pretends to date a male
gay friend of hers. "I grab crotches, I make sexual innuendos,''
she says. "The more they suspect, the more I try to cover up."
Recently, a married male officer made overtures. She did not
file a sexual-harassment report because she feared "an
investigation will ensue and my homosexuality will come out."
</p>
<p> Homosexuals who try to maintain a relationship proceed
with utmost caution. Bill, a Navy medical corpsman, has a
civilian lover. When they are together in Bill's apartment
complex, which is populated by a lot of Navy personnel, they are
careful not to touch or exchange intimate glances. Bill is a
veteran of the double life. He visits straight bars with his
straight friends, "dates" a lesbian friend, and once hired a
prostitute while in port in the Philippines. "I just took her
to my hotel, and we talked," he says.
</p>
<p> Even if the ban is lifted, homosexuals are still likely to
practice self-censorship to protect their careers. Civilian work
settings, where many if not most gays still keep quiet about
their sexual orientation, offer an apt model. "Hundreds of
corporations have policies that protect gay men and lesbians
against discrimination," says Jay Lucas, a Philadelphia
employment consultant. "But that doesn't mean the culture has
changed." John, a Navy petty officer in San Diego, sounds a
common refrain. To come out of the closet, he says, "would be
professional suicide because your superiors will find ways not
to promote you." A change in policy does not guarantee that
harassment will immediately stop: some gay servicemen reported
last week that insults and physical attacks have increased since
President Clinton began speaking out against the ban.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>