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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT0244>
<title>
July 26, 1993: Then There Was Nunn
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE MILITARY, Page 40
Then There Was Nunn
</hdr>
<body>
<p>After six months of negotiations and wrangling over language,
the Administration fashions a gay compromise--but there's
trouble ahead
</p>
<p>By MARGARET CARLSON/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Michael Duffy and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
</p>
<p> Last Wednesday, Defense Secretary Les Aspin walked into the
Oval Office, assumed his customary slouch in a chair across
from the President--and admitted defeat. It was the eve of
the President's self-imposed deadline to come up with a compromise
on the military ban on gays in the armed forces. However, despite
nearly six months of studying and analyzing, arguing and negotiating,
Aspin's report could just as well have been made in January.
With Vice President Al Gore, David Gergen, George Stephanopoulos
and National Security Adviser Tony Lake sitting in, Aspin told
Clinton that the policy dubbed "Don't ask, don't tell"--a
politically unsatisfactory solution in which the Pentagon would
not inquire about, and gay soldiers would not volunteer information
on, sexual orientation--was all he had been able to get out
of the Joint Chiefs. And if that was all Aspin could get out
of his chiefs, that would be all Clinton could get out of the
military-sympathetic Congress.
</p>
<p> After Aspin's nearly two-hour briefing, the President decided
to let his deadline come and go. The Administration would later
gravitate toward a new formula--"Don't ask, don't tell, don't
pursue"--that would meet the military's requirements while
trying to define what one official called a "zone of privacy"
for gay servicemen and -women. But the military's chief congressional
ally, Armed Services chairman Senator Sam Nunn, was taking no
chances. Ending his truce with the White House, Nunn announced
that he would introduce legislation to codify a strict interpretation
of "Don't ask, don't tell"--one that would preserve the policy
that declares "Homosexuality is incompatible with military service."
</p>
<p> The search for a compromise was ill-fated from the start. The
Joint Chiefs had always been dead set against change. And they
remained so throughout days of intense negotiations in windowless
rooms in the Pentagon. Indeed, they treated the entire debate
like a national emergency. Amid discussions with Aspin, they
met three times on July 2, more than anyone remembers their
convening in one day during the entire Vietnam War. One chief
referred to homosexuals as "fags," and the Marine Corps Commandant,
General Carl Mundy, passed out antigay video tapes at meetings.
Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Colin Powell, while talking
cooperation with the White House, instigated behind-the-scenes
opposition to the President. In a speech in Annapolis, he had
told sailors he would understand if they chose to resign in
the event that they ultimately disagreed with the President's
decision.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile Clinton discovered that getting what he wanted without
a fight with Congress was impossible. He had one significant
ally in Senator Bob Kerrey, the Congressional Medal of Honor
winner who lost a leg in Vietnam. In a speech last week, Kerrey
admitted that his own experience in the Navy SEALs had caused
him initially "to drift toward the military point of view."
But he changed his mind in May after he heard Marine Colonel
Fred Peck testify that he would not want his gay son to serve
in the Marines, fearful that his son's life would be threatened
by fellow soldiers. Kerrey said, "I must tell you, Mr. President,
in that moment, I said, `Time out.' It's time for the military
to change."
</p>
<p> But that moment has not arrived for Nunn, and may never come.
On Friday, the Georgia Senator surprised even sympathetic colleagues
by announcing on the Senate floor that Congress would have to
pass a law on the gay ban--no matter what Clinton decided.
His language was tough and restrictive. "There should be no
change in the current grounds for discharge for homosexual acts
or statements and marriages." He included among his targets
anyone who "demonstrates a propensity to engage in homosexual
acts." These were fighting words, since one point of the six-month
study was to give Nunn his time in the sun, days of televised
hearings in which he could assert his authority over the process.
Out of this came a willingness on Nunn's part to live with "Don't
ask, don't tell"--and, it was assumed, to keep lawmakers from
tinkering with the policy. All seemed well until Nunn's speech,
which came across as a pre-emptive rebuke to Clinton.
</p>
<p> Part of the President's new formula was revealed late Friday.
His policy would go beyond "Don't ask, don't tell" to "Don't
pursue." It would forbid the military to inquire about an enlistee's
sexual orientation not only upon entering the armed forces but
at any time during service. The new policy would put an end
to witch hunts in the service by raising the standards required
to launch an investigation, ending vigilante squads and MPs
with cameras waiting outside off-base bars. The policy, said
an official, would allow homosexuals in the military "to quietly
have a life."
</p>
<p> But how quiet a life? Oddly enough, conduct will be shown greater
tolerance than talking about it. Simply going to a gay bar or
marching in a gay parade would not start up an investigation.
But talking about it--as well as repeated reports of such
activity--would. These hairs are split in a five-page addendum
to the proposed policy. While it admonishes commanders not to
harass suspected gay soldiers, it also says that overt activities
like holding hands and kissing would set off an inquiry. There
remains no distinction between behavior on and off base. As
a White House official summarized, "`Don't tell' means don't
tell. It would be unwise to say, `I am gay.' If you do, you
enter a danger zone."
</p>
<p> The Administration, trying to tiptoe carefully between the military-service
chiefs and its gay-activist constituents, believes it has succeeded
in keeping part of a campaign promise while improving the lot
of gays already in uniform. The White House also seems to be
taking heart from the fact that the so-called compromise means
spinach for everyone. But the costs are heavy. Aspin and his
aides lie bloodied on the floor of the Pentagon briefing room.
Nunn's threat to legislate even harsher restrictions on gays
remains real.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile the President's gay constituency is disillusioned.
Says Barney Frank, a homosexual member of Congress: "The victims
of the prejudice would rather lose with the President on their
side than win a small gain with him being perceived as having
moved away." One Administration official says he wishes Clinton
wouldn't insist on saying his moderated version of the Joint
Chiefs' position is progress. "It would be better if he would
admit that he had to compromise on a difficult issue, that this
isn't what he believes, that this is what he was forced to accept
or Congress would legislate a ban that would make life hell
for those gays now serving." He adds, "Just don't say this is
a good thing."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>