Victory and Vindication
Tuesday 21 December 2010
by: Eugene Robinson, Op-Ed
Washington - President Obama must be tempted to respond to his progressive critics with a quote from the old-school rapper Kool Moe Dee: "How ya like me now?"
Repeal of the military's bigoted and anachronistic "don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays in the military -- a campaign promise that seemed to be slipping out of reach -- doesn't fully mend the relationship between Obama and the Democratic Party's liberal wing. But it's a pretty terrific start.
Progressives needed a clear, unambiguous victory to ease the sting of those extended tax cuts for the rich. They got one Saturday with the Senate's historic vote to end "don't ask, don't tell" -- and Obama won vindication for the slow, patient, step-by-step approach that drove gay and lesbian activists crazy but ultimately produced a stunning result.
Administration officials believed from the beginning that getting the discriminatory policy repealed, and allowing homosexuals to serve openly in the armed forces, would require getting the Pentagon brass on board. The military leadership had to support the change, or at least accept it. Otherwise, repeal-minded members of Congress might balk at casting a vote that could be portrayed as somehow weakening America's defense.
So the White House spent months demonstrating that Defense Secretary Robert Gates fully endorsed the end of "don't ask, don't tell" and that the service chiefs would implement the change. A key part of this painstaking strategy was the Pentagon's 10-month study of the impact of eliminating the policy -- which concluded, essentially, that there was likely to be no adverse impact at all.
The study included a military-wide survey, which found that two-thirds of service members believed ending the policy would have positive, mixed or neutral effects. Perhaps more significant was the study's description of the experience of the British, Canadian and Australian militaries, which changed their rules and allowed gays and lesbians to serve openly. What happened? Nothing at all.
"Uniformly, these nations reported that they were aware of no units that had a degradation of cohesion or combat effectiveness, and that the presence of gay men and lesbians in combat units had not been raised as an issue by any of their units deployed in Iraq or Afghanistan," the study reports. None of those other nations had problems with recruiting or retention, either. The change turned out to be a non-issue.
Opponents of ending "don't ask, don't tell," including Sen. John McCain, had insisted that Congress not act until the Pentagon study was completed. When it finally came out, they promptly began moving the goalposts, demanding yet more hearings and testimony. It looked as if they were going to run out the clock and leave the issue for the new Congress, which will be far more conservative.
But then Joe Lieberman and Susan Collins came to the rescue.
I've been sharply critical of Lieberman in the past, and I suspect I'll have occasion to be equally critical in the future. But on "don't ask, don't tell," he was pure gold. Sometimes it seems as if Lieberman, who serves as an independent, delights in driving liberal Democrats crazy, but on social issues he still has a righteous sense of fairness and justice. His well-established record as a hawk on military matters gave him the credibility to push this change -- and push it he did, even when all seemed lost.
And as for Collins, I've wondered how she can be called a "moderate" when she reliably stands with the archconservative, down-with-the-president GOP leadership in the Senate, especially on important procedural votes. But she was brave and principled on "don't ask," and by linking arms with Lieberman she allowed seven other Republicans to cast their votes on the correct side of history.
Now that Congress has acted, the military will move with caution to implement the change. Judging by what has happened in other countries that took this step, however, the process will probably move much faster than anyone expects. A year from now, we'll all be wondering what the big deal was.
For gays and lesbians currently serving in the military, this doesn't mean they necessarily have to make public their sexuality. It just means that soon they won't have to fear being discharged for being who they are.
And for President Obama and the left, this is an important milestone -- a reminder that even in dysfunctional Washington, what Sarah Palin derided as "that hopey-changey stuff" can still produce real hope and change.
Eugene Robinson's e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.
(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group
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Comments
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Thin gruel, DADT.
Tue, 12/21/2010 - 12:05 — Vic Anderson (not verified)Thin gruel, DADT.
So now we gays can be open
Tue, 12/21/2010 - 15:57 — Martha Shelley (not verified)So now we gays can be open about our sexual orientation while we murder people on the other side of the world, or get our heads blown off on behalf of the oil industry. And this is supposed to make up for escalating the wars, increasing assaults on civil liberties, undermining Social Security, and transferring more and more wealth to the super-rich. I'm so thrilled -- I'm going to enlist the minute I get laid off, and write a thank-you note to Obama -- NOT!
I can only hope that, as
Tue, 12/21/2010 - 18:21 — TedRadamaker (not verified)I can only hope that, as predicted by some of our Generals, that thousands of bigoted straights will now leave the armed services and that no gays will be stupid enough to replace them. Good thing if this helps to end Obama's senseless wars!
He's still on his way to
Tue, 12/21/2010 - 19:46 — Anonymous (not verified)He's still on his way to being a one-term president. And apologists like Robinson, who once spoke to the choir, are now spitting in the wind. His man is just a corporatist of another color.
What a stupendously stupid
Tue, 12/21/2010 - 22:00 — Anonymous (not verified)What a stupendously stupid article. Mr Robinson- usually a thoughtful and reasonably honest columnist- has apparently drunk Obamaflava KoolAid and liked it a lot. Who got to him?
Really sad to find that he joins the rest of the sheeplike MSM is reporting only the game and not the substance. That's what insiders do! Because the substance is sad and it stinks. Apparently few journalists or agencies are interested in the truth, short or long term.
DADT is a worthy signpost social issue long overdue, however twisted in its reality. Gays should definitely have the same right to join a corrupted military sent off all over the globe to fight for corporate interests.
So to answer Mr Robinson's question: Hell no, we still don't like ya! Plus- after the last two years there is little or nothing you can do now to change that.
Repeal of DADT was
Wed, 12/22/2010 - 00:03 — NoOneYouKnow (not verified)Repeal of DADT was inevitable, and it only serves up more cannon fodder for the US's illegal wars. As "progressive" acts go, this was a weak piece of theater.
It seems that most of the
Thu, 12/23/2010 - 08:37 — Anonymous (not verified)It seems that most of the readers here are too young or have never read history and do not realize just how far to the right this country has shifted since Truman's day. This country was barely out of the Depression and the majority were still grateful to the New Deal for having a roof over their families and full bellies. There were also parts of the country that didn't get out of the Depression until the 1960's and LBJ's policies. Nixon's southern strategy has worked very well. The GOP has used racism to drag voters into supporting its retrograde policies. What Obama finally pulled off is remarkable considering the atmosphere prevailing.
Martha Shelley: Right on!
Fri, 12/24/2010 - 00:54 — Pete W (not verified)Martha Shelley: Right on! My sentiments exactly. Congratulations, gays and lesbians, you can come out of the closet now -- of course, just because the law says you can do so doesn't mean you won't still be harassed, raped, or beaten -- and fully celebrate your right to kill innocent civilians, bring terror to the survivors' lives, and ransack the land bases of indigenous cultures, all while you live in constant fear and while knowing that you will never escape the nightmares coming your way. Cindy Sheehan says it all more eloquently: Don't Go, Don't Kill! http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2010/12/2010122314043803810.html
Note that DADT remains in
Tue, 12/28/2010 - 09:11 — Anonymous (not verified)Note that DADT remains in place until "someone" in the Pentagon decides how to implement it. I think DADT will be finished at the same pace as Obama's much touted closure of Gitmo.