Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Obama signs law allowing gays to serve in army

USA – Fulfilling a campaign pledge, cheering his party‘s downcast liberals and striking a blow for what he sees as basic human rights, President Barack Obama signed a landmark law on Wednesday that tells America‘s armed services to let homosexuals serve openly for the first time.

The president said in remarks preceding the signing that the repeal of ”don‘t ask, don‘t tell” will strengthen security and uphold ideals. He also said the government will not be ”dragging its feet” to enforce the repeal and encouraged those discharged under the ban to rejoin the military, the Associated Press reports.

So many gay rights and Democratic activists were expected at the signing ceremony that the White House booked a large auditorium at the Interior Department.

”This day has come!” said an elated Mike Almy, an Air Force major discharged four years ago when his sexual orientation became known. ”‘Don‘t ask, don‘t tell‘ is over, and you no longer have to sacrifice your integrity.”

While the elation is real, Pentagon officials caution it could be premature, since the bill requires service chiefs to complete implementation plans before lifting the old policy — and certify to lawmakers that it won‘t damage combat readiness, as critics charge.

Also, guidelines must be finalized that cover a host of practical questions, from how to educate troops to how sexual orientation should be handled in making barracks assignments.

While officials have avoided timetables, the process will probably take months.

Still, for gay and lesbian Americans, Wednesday is a watershed. And for Obama, it is a day to revel in the achievement of a goal he‘s long championed.

It is also the second of three expected victories in what‘s turned out to be — for Obama — a surprisingly productive lame-duck Congress. Weeks after his self-described ”shellacking” in the midterm vote, he‘s won lopsided approval of a tax cut compromise, and the Senate is poised to deliver his top foreign policy goal: ratification of a new nuclear arms treaty with Russia.

Many Democratic liberals were furious over the tax package, believing Obama blithely yielded to Republican demands to retain the same tax cuts for the rich he had loudly denounced on the campaign trail. That‘s not the case with the repeal of don‘t ask, don‘t tell. Lifting of the ban on gays serving openly was something Obama not only campaigned on in 2008 but reiterated in this year‘s State of the Union speech.

”I will work with Congress and our military to finally repeal the law that denies gay Americans the right to serve the country they love because of who they are,” he said in January to cheers in the House chamber, adding, ”It‘s the right thing to do.”

Born 17 years ago as a compromise between President Bill Clinton and a resistant Pentagon, the ”don‘t ask, don‘t tell” policy became for gay rights campaigners a notorious roadblock on the way to full acceptance.

Source:Punch




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