Interfaith Foxholes
posted at 8:15 pm on May 27, 2010 by J.E. Dyer
[ Political Correctness ]
As Congress this week considers language for the 2011 defense appropriation bill that would effectively repeal the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy, two current lawsuits frame the reality of what this matter is and is not about. One is that of Air Force Major Margaret Witt, who lived discreetly with a same-sex partner while serving as a flight nurse. In 2003, her lesbian partnership was brought to the attention of her command; in 2004, two years short of eligibility for military retirement, she was dismissed from the service.
She brought suit against the Air Force in 2006. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on her case in 2008, issuing an opinion that has so far received little media attention. The ruling’s Solomonic proposition is that, while the 1993 law passed by Congress is the law of the land, the military’s application of it requires a demonstration of more than mere homosexual practice on the part of a servicemember. To justify dismissal, according to the Ninth Circuit, the military must show that in an individual case, homosexual behavior creates a problem for unit cohesion or military discipline. (As commentators point out, this ruling, among its other oddities, has effect for the U.S. military only in the Western states overseen by the Ninth Circuit Court.)
The Obama administration declined to appeal that verdict in 2009. And I believe most servicemembers would regret Major Witt’s dismissal anyway. Nothing about her case suggests she had a deleterious impact on cohesion or discipline. She was a highly decorated and, by all accounts, highly professional and well-liked flight nurse. Dismissing airmen like Margaret Witt is not what Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) is “about.”
But the Ninth Circuit ruling makes very clear what repealing DADT will be “about,” and that is judicial inquiry into the institutional reasoning behind military policy and decisions. The Ninth Circuit ruling requires something the federal law itself does not: a demonstration of damage to unit cohesion or discipline. The law assumes the potential for such damage, and is preemptive in intent. The appeals court ruling effectively rejects that premise. Its approach to the Witt case makes clear that it will choose, at its discretion, to disregard the intent of law and focus instead on individual circumstances, and even on forms of evidence for which there may be no legal definition (e.g., “damage to military unit cohesion”).
This is a useful perspective from which to address the other lawsuit I mentioned. Although unrelated to the military, at least at present, it’s a suit about government facilities and “discrimination” against gays by a religious group. As laid out by retired federal judge Michael McConnell, in an interview here, Christian Legal Society v. Martinez is about a state university law school (Berkeley’s Hastings School) not allowing a student organization to operate on campus because it affirms traditional marriage. The basis for the school’s defense is that letting private organizations use its facilities amounts to subsidizing them at taxpayer expense.
The school has assumed, in effect, the position that its student organizations must design their purposes and beliefs in such a way that no one could be excluded from membership because of disagreeing with them. A Washington Post editorial from April, when the case’s appeal was argued before the Supreme Court, detected the obvious flaw in that reasoning, as did the questioner in a much-cited interview of Hastings’s Dean Leo Martinez (linked at the McConnell interview). By the school’s reasoning, Jews could not have a group on campus that did not admit radical Islamists, nor could blacks have a group that did not admit white-supremacist skinheads.
We may hope that the Supreme Court rules in favor of the plaintiff this summer. But the central thesis of the defense – that religious association and speech have to be restricted on government facilities to avoid subsidizing “discrimination” – may or may not be ruled on explicitly. It will depend on what the justices view as the basic question of law in this case. If the Supreme Court upholds the Ninth Circuit’s ruling for the defense, however, Judge McConnell affirms without hesitation that the ruling would have broad implications for religion and government, including the military chaplaincy and servicemembers’ religious groups. The collision of religious freedom with anti-discrimination policy in the precincts of government is not inevitable, but it is closer today than ever before.
Fair-minded people of goodwill have insisted that institutional endorsement of homosexuality by the military – the outcome repealing DADT will produce – isn’t going to infringe on the religious freedom of others. But CLS v. Martinez makes it clear that there are decision-makers willing to prohibit religious association and speech on government facilities, for precisely the reasons that would be adduced in the military’s case. Of perhaps more importance, there are multiple levels of judicial appeal, in at least some federal jurisdictions, where such prohibitions have lately been upheld.
Just as Major Margaret Witt tugs at our consciences as a victim of DADT, so should soldiers who rely on the ministry of their faith while in uniform. Tim Dalrymple, who interviewed Michael McConnell for “patheos,” has another recent interview with Michael Yon on the topic of soldiers and their religious faith. Yon’s own words make the case eloquently, and I urge you to read the interview and make up your own mind. My military experience validates his statements in every particular.
The Yon interview reminded me, moreover, of a remarkably moving document Ronald Reagan read to a Baptist convention in 1984. It was the report of a U.S. Sixth Fleet chaplain, Rabbi (Lieutenant Commander) Arnold Resnicoff, who along with his Catholic counterpart was one of the first men on the scene after the 1983 bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut. The whole report is gripping, but this brief passage in particular has remained with me:
I remember the first time I jumped in a foxhole, the first time the shells actually fell within the U.S. area. Looking around at the others in there with me, I made the remark that we probably had the only interfaith foxholes in Beirut. The Druze, the Muslims, Christians, all had theirs. The Jewish forces in the Israeli Army had theirs. But we were together. I made the comment then that perhaps if the world had more interfaith foxholes, there might be less of a need for foxholes altogether.
How perfectly that observation captures the blessing of American tolerance: unity from respecting multiple faiths, not from delegitimizing one or more of them. I could willingly occupy a foxhole with Margaret Witt, and I bet she would have no objection to occupying one with me, in spite of my faith. We, and most others in uniform, can do much better than the letter of the law in that regard. Indeed, law that litigates religious belief, and policy that takes an attitude on it, cannot unite us in foxholes.
Law that seeks to make windows into our souls is a divider, not a uniter. A DADT policy that gave the military more institutional discretion to keep people like Margaret Witt in uniform, but that did not open the door to a whole new category for litigating not just personnel management decisions but religious beliefs, would be ideal. Unfortunately, because of the state of federal law and grievance politics today, repealing DADT will open that door. And in the end, the defensive policies to which repeal drives the military will leave commanders with less discretion than they have today. A military of political litmus tests, in which commanders are always looking over their shoulders for fear of hostile and suspicious legal review, will not be a military that functions as America needs it to.
Cross-posted at The Optimistic Conservative.









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There has been homosexual sex in the military as long as there have been armies. However, no one will deny that much of that was at best a matter of convenience and worst unwilling and non-consensual. How much tolerance will there be for the not interested object of a come-on by a homosexual and how quickly will there be cries of homophobia or bigotry when someone is rejected (in word or deed) by someone else not interested. Who will be deemed at fault when this type of sexual affairs become an “issue” in the middle of a mission. Would YOU want to go to Seattle Grace when Callie and what’s her name are arguing about whether Callie has a baby?
wtis02575 on May 27, 2010 at 8:38 PM
Did Major Witt violate military policy?
Yes.
She was punished for it.
It may not be ‘fair’ but it’s the law. I understand your greater point, but it doesn’t change that there are consequences for breaking the law, however unpleasant.
You acknowledge the consequences which will erupt as a result of repealing DADT, but don’t make an issue of the consequences of violating the law?
catmman on May 27, 2010 at 9:47 PM
People discriminate. That’s what we do. We make choices every moment of our lives. We make choices that by logic alone dictate that we choose against something else. Argue it any way you want, freedom of choice and freedom of association within our lives is what defines us. Foxholes may be a dire situation uniting people that otherwise may choose to associate differently under other circumstances. Stress is like that. It also can unbind just as it can bind, making tatters of the fabric of life we have previously chosen towards.
Lacking the interest to pour through all the laws, regulations, and commands issued throughout history by all the armies and navies that have ever been commissioned, I nevertheless don’t recall any instance by casual reference to there having ever been strictures for or against homosexual service members. Someone with more insight may better address this. Religious beliefs more often address this lifestyle, one way or the other. This should never have been taken up by the US Military command in any fashion. The freedom of choice and association work like the free market in who will attend a foxhole meeting casually. And just as politics make for strange bedfellows, so does shrapnel.
Robert17 on May 27, 2010 at 11:31 PM
My recollection is that DADT was implemented instead of Pres. Clinton’s proposed allowing open homosexuals to serve in the military. The law codified general military practice. Over the years, the amount of allegation for an investigation has varied from merely an accusation to having to nearly catch the couple in the act and everywhere in between.
In civilian life, on a practical basis, I don’t care what two people do with each other in private, so long as they leave children and animals alone. (I have religious views, but I also don’t have to impose those views on others.) My main objection to open homosexuals in the service is that it will tend to break up teams, which is how fighting units are successful. My secondary objection, is that with the new policy, all leaders will be evaluated on how well they implement the new rules, which is going to drive out those with religious scruples and those who do not want to have to deal with the inevitable mess.
Kevin K. on May 28, 2010 at 1:37 AM
i would never leg up on a man out of convenience
blatantblue on May 28, 2010 at 12:40 PM
I wonder how much it would change things if only male homosexual behavior was prohibited. Its hard to see female homosexual behavior as a unit cohesion problem on its own, even if male homosexual behavior presents obvious problems.
Count to 10 on May 28, 2010 at 12:51 PM
Interfaith foxholes are a bad idea.
Who want to be stuck with the Amish guy when the bad guys are at the wire?
Give me a good ole Southern Baptist with a grudge or a 1/2 drunk Irish Catholic
LincolntheHun on May 28, 2010 at 12:58 PM
Then you need to spend a little more time learning about the lesbian community; and not just from porn sites.
LincolntheHun on May 28, 2010 at 1:00 PM
I can’t believe 18 y/o boys have really changed since my Vietnam days. Shame on this country if the military is seriously thinking of repealing DADT. Visit a high school football locker room some time and you will get a feel for what barracks life is like. This will not fly.
Leviticus 18:22
1 Corinthians 6:9
Ephesians 5:5
“Tolerance is the last virtue of a dying society” ~ Aristotle
scullymj on May 28, 2010 at 1:28 PM
If Major Witt knowingly, and on a daily basis, broke Army regulations that she had sworn to obey, by living with a lesbian partner, then she should not have complained about her punishment.
Are we to obey such regulations only when they suit us? What example does such a decision set for other officers and for enlisted people? If it was all right for her to disobey in that one part of military life, why not in others?
If one “discreetly” disobeys military regulations, is that okay? Not by my book. If you don’t like the regs, get out of the service. I can believe that Maj. Witt was a fine nurse, but that didn’t give her the right to make a choice that would keep her disobeying day after day, every day.
KyMouse on May 28, 2010 at 1:44 PM
JED, it sounds as if you believe DADT may ironically soon be visited upon religious soldiers instead of homosexuals, and maybe in varying degrees depending on which federal court’s jurisdiction they happen to be stationed under. That is presumably because traditional Christians in particular have not mobilized like the gay community to claim the rights and benefits due them under the Constitution. That leaves such Christians with the choice whether to help themselves to their own generous dollop of victimology or rely on a less divisive, less litigious, more generally political appeal to common sense and fair-mindedness. The latter is of course an outlandish suggestion.
Seth Halpern on May 28, 2010 at 2:26 PM
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Ed Morrissey on May 28, 2010 at 6:27 PM