Military Panel Recommends Gay Soldier Dan Choi Should Be Discharged Under Don't Ask, Don't Tell
July 1, 2009 by John Allen · 3 Comments
AP-gayapolis.news-A military review panel recommended Tuesday that National Guard Lt. Dan Choi, the gay Arabic translator who became a national figure in fighting the military’s "don’t ask, don’t tell" policy after declaring his sexuality on television, be discharged from the service.
The four-member Federal Recognition Board of Army officers in Syracuse, N.Y., had no recommendation Tuesday for how the 28-year-old should be discharged.
It’s recommendation that the Army no longer recognize Choi as an officer must be approved by the First Army commander and the chief of the National Guard Bureau before Choi would be discharged.
Lt. Dan Choi would be the first New York National Guard member discharged for violating the policy against homosexual conduct, said Lt. Col. Paul Fanning, a spokesman for the New York Army National Guard.
Choi, 28, appeared in Syracuse before a Federal Recognition Board, a panel of four military officers, which deliberated four hours before deciding to recommend the Army no longer recognize him as an officer. In essence, that amounts to a discharge, Fanning said.
Choi, a combat veteran, said it amounted to firing him "for nothing more than telling the truth about who I am."
"I’m a leader. A setback is an opportunity to keep fighting, and I’m going to do that through my actions," said Choi, who on Sunday was a celebrity grand marshal in San Francisco’s Gay Pride Parade.
The recommendation must be approved by the First Army commander and the chief of the National Guard Bureau before Choi is discharged, a process that could take anywhere from a few weeks to a year, said Maj. Roy Diehl, who represented Choi. Until then, Choi remains an active member of the National Guard, he said.
"It’s a recommendation, not a completed act," Diehl said, adding he hoped military commanders would reconsider Choi’s value as a soldier.
Choi likely will receive an honorable or a general discharge and could lose some of his veteran educational benefits, Diehl said.
"They are taking effective troops … and kicking them out, removing them from the force just as effectively as if al-Qaida was blowing them up," said Diehl, who claimed the military is more tolerant of drug abusers, malcontents and adulterers.
Choi, a 2003 West Point graduate, outed himself in March in the Army Times newspaper and on a nationally broadcast MSNBC show to protest the military’s policy, which he said forces soldiers to lie.
"It’s an immoral code that goes against every single thing we were ever taught at West Point with our honor code," Choi said at the time.
His declaration was part of the launch of Knights Out, the first association representing gay and lesbian alumni of West Point. Already, Knights Out has at least 50 members who have publicly identified themselves on the group’s Web site. Choi is the only one still active in the military.
The "don’t ask, don’t tell" policy was put in place in 1993 by former President Bill Clinton and forbids military recruiters from asking someone about his or her sexual orientation, but it also prohibits a service member from revealing if he or she is gay. About 10,500 military personnel were discharged for violating the policy between 1997 and last year, the Department of Defense said.
President Barack Obama has pledged to work to end the policy, but he has made no specific move to do so since taking office in January. The White House has said it won’t stop the military from dismissing gays who admit their sexuality.
Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court turned down a challenge to the Pentagon policy forbidding gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military. The court refused to hear an appeal from former Army Capt. James Pietrangelo II, who was dismissed under the military’s policy while in the Vermont National Guard in 2004.
Fanning, the New York Army National Guard spokesman, said the law is the law.
"The military has no choice but to follow it," Fanning said. "We don’t pick and choose what regulations to enforce."
At West Point, Choi, a native of Tustin, Calif., majored in Arabic language and environmental engineering.
He served in Iraq with the 10th Mountain Division for 15 months in 2006 and 2007, leading combat patrols through a region called the Triangle of Death and serving as a translator and language instructor. He also helped rebuild schools and hospitals.
In 2008, he left the Army and joined the 1st Battalion, 69th Infantry of the New York National Guard, based in Manhattan.
The closed hearing was held in Syracuse because it is the headquarters of the 27th Brigade Combat Team, which overseas Choi’s National Guard unit, Fanning said.



























I’ll bet he really looked quite’ in SFO. A member of the psychlogical spy ring designed to undermine moral values in THE MILITARY AND America. You too can help your local high school boys discover the new induced American Freedom. IT’S CALLED SCREW YOUR BUDDY.
I’ve got some bad news.
After 10 years of service to our country — including leading combat patrols, rebuilding schools and translating Arabic in Iraq for 15 months — the Federal Recognition Board issued its recommendation on Tuesday that I be discharged from the Army for "moral and professional dereliction" under the military’s "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" policy.
The board’s decision to fire me is not the end. Now that this panel of four officers has recommended my discharge, it still must be approved by senior officials in the Army, a process that could take a few weeks to a year. Unless something unexpected happens, it may be just a matter of time before the Army officially fires me.
I will not give up, no matter the odds. Because I know that the only way we will win this fight to repeal "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" is by facing it head on. And I need your help again to keep up the fight.
I’ve made my case to President Obama — supported by more than 140,000 of your signatures. I’ve made my case to the Army — supported by more than 160,000 of your signatures. And I will continue to make my case until they fire me for good.
Now we need to make our case to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Will you join me in asking Speaker Pelosi to strongly support legislation currently in Congress that would repeal "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell"? Please sign on to our letter before July 4th and I’ll personally deliver your signatures to the Speaker ASAP: [www.couragecampaign.org]
http://www.couragecampaign.org/RepealDADT [www.couragecampaign.org]
At West Point, I recited the Cadet Prayer every Sunday. It taught me to "choose the harder right over the easier wrong" and to "never be content with a half truth when the whole can be won." The Cadet Honor Code demanded truthfulness and honesty. It imposed a zero-tolerance policy against deception, or hiding behind comfort.
That’s why I can’t give up now. I’ve got to keep fighting. My fellow servicemembers — and the 70 fellow West Point graduates who have also come out of the closet to join Knights Out, the organization I co-founded to push for repeal of "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" — would expect nothing less.
The only way we can win this fight for the truth is if the political cost of discrimination eventually becomes too great for the system to operate successfully. We need to raise the political cost in Congress so that Speaker Nancy Pelosi understands that, as Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall once said, "justice too long delayed is justice denied."
Speaker Pelosi needs to make "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" a priority now and come out strongly in support of legislative action to repeal this discriminatory law. Will you stand by my side now and sign our letter to the Speaker before July 4th? You have my word that I will deliver your signatures to Speaker Pelosi personally: [www.couragecampaign.org]
http://www.couragecampaign.org/RepealDADT [www.couragecampaign.org]
As I said a few days ago, national security means many things, but the thing that makes us secure in our nation and homes is love. What makes me a better soldier, leader, Christian and human being is love. And I’m not going to hide my love.
Love is worth it.
Thank you for your support.
Daniel W. Choi
1LT, IN
New York Army National Guard
You touch a pecker, you gotta go.