Marine General Says He’d Give Gays Separate Rooms

March 26, 2010 20:50


Marine Corps’ commandant said he won’t force his troops to bunk with gays on base and would give them separate rooms if Congress votes to allow openly gay service.

via FOXNews.com

The comment, by Gen. James Conway, is the latest pushback by a small but vocal faction of senior military leaders opposed to a repeal of the 1993 law known as “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

The Marine Corps’ commandant said he won’t force his troops to bunk with gays on base and would give them separate rooms if Congress votes to allow openly gay service.

The comment, by Gen. James Conway, is the latest pushback by a small but vocal faction of senior military leaders opposed to a repeal of the 1993 law known as “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

President Obama says the ban is unfair, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates has launched a lengthy study to determine how to allow gays to serve openly without hurting military effectiveness.

Among the questions to be answered is whether changes to housing policies would even be necessary.

Conway, a known opponent of repealing the law, suggested in an interview published Friday by Military.com that he already knows it would be a logistical hurdle. On base, Marines typically bunk two-to-a-room.

“I would not ask our Marines to live with someone who is homosexual if we can possibly avoid it,” he said.

“And to me that means we have to build BEQs (bachelor enlisted quarters) and have single rooms,” he said.

Conway’s remarks foreshadow the rocky political debate ahead. Gates has asked lawmakers to keep troops “out of the political dimension” of the issue, but some uniformed officers are willingly jumping in.

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