Friday, July 8, 2011

Gay troops cheer ‘don't ask, don’t tell’ court ruling

The Defense Department will comply with the court order and took steps late Wednesday to begin informing the forces of the change, according to Marine Col. Dave Lapan, a Pentagon spokesman.

But plans to end the ban on gays in uniform, as outlined in a law passed in December, will continue as scheduled, senior military officials said Thursday.

The law requires every man and woman serving in military uniform to complete training courses about the end of the policy before its repeal. Military officials said President Obama will certify “in the coming weeks” that the military has completed the training courses and is ready to end the ban.

The “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, which began in late 1993, will officially end 60 days after Obama’s written certification.

Some gay troops serving on the front lines said Thursday that military culture — not a court order — would dictate whether they eventually reveal their sexual orientation.

“I’m ecstatic,” said one soldier stationed in Baghdad, adding that he planned to meet Thursday night at a military coffee shop with other gay soldiers to celebrate.

“We won’t be loud or obnoxious, but we will show solidarity and resolve,” the soldier said by e-mail, speaking on the condition of anonymity while the ban remains in effect.

Military officials in Iraq said Thursday that the approximately 47,000 troops deployed here had completed training courses on schedule. But when asked, one official said there was no way of knowing how many courses had been conducted in Iraq, suggesting only that there had been many.

At Bagram air base in Afghanistan, an Air Force staff sergeant who also requested anonymity said the court decision would probably add to the confusion about the end of the policy.

“A lot of people thought it all ended back in December and thought we were done,” the staff sergeant said in an interview. “People are frustrated. They’re waiting and thinking, ‘It’ll be any week now,’ and they’d just like it to get done.”

An Army officer based in Kabul said that he and his gay comrades were unlikely to publicly disclose their sexual orientation immediately — whenever the ban ends.

“I’d like to, but that’s difficult because of the culture around me,” he said in an interview. Complicating the decision, he said, he has heard fellow soldiers and commanding officers use gay slurs and make gay jokes.

“I don’t know who will be accepting,” he said. Even if the ban ends quickly, “military culture won’t change overnight.”

Sounding more optimistic, the Air Force staff sergeant at Bagram quoted his commander, who recently said, “Don’t ask, don’t tell, don’t care, doesn’t matter. We have a war to fight that is much more important.”

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Pelosi, Obama to hold White House meeting on Friday

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and President Obama will meet at the White House on Friday morning, according to a Democratic source.

Meanwhile, Pelosi told Bloomberg TV that the country would reach a deal on raising the debt limit before the Aug. 2 deadline set by Treasury officials.

“With all due respect to Greece, we are not Greece,” Pelosi said, referring to the recent financial crisis that engulfed that country.

“I believe, respecting our colleagues on both sides of the aisle, that everybody knows that the full faith and credit of the United States of America must be respected by the Congress of the United States. I have faith and confidence this will happen.”

Regarding the Pelosi-Obama meeting, the source, who has not authorized to speak publicly regarding the meeting, said the session had been scheduled before Obama invited eight bipartisan congressional leaders, including Pelosi, to meet at the White House on Thursday to discuss how to restart talks on a deal to raise the nation’s debt limit.

Obama has held one-on-one meetings with other top lawmakers this week, including House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) on Sunday and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Monday.

The meeting with Pelosi is scheduled for 10 a.m. One issue likely to come up is entitlement reform. Obama is proposing significant reductions in Medicare spending and for the first time is offering to tackle the rising cost of Social Security as part of a sweeping debt-limit deal, people in both parties with knowledge of the proposal said Wednesday.

Pelosi told Bloomberg that Social Security reform should be considered on a “separate table.”

“If there are suggestions that people have for strengthening Social Security, let’s pour it back into Social Security if there are some good ideas to that effect. But we should not do that in order to subsidize tax cuts for the wealthiest people in our country. We have been clear about that from the standpoint of our House Democratic caucus over a long period of time.”

Pelosi said that she did not think anyone was “drawing lines in the sand” that might subvert a “grand bargain” on a debt limit deal between Congress and the White House.

“Understand though that our priority is no benefit cuts to Social Security or Medicare. I do not know if you can save money doing that. Are you reducing the deficit? We have to examine every piece of revenue we have.”

On Thursday, Pelosi and other House Democratic leaders expressed alarm at the proposal.

“We are not going to balance the budget on the backs of seniors, women and people with disabilities,” Pelosi said at a news conference at the Capitol.

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Friday, July 1, 2011

West Wing Briefing: Obama to bid farewell to Gates, then attend fundraisers

President Obama will say goodbye to one of his top advisers, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, at a farewell ceremony at the Pentagon on Thursday.

Gates, who served as defense secretary the final two years of George W. Bush’s second term and was persuaded by Obama to stay on, was a key ally of Obama’s in working with the military, particularly on the president’s Afghanistan policy.

And Obama is choosing to honor Gates in an elaborate way, hosting a private dinner at the White House on Wednesday in honor of the defense chief in addition to the event at the Pentagon.

Obama will leave town Thursday afternoon to attend two campaign fundraisers in Philadelphia.

By Perry Bacon Jr.  |  06:00 AM ET, 06/30/2011

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Obama, Palin to appear in Iowa on same day

President Obama and former Alaska governor Sarah Palin will both come to Iowa on Tuesday, coming within three hours of each other and, in the process, taking attention away from the growing field of official GOP presidential candidates stumping through the Hawkeye State.

Continuing his recent focus on the economy, Obama will tout his vision for increasing American manufacturing jobs at a factory in Bettendorf, in the eastern part of the state. Palin will head to Pella, in central Iowa, for the premiere of “The Undefeated,” a film about her political rise.

Obama speaks at 1 p.m. Central time; the Palin movie opens at the Pella Opera House four hours later.

It’s not clear whether Palin will give formal remarks after the movie, which was produced by the conservative Victory Film Group. The film will be formally released in 10 cities (Houston, Indianapolis, Oklahoma City, Orlando and Phoenix, and the suburbs of Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Kansas City and Los Angeles) on July 15.

“We are very excited to visit historic Pella and its opera house and look forward to seeing the finished film for the first time with fellow Americans from the heartland,” Palin said in a statement released by Victory.

Officially, neither the president nor the former vice-presidential candidate are making campaign appearances. Palin has not yet entered the 2012 Republican field.

Obama has announced his reelection campaign, and the trip to Iowa is not surprising, given that he appears in a swing state nearly every week for an “official” presidential trip.

By Perry Bacon Jr.  |  06:00 AM ET, 06/28/2011

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