OSAMA'S
THE ENEMY - NOT GAYS
March
15, 2007
Michael
Smerconish
ARENEWED debate on
"don't ask, don't tell" is just what al Qaeda ordered.
Somewhere in north
Waziristan, there's a tall guy on dialysis laughing his turban off at our
preoccupation with fighting ourselves instead of hunting him.
And yet that is what Gen.
Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, ignited when he told the Chicago
Tribune that homosexual acts
"are immoral," like a member of the armed forces conducting an
adulterous affair with the spouse of another service member. "We prosecute
that kind of immoral behavior," he said.
Put aside for a moment that
he's wrong. (I support "don't ask, don't tell," but how can
monogamous homosexuality be the moral equivalent of adulterous heterosexuality?)
The bigger point is one of timing. With a quagmire in Iraq, and bin Laden at
large in Pakistan, this is not the moment for an attention diversion. After
all, there are only so many 20-second time slots for Americans to get their
news.
The Tribune story was 1,378 words. I had to get through 1,191 of
them before I read about something far more dangerous than gays, and explains
why we can't kill bin Laden: "Regarding Pakistan, Pace said that a
controversial treaty that Musharraf signed with tribal chiefs in north
Waziristan province has not produced the results that the Pakistani leader
hoped it would in reducing cross-border attacks by Taliban and al Qaeda
insurgents."
If bin Laden is hiding in
Pakistan, we've totally outsourced the hunt to President Pervez Musharraf, and
instead of debating the propriety of that, we're now going to waste our time on
a non-issue. Ridiculous.
And I blame Gen. Pace, not
so much for offering his honest view, but for not recognizing that it would
cause a firestorm.
The renewed interest in
military policy on gays caused by Pace's comments doesn't bode well for Matt
Sanchez, the Marine corporal who used to work as a porn star under the name Rod
Majors. That became news last week after Sanchez was feted at the Conservative
Political Action Conference, where he received an award for having battled the
forces of political correctness and anti-military sentiment at Columbia
University.
Some of Sanchez's fellow
students had "humiliated" him at an Activities Day in 2005, calling him
minority "cannon fodder" (he's Hispanic) and a
"baby-killer." When he appealed to the administration, it defended
the students' right to free speech.
"They really messed
with the wrong Marine," Sanchez told me. He said he stood up to the
hostility on behalf of the Marine Corps and other service members. "This
wasn't just about Iraq, it wasn't just about Columbia. It was about the
country."
Sanchez's advocacy for
soldiers earned him the on-campus sight of his picture next to a dead Iraqi
baby and a homeless vet with the headline: "Victim?"
The New York Post, "Hannity and Colmes" and "The
O'Reilly Factor" came calling. That association is making liberals froth
at the mouth that he's a hypocrite. Take Huffington Post blogger Max
Blumenthal, a research fellow at Media Matters for America, who said on MSNBC:
"I don't really care
what Cpl. Matt Sanchez, aka Rod Majors, says. This is a guy who was supported
by two networks at the same time. The first network was a gay sex network, and
he sold his services for $200 a pop and $250 if he had to leave his house.
"The other network was
an ideologically homophobic right-wing network that consisted of people like
Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity and David Horowitz, who used Cpl. Matt Sanchez,
aka Rod Majors, to advance their campaign to demonize the campus anti-war
movement and academics in general. So he joined up with this right wing culture
war, and he's been unmasked by progressive bloggers as a hypocrite."
Hypocrite? I don't see it,
and I think the willingness to call Sanchez one says more about his critics
than about him. Aren't they the ones who've been telling us that sexuality has
nothing to do with the ability to be a good soldier?
If his acting is a thing of
the past, and it doesn't interfere with his current reserve responsibilities, I
say, let him serve.
As Sanchez told me,
"There's no such thing as a gay Marine, or a Latino Marine, or a black
Marine. It's just Marines. I think that's really important to say. I'm a
Marine, first and foremost."
We'll have plenty of time
later to fight among ourselves. For now, let's get back to battling Arab
extremists.
Listen to Michael Smerconish weekdays 5:30-9 a.m.
on the Big Talker, 1210-AM. Read him Sundays in the Inquirer. Contact him via
the Web at www.mastalk.com.