A sailor who was
discharged under "don't ask, don't tell" and then
recalled to active duty in an apparent bureaucratic snafu
has been summarily discharged again after telling his
story in the Stars and Stripes newspaper.
Petty Officer 2nd
Class Jason Knight learned Thursday that the Navy
intends to discharge him just weeks before he
completes his most recent one-year commitment,
the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, an advocacy
group for gay and lesbian service personnel, said in a
written statement.
Knight, a Hebrew
linguist with four years' service, came out to his
command in 2005 and was discharged soon after, losing his
$13,000 sign-on bonus. He was pleasantly surprised to
be recalled in June 2006 and completed a tour of duty
with Naval Customs Battalion Romeo in Kuwait.
Once again he was
entirely open about his sexual orientation; his
interview with Stars and Stripes was published
May 6.
"Jason Knight was
an exemplary sailor who gladly returned to active duty
when our country needed him," Sharra E. Greer, SLDN's
director of law and policy, said in Friday's
statement. "Our nation should be embarrassed that our
armed forces are forced to respond to Knight's
selfless service with a government-sanctioned pink slip."
Knight told
Stars and Stripes that he was impelled in
part to come out again by the homophobic comments of Gen.
Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who
called homosexuality "immoral" and refused to
apologize despite pressure from members of Congress
and several presidential candidates.
"Though I respect
[Pace] as a leader, it made me so mad," Knight told
the paper.
America's
changing attitude on "don't ask," wrote reporter Joseph
Giordono, "includes suggestions that the Pentagon is
less interested in kicking out gay service members
during war." As Giordono pointed out, "Pentagon stats
show that discharges of gay service members dropped to
612 in 2006. The peak of such discharges was in 2001,
when 1,273 were reported. The numbers have fallen steadily
each year, from 906 in 2002 to 787 in 2003, and on
down."
Knight receives
honorable discharges in both cases--commanding
officers have discretion in such matters. Sailors in
his detail praised him highly.
"The Navy tends
to keep people who don't want to be here, but Jason
does," Petty Officer 1st Class Tisha Hanson told the paper,
adding that his gayness "doesn't bother me."
"I have now spent
five years in the Navy, and I have loved every minute
of it," Knight said in Friday's statement. "I am proud to
be among the 1 million gay veterans who have answered the
call to duty." (Barbara Wilcox, The Advocate)