No Change Soon On "Don't Ask,
Don't Tell"

March 29, 2009
WASHINGTON – Don't expect any change
soon to the "don't ask, don't tell" policy about
gays in the military.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates says both
he and President Barack Obama have "a lot on our plates
right now." As Gates puts it, "let's push that one
down the road a little bit."
The White House has said Obama has begun
consulting with Gates and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff on how to lift the ban. Gates says that dialogue
has not really progressed very far at this point in the administration.
The Pentagon policy was put in place after
President Bill Clinton tried to lift the ban on gay service
members in 1993.
The policy refers to the military practice
of not asking recruits their sexual orientation. In turn,
service members are banned from saying they are gay or bisexual,
engaging in homosexual activity or trying to marry a member
of the same sex.
Gates appeared on "Fox News Sunday."