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News release from
Barney Frank
_________________________________________________________
Congressman, 4th
District, Massachusetts
2252
Rayburn Building · Washington, D.C. 20515 · (202) 225-5931
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Steven Adamske
202.225.7141
FRANK HAILS CIA DIRECTOR’S
AFFIRMATION OF THE VALUE OF LGBT EMPLOYEES
Washington, DC--Congressman
Barney Frank today expressed his appreciation for the strong, albeit
implicit, opposition to prejudice against sexual minorities in the federal
service, expressed by CIA Director Michael Hayden.
“Dr. Hayden’s repudiation of
the long held view that those of us who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or
transgender are security risks, not to be trusted with national security
responsibilities is very welcome,” Frank said. “This automatic
disqualification for GLBT people seeking to serve our country in a
security-related capacity was promulgated by Dwight Eisenhower in 1954, and
survived until Bill Clinton abolished it by executive order in 1994.
President George H. W. Bush, for example, explicitly refused to rescind the
order during his presidency. While President Clinton’s executive order
abolished the prohibition, there continue to be those who express
reservations about our ability to serve, and it is therefore especially
important that General Hayden, himself a lifelong military leader who is now
the head of the Central Intelligence Agency, expressed his disdain for such
prejudice,” continued Frank.
Specifically, General Hayden
told the Committee that “it would make no more sense to apply the Army Field
Manual to CIA – the Army Field Manual on interrogations, than it would be to
take the Army Field Manual on grooming and apply it to my agency, or the
Army Field Manuel on recruiting and apply it to my agency, or for that
matter, take the Army Field Manual on sexual orientation and apply it to
my agency. (emphasis added)
“As I noted, thanks to
President Clinton’s executive order of 1994, the ban is no longer policy,
but as we have seen in the Bush Administration, especially in the actions of
Scott Bloch, the Special Counsel at the U.S. Office of Special Counsel,
anti-gay prejudice has not entirely disappeared and this repudiation of it –
indeed this clear assertion that it would be damaging to the national
interest to exclude LGBT people from the CIA – is a welcome addition to an
ongoing debate,” Frank said.
General Hayden’s comments came in the
course of his testimony to the Senate Committee on Intelligence. Asked
whether the CIA should adopt the Army Manual regarding torture, General
Hayden disagreed, and to show how unwise he thought that would be, he used
what he obviously believed to be an example of the lack of logic to the
point.
Frank noted: “While I do not
agree with General Hayden in his insistence that the CIA be allowed to
continue to use torture as a weapon, I very much appreciate his use of the
prejudice against sexual minorities as an example of an incorrect policy.”

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