Statement on Iraq War Deaths From The Michael
D. Palm Center
AScribe Newswire
By The Michael D. Palm Center
April 4, 2008SANTA BARBARA, Calif., April 4 (AScribe
Newswire) -- After it was confirmed recently
that a gay soldier, Maj. Alan Rogers, died in
combat in the Iraq War on January 27, the Palm
Center has learned that an estimated sixty-four
gay and lesbian service members may have been
killed since the war began in 2003. The Pentagon
announced that the number of U.S. deaths from
the Iraq War passed 4000 last month, and that 98
of these were women. According to Gary Gates,
senior research fellow at the Williams Institute
at the UCLA School of Law, approximately 1.4
percent of active duty men and 9.3 percent of
active duty women are gay. If the deaths among
gays and lesbians are proportional to the deaths
from the Iraq War of the rest of the military
population, that would mean that fifty-five men
and nine women who died in uniform were gay.
The sexual orientation of service members is
a private matter. But the nation must recognize
that gays and lesbians are among those giving
their lives for their country, a fact that can
be obscured by the "don't ask, don't tell"
policy, which bars service members from being
truthful about who they are.
Confirmation of the number of gay deaths is
not available because of the policy's strictures
on speech about sexual orientation. But the
estimates offered by Gates, who is a demographer
and statistician who works with census and other
data to estimate figures of gays and lesbians in
the American population, are the most precise
available and are widely viewed as reliable
calculations.
The Palm Center, formerly the Center for the
Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military, is a
research institute at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. The Center uses
rigorous social science to inform public
discussions of controversial social issues,
enabling policy outcomes to be informed more by
evidence than by emotion. Its data-driven
approach is premised on the notion that the
public makes wise choices on social issues when
high-quality information is available. For more
information, visit http://www.palmcenter.org .
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CONTACT: Nathaniel Frank, Senior Research
Fellow, The Michael D. Palm Center, UC Santa
Barbara, 805-893-5664, frank@palmcenter.ucsb.edu
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