Vanasco: Another DADT casualty
You probably saw him on Rachel Maddow last night.
Lieutenant Colonel Victor J. Fehrenbach, an Air Force hero, a decorated officer, is being booted – because yes, he’s gay.
SLDN executive director Aubrey Sarvis has a great post on the silliness of letting go great servicemembers during wartime:
Lieutenant Colonel Victor J. Fehrenbach, a fighter weapons systems officer, has been flying the F-15E Strike Eagle since 1998. He has flown numerous missions against Taliban and al-Qaida targets, including the longest combat mission in his squadron’s history. On that infamous September 11, 2001, Lt. Col. Fehrenbach was handpicked to fly sorties above the nation’s capital. Later he flew combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. He has received at least 30 awards and decorations including nine air medals, one of them for heroism, as well as campaign medals for Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq. He is now a flight instructor in Idaho, where he has passed on his skills to more than 300 future Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force weapons systems officers.
Since 1987, when Fehrenbach entered Notre Dame on a full Air Force ROTC scholarship, the government has invested twenty-five million dollars in training and equipping him to serve his country, which he has done with what anyone would agree was great distinction. He comes from a military family. His father was a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, his mother an Air Force nurse and captain. Lt. Col. Fehrenbach has honored that tradition.
And the Air Force is about to discharge this guy, a virtual poster boy for Air Force recruiting, because he is gay? Someone has to be kidding. This is sheer madness.
But then he ends up saying, poor Obama, being sidelined on this issue by the charismatic folks at the DOD.
I like the blunt statement on Pam’s House Blend instead:
Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon press secretary, stated today that the Pentagon has no plans to, and has not been asked to plan for, the repeal of the ban on gays and lesbians serving in our nation’s armed forces. We now have it from the White House per statements from the President himself, from his press secretary, and from the White House website, we have it from Congress, and now we have it from Obama’s own Defense Department that there are no plans to repeal DADT
Obamabots can try as hard as they like to paint this as careful politicking, and say that we have to give the Administration time. 2LT Sandy Tsao doesn’t have time. LT Dan Choi doesn’t have time. Lt.Col. Victor Fehrenbach doesn’t have time. This is insanity. Long past excuses of craven cowardice, this is nothing short of a freshly renewed attack on patriotic American troops, driven by hate and bigotry.
If Republicans and Conservadems want to complain about wasteful spending, I’ll point them to the fact that they’re throwing away $25 million in the form of an accomplished pilot strictly because bigots don’t like how he fucks in the privacy of his own home.
Obama might want a legislative solution here instead of an executive order, and that’s fine. But the military ban is relevant right now. RIGHT NOW. We’re in a war. We need all the experienced servicemembers we can get. If he doesn’t want to end DADT right away, for whatever misguided political reason, then he should put it on temporary hold. Stop-Loss, if you will.
Obama should just say: Hey, we’re losing a lot of Americans in Afganistan and Iraq. There’s no need to disrupt units by sending good soldiers home for reasons that have nothing to do with their service. Let’s stop the bleeding until we have time to figure this out. Let’s let gay soldiers stay in, until this Administration has had the chance to review the policy.
If Obama isn’t going to keep his campaign promise, he should at least compromise, and put the discharges on hold.




I am not currently in the military, I never have been, and, for a number of various reasons, I never will be. I hold a great deal of contempt for those entities that allowed the US to enter into the illegal war in Iraq. That having been said, I still hold a great deal of respect for those uniformed soldiers and officers who put their lives on the line to defend truth, justice, and the American way. I watched the interview with Lt. Fehrenbach and found myself crying in shame for my government and my countrymen.
How many gay men and women have died for the missions of this country and have received accolades simply because it was not publicly known that they were gay? Would the military retroactively repeal those accolades if the truth were to be known about those people? Don’t Ask Don’t Tell is not just a slight against those living service members, it is a slight against all those that have paid the ultimate sacrifice for their nation and their countrymen.
DADT removes the human element from the armed forces. And the most important thing for us ALL to remember is that the people in uniform who defend this or any nation are actually people, they are thinking individuals with needs and desires comparable to the needs and desires of all citizens of every nation.
I believe iI do not (as a rule) agree with military action, but condemning the action is a separate notion from the troops themselves. Separating the war from the warriors is not always an easy feat, especially in a conflict as mired in controversy as this one is. As these wars are.
In the immortal words of the band Crass: Fight war, not wars. Destroy power, not people.
Great article.