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Anthony Woods: Taking a Stand

by Elizabeth Gudrais

 

Stu Rosner

Anthony Woods

For a March 2009 update on Anthony Woods, see this post on our blog.

Keywords

ROTC

When Anthony C. Woods, M.P.P. ’08, delivered the graduate English address at Commencement last June (shown at right), he had just made a momentous decision: to publicly acknowledge his homosexuality and effectively end a military career that had spanned nine years and two tours in Iraq.

Woods did not mention this decision in his speech. Soon after, though, the West Point graduate and U.S. Army captain informed his commander that he was gay, initiating his dismissal under the “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. In early November, Woods learned he would be “eliminated” from the army on the grounds of “moral and professional dereliction” and required to repay $35,000—the amount of his scholarship to attend the Kennedy School.

A military career may seem a curious choice for a young man who is gay or even questioning his orientation. But for the son of a single mother, growing up in an Air Force town in northern California, acceptance to West Point was an honor—and an opportunity—beyond compare. Woods focused on the professional to the exclusion of the personal; with the country at war, that wasn’t hard. But two years at Harvard gave him space to think—and to face his dismal prospects for upward mobility in an organization with an explicit homosexuality ban and a strong culture of marriage and children. Even if he had stayed closeted, he says, “It wasn’t going to be possible for me to fit the mold, and I knew that because of that, there was going to be a glass ceiling.”

Even after the invasive court-martial process—the military conducts interviews with friends and family to verify homosexuality, presumably to prevent fraud, for instance by soldiers who wish to avoid an additional tour in Iraq—Woods is reluctant to malign the officers who carried out his investigation. He says they are simply implementing a policy. Change might come from Congress, but Woods believes the Supreme Court is a more likely venue: “I think it’s going to take a landmark court case, like Brown v. Board of Education.”

As recently as a year ago, Woods thought life after Harvard would include at least five more years of military service. He had been accepted to teach at West Point—“a huge, huge dream,” he says. Now, even as he waits to hear whether his discharge will be honorable or dishonorable, Woods has begun a new chapter: while working as staff secretary to New York governor David Paterson, he is applying to law school. He dreams of a role in changing the policy that cut his own dreams short. But his decision to come out already constitutes a significant first step. “If this policy’s ever going to go away,” he says, “they have to lose talented people. It’s not going to go away unless it hurts.”

More Articles by Elizabeth Gudrais

November-December 2009

Institutional, International

November-December 2009

Destination Nollywood

November-December 2009

A Better Bed-Net Strategy

November-December 2009

A Leap of Faith, and a Prayer Answered

November-December 2009

Finding Sunshine in the Slum

Issues > January-February 2009 > The Alumni

January-February 2009

Taking It to the Streets

January-February 2009

Educational Activist

January-February 2009

Natural Baker

January-February 2009

The SIGnboard

January-February 2009

Storytelling Scholar

January-February 2009

A Record-Breaker Passes

January-February 2009

Comings and Goings

January-February 2009

A Special Notice Regarding Commencement Exercises

  1. July 8, 2009

    Maybe I’m missing something: isn’t “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” a means to allow military personnel to keep their personal lives private in order to continue serving their country without upsetting “good order and discipline” by being openly homosexual? I am also a combat arms officer and have served with several Soldiers who (I’m fairly certain) were gay. But, what differed from them and Mr. Woods is that no one asked, and they didn’t tell. We were all Soldiers working toward the same mission and focused on the same goal. That was enough for everyone.

    One of my good friends at USMA was kicked out our freshman year because someone found out he was gay (details of the discovery are not important and so I will not relay them here). Let me emphasize that this friend of mine knew he was gay when he arrived on R-day, was committed to serving his country, and did not have a problem keeping his personal and his professional lives separate in order to do so. But, someone went looking (i.e. they ASKED) and my friend was forced out of the Army.

    I agree with CPT Hertling and CPT Ackerman: no one asked Mr. Woods if he was a homosexual so why did he tell? Kind of seems like he got himself discharged.

    JAG Paul: I don’t know you or your service experience, but I do not agree that DADT is incorrect for the ENTIRE military, just for most of it. Unfortunately, not all service members are as progressive and tolerant as you and me. And for the record, I’m pretty sure Mr. Woods violated #2. (Nice cut and past job with “He didn’t” though).

    ~Scott

  2. August 10, 2009

    Mark And Colonel “Rich,”

    You two are idiots. Gay soldier will not in any way undermine the moral of a unit. At least not any more than African-American soldiers and female soldiers would. Seriously, we’ve moved on.

    The notion that a soldier can handle the stress of war in battle zones like Normandy, Fallujah, or hot spots in the Tora Bora mountains, but cannot stand the dedicated (albeit gay) soldier standing at their side ready to defend them in battle is ludicrous! There is no evidence to justify what you said Mark. To the contrary, the defenders of this bigoted law used to hold up the examples of Britain, Israel, Canada, Australia and many other countries that prohobited gay soldiers from serving. And, guess what? All those countries now allow openly gay soldiers to serve. What’s more, our American military conducts joint military operations with these countries, and there’s NEVER an American soldier complaining about possibly having to serve with a gay soldier.

    And Colonel “Rich,” why would a gay man or woman want to serve in an organization that prohibits it? Because like African Americans and women, we don’t want to live in an equal world. Is it too much to ask to be able to serve our country and risk life and limb to do so? Seriously!

    ~Joel, Army CPT

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