When I have the opportunity to speak with
someone as patriotic, clearheaded, and
intelligent as LT Chaurasiya, I feel as if I
have been brought into the light from a
place of dark ignorance. It is somewhat of
a mystery why it is that so many lesbian and
gay service members are linguistic
prodigies, but 1st Lt Chaurasiya stands out even
among her peers. She speaks 6 languages:
Hindi, Urdu, Turkish, German, Luganda
(Uganda), and Swahili, as well as English.
She was, in fact, being modest in listing
those, as she can communicate in several
more languages but didn’t want to claim that
she’s fluent or conversational in them.
Frankly, if I were a military leader who had
someone like that, I wouldn’t care if she
had one arm, two heads, and three legs.
But, that is exactly how she’s been treated,
quite specifically as if who she is was a
character flaw. They are specifically
troubled about her sexual orientation; but
also, she notes that women, and particularly
minority women, are discriminated against
and discharged in the military at an
alarmingly high percentage compared to their
small numerical presence in our armed
forces.
The story follows of how the Air Force
has entangled itself in bureaucratic
obfuscation by deciding to discharge her,
not discharge her, and again to discharge
her because she might be, might not be, and
in fact apparently is a lesbian. I’m just a
befuddled old former sergeant, but it seems
to me that it ought not take a genius
somewhere in the chain of command to realize
that the most efficient and intelligent use
of an asset like LT Chaurasiya would be to
transfer her to Pentagon duty to provide
insight to the Comprehensive Working Group
studying ‘how’ to implement the integration
of lesbian and gay service members. She is
a product of their education from college
ROTC forward to the present. She’s served
in the Air Force for seven years, now.
She’s a triple minority, Air Force educated,
highly intelligent, motivated officer. She
sounds useful to me, Sir.
Robin Chaurasiya is the child of
immigrant parents from India. The family,
and Robin’s becoming an Air Force officer,
is a classic story of the success of
American freedom and opportunity. Coming
from an impoverished lower caste in India,
her father studied by candlelight and
suffered to save every Rupee he could for
his education. Proving his ability and
potential, the young man and his wife came
to America, as legal immigrants, where he
became an engineer for Boing Corp. He has
repaid our nation over and over not only by
paying taxes, but by contributing to our
nation’s technological advancement, and by
raising his daughter to be so patriotic that
she has devoted her life from high school
onward to serving America as an officer in
the United States Air Force. How proud
could a father be! How proud could our
nation be?
Robin grew up in Seattle’s suburbs living
the American Dream that her parents had
worked so very hard to achieve. The family
was affluent enough to visit India more than
once; and on those visits Robin, at a young
age, began to realize the contrast between
her life in America, and what might have
been had her parents remained in India and
raised her there. Seeing that, like many
first generation American children of
immigrants and refugees (myself included)
she became motivated to “give back” to
America for the opportunity of freedom
received. With her father’s work in
aerospace, and the Air Force’s inspiring
rhetoric and advertising, serving in the Air
Force became Robin’s teenage life goal. She
did so well in high school that she
graduated a year early and earned an Air
Force ROTC scholarship.
Particularly in the atmosphere of life in
the Pacific North West, she had never known
prejudice, not as a woman of Indian decent,
nor as a lesbian. She knew nothing about
the military’s institutionalized prejudice
of exclusion. It was only upon beginning
military training that she was required to
sign paperwork avowing that she would not
engage in any homosexual activity. And like
so many of us who had reached this point
before her, her patriotic determination to
serve, to be a part of something greater
than herself, to pay back America for her
family’s freedom, caused her to sign the
paper without a word of protest nor a moment
of hesitation. Her youthful enthusiasm and
determination caused her to think, “who I am
has nothing to do with this; I can do this,
I want to do this; I’ll give up that small
part of my own freedom to embark on this
great adventure of service.” Ahh youth!
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Well, she’d wanted to be a fighter pilot,
after all! It’s every girl’s dream, isn’t
it? She was too small, as it turned out; so
her specialty is communication. Imagine
those Air Force advertisements: ‘a little
girl on the Great Plains stares intently
without fear at a brewing tornado; in the
next scene she’s a young adult in uniform
immersed in the hubbub of a high tech Air
Force meteorological command center, in
space.’ The voice over intones: “WE’VE BEEN
WAITING FOR YOU!” Think about the American
promise that kind of hyperbole intentionally
implies to a bright minority female high
school student. It says, “We want smart
women to find their full potential in the
Air Force.” It says, “There’s no
discrimination here; in fact, we’ve been
waiting for you!” |
The promise of a
career in the Air Force was perfect for
young Robin Chaurasiya. And she was
just what they were looking for to fulfill a
future of American military progress.
If only the Air Force had had the
determination she brought to her training to
make that a reality. What she
encountered were Neanderthal-minded males
who made crude remarks about women and
minorities. Like most determined young
people who volunteer to join our armed
forces, she dealt with that sort of thing by
simply toughing it out; even as the glowing
ideal got a bit tarnished by reality.
Surely there must be some Air Force rule
about kicking out those who sully the ideal
of ‘equality and full potential’ with
disrespect, harassment and inflicting sexual
trauma?
She has led her communications section
with smooth efficiency. No one there cares
that she’s a five foot tall brown-skinned
female non-Christian vegetarian who might be
lesbian. They don’t care about any of that
because they are all young Americans who
were reared and believe in the American
ideal of equality, acceptance, affirmation,
and diversity. She knows what she’s doing;
that’s all they care about. But, to her
superiors, all of that does matter, and her
intelligence and leadership doesn’t; they
want her out.
The DADT policy and the overwhelming
discrimination are a betrayal of her
patriotism.
She had served on active duty in Turkey
and elsewhere. Due to her father having
been gravely ill, she had transferred to the
Air Force Reserve. Later she began
international studies working towards a
master’s degree. At home and abroad in the
European Union at university, she matured
and began to live freely and openly as a
matter of course.
Then, after completing her postgraduate
degree, she was recalled to active duty in
2009. She was an even more valuable asset
at that point, of course. Shortly
thereafter, some private personal
correspondence of hers, strongly suggesting
that she was a lesbian, was forwarded to her
commander. Her commander told her that he
was going to toss it out because he did not
believe it; but cautioned her to make sure
no one could make such claims about her
character. How profoundly insulting! Since
college ROTC, the Air Force had taught
her about integrity and self respect. She
wrote to her commander telling him that she
would not allow her ‘character’ assaulted as
a ‘flaw.’ That led to an investigation that
took nearly half a year. She was then
informed that she would not be discharged
because she was making it all up in order to
get out of serving. How profoundly
insulting!
It is also profound that the Air Force
could be so oblivious to reenacting the old
“Catch 22” irony. The WWII original Catch
22 was that if you said you were eager to go
into battle and kill the enemy, you were
assumed to be crazy and removed from combat
duty. On the other hand if you said you
were too terrified to go into combat, you
had to go. So, now, if you are a lesbian
and want to serve, you can’t; but if you are
a lesbian and don’t want to serve, you must.
Right?
Assuming that she was about to be
discharged, she set her sights on the future
and married her partner. When told she
would not be discharged, she presented her
commander with her marriage certificate – as
was her duty to do even had she married a
male. One might perhaps imagine the scene
of her commander’s pursed lips. Then, after
two more months, this woman, who had devoted
every effort of her young life to serving in
the Air Force, was told that she would once
again not be discharged because she had
gotten married to a woman and presented her
marriage certificate in order to get out of
serving. WHAT? All she had ever wanted to
do with her life was serve in the Air Force!
At this point, the Air Force’s betrayal
of her patriotism was completely
overwhelming. But wait, there’s more. The
story was told in major American
newspapers. She continued to serve in her
capacity of leading a communications unit.
Everyone in her unit was ‘instructed’ to
treat her with complete respect, as if they
had not already been doing that from the day
she took command simply because none of
those young American service members had
ever had any reason to not respect her.
They were told that harassment would not be
tolerated, not that any had ever thought of
doing so. On the contrary, many of her
subordinates expressed their complete
support to her. Belatedly, all were also
instructed not to speak to the media.
Right. But, because of the media stories,
perhaps, she has now again been recommended
for discharge. She has lead her unit
without disruption to unit morale or
performance. At this point, she insists on
integrity and honesty and is at long last
unwilling to serve in any way other than
being fully respected for who she is.
She had worked so very hard to qualify to
achieve her dream of service in the US Air
Force, to serve her country, to be the best
American that she could be. And now the Air
Force tells her that it does not value her
service. I inquired of her about whether or
not she has become disenchanted. True to
her American character, she simply has
become determined to advocate for the right
of all Americans to choose to volunteer to
serve without discrimination.