A gay sailor on a Navy nuclear submarine was hazed for months about
his sexuality, including being called "Brokeback" in reference to the
movie about homosexual cowboys, according to a news report.
The
sailor endured the hazing, believing it would get better over time. But
it eventually led him to contemplate suicide and he feared he could snap
and hurt someone else or himself, he wrote in a note, The Associated Press reported, citing an investigative report it had obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.
The
hazing occurred in 2011 aboard the Kings Bay, Ga.-based USS Florida.
The vessel's top enlisted officer, Master Chief Machinist's Mate Charles
Berry, was fired over the case due to dereliction of duty, the Navy
said on March 30. In his role as chief of the boat, Berry had to consult
the commanding officer of issues surrounding enlisted sailors.
The sailor who was targeted for abuse was well-liked, and his fellow
sailors did not realize the toll that the remarks -- including being
called a derogatory name for someone who is gay -- were having on him,
AP reported.
While docked at the Diego Garcia port in the Indian
Ocean, another man attempted to rape him and threatened him with a
knife, the report said.
Several junior officers involved in the
hazing were subject to disciplinary action, such as loss of pay and
rank. There was a culture of hazing and sexual harassment on the vessel
and not enough knowledge about Navy policies to prevent the abuse, the
Navy report said.
"The Navy's standards for personal behavior are
very high and it demands that sailors are treated with the dignity and
respect they deserve," the Navy said in a March 30 statement. "When
individuals fall short of this standard of professionalism and personal
behavior, the Navy will take swift and decisive action to stop
undesirable behavior, protect victims and hold accountable those who do
not meet its standards."
Hank Nuwer,
who has done decades of research on hazing in schools and the military,
said it was "a significant and positive response by the Navy in regard
to requiring a chain of command to take responsibility in the event of a
substantial hazing allegation."
However, he said, the Navy might
consider moving up its timetable when an allegation of hazing is
reported aboard such a vessel since victims were stuck in the close
quarters with nowhere to go nor hide.
" ... getting a culture of
change with regard to Navy hazing is going to take many years, if at
all," he wrote in an email to msnbc.com. "Such 'traditions' as having
Navy people crossing the equator or reaching a certain petty officer
rank were winked on by Navy brass so long that completely eradicating
hazing stands about as much a small chance as there is eradicating
hazing in college fraternity life.
When I first heard about this story, it was reported that a gay sailor had tried to rape another sailor aboard the sub and was *proof* that homosexuals shouldn't be allowed to serve in the military, that *we* were warned this kind of thing would happen.
It's nice too know it was the other way around, tho I doubt it's now as news worthy as it was originally presented.
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