Lifestyle | gay marriage Pentagon Allows Gay Weddings on Military Bases And will allow military chaplains to perform them By Kevin Spak Posted Sep 30, 2011 2:38 PM CDT Copied Joseph Martinez (C) an active duty sailor in the Navy, prepares to march during the San Diego gay pride parade July 16, 2011 in San Diego, California. (Getty Images) The Defense Department today issued guidance to military chaplains saying that they are free to perform gay marriages on or off military bases in states where it’s legal. The memos are quick to add that these weddings can’t be official Defense Department events, and that “making DoD facilities available for private functions ... does not constitute an endorsement of the activities by DoD,” according to the Wall Street Journal. Ceremonies will be allowed in any state where the law does not explicitly forbid them. Chaplains, however, aren’t obligated to perform such ceremonies if they have religious objections. “Just because the Department of Defense says this can happen, the chaplains perform such rites in keeping with their ecclesiastical authorization. Period,” a spokesman for the Military Chaplains Association tells the Washington Post. Read These Next House overwhelmingly votes to release Epstein files. White House says 186K dead people are receiving SNAP benefits. Trump implies tariff checks could arrive just before midterms. A spate of coverage suggests Trump's hold on the GOP is weakening. Report an error