Voice
of America
February
9, 2012
The
Pentagon is unveiling plans to allow women to serve in military jobs
closer to the front lines.
The new rules would ease restrictions on women in combat, reflecting the realities of the past decade of war. Officials say the changes would formally open about 14,000 jobs to women. Female service members would be able to assume positions, such as medic and intelligence officer, in battalions, which are closer to the fighting and were previously considered too dangerous for women.
The changes mainly affect the Army and Marine Corps. Women would still be prohibited from serving in infantry, armor and special operations units.
Chris
Hanson, professor of journalism at the University of Maryland, says
the media coverage of the women in service is usually unfair.
“Women in the military are shown to be either too vulnerable and
too weak or somehow too strange and aberrant,” says Hanson. But he
says too much focus on sex scandals, rape and other difficulties
gives the impression that women hinder rather then contribute to the
success of the armed forces. Hanson says such reports feed the
stereotypes which slow the progress of service women.
Yet
American military women have come a long way since World War Two when
150-thousand joined the Women’s Army Corps. These were the first to
serve in the US Army in posts other than nurses. Today women
make up fifteen percent of the armed forces, says Hanson, and can
serve in most areas. “When the draft ended in the early 1970’s,
the military needed person power. And they went out and started
to recruit women and they opened up a lot of jobs to women that
earlier had been closed to them in the military. So women ended
up by now doing all kinds of specializations, many of them combat
related, although they are still kept out of infantry, tanks,
artillery.”
Until
the Iraq War, scant public attention was paid to this progress.
But the close-up television coverage of Iraq battlefields has drawn
attention to the number of women soldiers. Roughly one in seven
Americans serving in Iraq is female. Close to thirty have died, most
in combat.
Elaine
Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, an
independent public policy organization specializing in military
issues says “We
have never seen so many female soldiers. We know that many of
them are married. They are mothers. Some of them are single mothers –
great numbers of them. And we are sending them to fight our wars in a
way that is unprecedented, not just in American history, but in
history around the world.” Donnelly says many Americans
are understandably upset to see women so close to enemy lines. She
notes that a specially appointed presidential commission examined the
issue of women serving in close combat in 1992 and found that
presence may indeed hinder rather than improve troops’ readiness.
“Women
are not as tall, as strong. They don’t have as much upper
body strength as men do. So to put the load of body armor, for
instance, on a female soldier, is a much greater load on her
proportionately than it is on men. In every test that’s ever been
done in Britain as well as the United states and in Israel it has
been found that the physical differences really do put women at a
disadvantage, and it is unwise to have them therefore in land combat
units.” Donnelly, who was a member of the presidential commission,
says the case for women in combat is based on the concept of equal
opportunity, which is an important American value, but not applicable
to the armed forces.
“I
can summarize a huge body of information by saying this simply:
female soldiers do not have an equal opportunity to survive or to
help fellow soldiers survive in a combat environment.” Still,
some countries, including the Netherlands, Canada and Denmark have
lifted all restrictions on women serving in the military.
Hanson says a similar trend will continue in the US armed forces.
“I think that the controversies now are what other types of jobs
they’ll be allowed to have. Will women be allowed to be in the
artillery, which requires less physical strength than being in the
infantry? Will they be allowed to be in tanks, which in theory
could be operated by someone with less physical strength just as an
airplane can? I think special forces in the infantry are going be the
toughest nuts to crack and they might never be cracked."
But
as Donnelly points out, countries that have removed all restrictions
on women in service have not engaged in combat substantially since
World War Two. The United States has. “We are the
nation that has taken on the bad guys and we do so in the best way
that we can. We provide, of course, career opportunities, but that's
not our primary objective. The military is there to defend the
country. Careers are important, but when there is a conflict
with the needs of the military, then military necessity should come
first.”
When
national security is at stake, most Americans would agree that the
need to maintain a strong military must take precedence over concerns
about equal opportunity. Some believe that one does not exclude
the other, citing historic examples from Joan of Arc to modern
day women veterans.