It is all about the job, not the gender


By Donna McAleer






Best Defense giant slalom correspondent



Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, upon the Joint Chiefs of Staff's
unanimous recommendation, last week signed the repeal of the combat exclusion
policy of 1994, opening more than 200,000 military jobs to women. This was a military decision endorsed by
politicians about military readiness, strategic decision-making, and national
security.



More than a year ago, the Army chief of staff, General
Raymond Odierno, said
, "We
need their talent. This is about managing talent. We have incredibly talented
females who should be in those positions." This reflected an October 2010
decision by Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Gary Roughead and Secretary of
the Navy Ray Mabus to open two classes of nuclear submarines to women.



Ground combat is paramount in the Army. The Army selects the majority of
its senior leaders from ground combat branches. The 1994 combat exclusion
policy prohibited women from serving in such units. This meant its most
significant jobs, high command positions (division, corps, and chief of staff),
only went to men with combat arms unit experience. 



With Secretary Panetta's decision, the law has now caught up to reality.
The exclusion policy didn't keep women out of combat. The conflicts in Iraq and
Afghanistan demonstrated this self-evident truth: bullets, RPGs, and IEDs know
no gender. The policy did prevent
women from officially gaining battlefield experience required for promotion to
high command positions directly responsible for national security, e.g., combat
command.



In his letter of recommendation to Secretary Panetta, Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey said work remained regarding
proper performance standards for those new military roles. He also listed
"goals and milestones," with quarterly progress updates.



This is the key to successful integration -- setting physical
and mental standards based on job requirements, and physical and mental
capability, not gender. Most of the opposition to allowing women in combat arms
branches focus on doubts about women possessing the requisite strength and
stamina and/or whether the presence of women dilutes unit cohesion. These arguments
have been used previously -- against the integration of African-Americans,
against integrating women into the regular force in the 1970s, and most
recently against gays and lesbians. Each time the military has emerged
stronger.



No one suggests a lowering of standards. And the unit cohesion argument
is really about sex. Will women and men in mixed company have consensual sex?
The military has laws on the books that prohibit relationships that could cause
problems within the unit -- similar to both norms and laws in the civilian
world regulating the workplace environment. The primary reason has always been
that emotional entanglements between soldiers can lead to jealousy, result in
favoritism, and prevent soldiers from carrying out their duties impartially -- particularly
in a life or death situation. While in the civilian world, a workplace
relationship will only kill your career.



Recently, the military has strengthened its laws regarding
coercive sex
 recognizing a significant problem persists with rape and sexual assault.
However, correlating women in combat with levels of military rape and sexual
violence are inaccurate and inflammatory. Less than a quarter of reported rapes
occur in theaters of military operations and combat zones. Being in an all-male
unit is no protection from sexual predators. Half of sexual trauma survivors
being treated by the Veterans Administration are men.



General Dempsey indicated the persistence of sexual assault in the
military is linked partially to the military's separate classes of personnel -- male "warriors"
versus everyone else, including women. Lifting the combat exclusion policy and
treating the genders equally, he says, is more likely to lead people to treat
each other equally.



Today women make up nearly 15 percent of the 1.4 million strong
active-duty forces. The United States has been in combat in Afghanistan and
Iraq longer than in any previous war. More than 280,000 American women have
engaged in combat operations there. It is not unreasonable to think that some
have engaged in sexual relationships. Yet, there have been no waves of
"get me out of here" pregnancies, no orgies, and no combat failures.
In short, our men and women in uniform have behaved as military professionals.



Secretary Panetta's decision is a move in the right direction.
Servicewomen now have the opportunity to gain the same experience as their male
counterparts. It will take at least 20 years for servicewomen to gain the
appropriate escalating combat command experience. But the United States will be
well served by the increase in the number of sharp minds at the planning and
negotiating tables.



Service to country and in combat has never been about gender, it's about
the job.



Donna McAleer is a former congressional candidate
for Utah's 1st District, a West Point graduate, an Army veteran, a mother, and
the author of 
Porcelain on Steel: Women
of West Point's Long Gray Line 
(Fortis Publishing, 2010).

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 28, 2013 07:24
No comments have been added yet.


Thomas E. Ricks's Blog

Thomas E. Ricks
Thomas E. Ricks isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Thomas E. Ricks's blog with rss.