Editorial: We need to protect women in military
now
We've all heard about sexual discrimination, harassment and, worse,
rape, in the military, including at our nation's service schools for the
Air Force, Navy and Army.
But Michael Gisick's report Thursday in The Tribune ("Female veterans
slam VA") was a disturbing and distressing eye-opener.
Things need to change for female soldiers, sailors and aviators, and
they need to change fast.
They need to change, from the lowest ranks all the way to the top jobs
at the Pentagon and from the battlefields to the Veterans Administration
hospitals - such as the one in Albuquerque, which two years ago closed a
clinic dedicated to women's health problems.
As more and more women choose military service, including careers in the
military, we need to change direction.
In the context of the overwhelmingly male environment that the American
military has been been for centuries, Gisick's story is compelling
evidence that the emergence of women in the U.S. military has been
severely compromised - even handicapped - by the unfortunate reality
that men dominate and command it. For too many American females in the
military, this can be an intimidating and damaging reality.
Until that changes - until there are enough women throughout the command
structure to make such abuse more dangerous for men - we must demand a
military policy and command that fully respects its women volunteers,
protects them from sexual abuse by their comrades and serves their
gender needs in the services and as veterans.
As Gisick reported, women now make up one of seven Americans serving in
Iraq. Some 450 women have been wounded while serving there, and 71 have
been killed. Women are coming home with battle-related post traumatic
stress syndrome.
They also face PTSD from sexual harassment and rape by members of their
own units. According to a Department of Defense report issued last
month, the problem has worsened dramatically in just the last year when
there were 3,000 sexual assaults reported in the military, a 25 percent
increase over 2005.
That may explain, says Air Force veteran Christin McKinley of
Albuquerque, why women have a higher rate of PTSD than men. It's like
facing, in too many cases, a constant barrage of psychological friendly
fire that is far from accidental and is difficult to evade.
While the Pentagon does have programs addressing rape, the widespread
practice means the military isn't doing enough to prevent it, to expose
it, to punish it or to treat those who are victimized by it. The
military can't wait on getting more women into top military ranks,
though that ultimately will help. The male-dominated command must come
to the defense of its women volunteers now.
Until Americans elect a women to serve in the Oval Office and as
commander-in-chief, the job of addressing rape will fall on women in
Congress - including New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi and Rep. Heather Wilson of Albuquerque, herself an Air Force
veteran.
They can help lead the way to a military that need not be gender blind
but that will fully respect the women who have enlisted and placed their
faith in it.
Before they were soldiers, sailors or aviators, they were America's
daughters, sisters and mothers.
---------------
Larry Scott --
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