Friday, April 22, 2011

newsflash 3

Jason Kleinman

Professor Simonson

Introduction to Women’s Studies

April 22, 2011

Women in the Military

For a long time, the military was an institution made up almost entirely of male soldiers. As such, men in the military could exhibit their naturally aggressive, sometimes violent behavior amongst themselves. Recently, however, women have changed the face of the military. About eleven percent of the United States forces serving in Iraq and Afghanistan are women. Women’s induction into the military has been quite successful and effective, but has also come with some disturbing and unacceptable problems. The aggressive behavior by some male soldiers has manifested itself in many sexual assaults against their female counterparts. Since women in the military are generally treated as second-class citizens, rape allegations get swept under the rug and military women live in constant fear of sexual assault. War is hard enough without having to fear those who are supposed to be fighting by your side. All of the progress that women have made in society over the last century, including the right to be in the military, is ignored.

Wars are extremely difficult and trying to those who fight in them. In addition to combat, soldiers have to deal with tough situations such as seeing dead bodies, handling remains, and losing close friends who have been killed in the line of duty. On top of all of this, women must cope with the arduous task of being a woman in the armed forces. One of the major issues that military women encounter is experiencing sexual trauma. This includes harassment, assault, rape, and other violent acts. While civilian women must deal with these issues as well, women in the military experience them much more frequently. National surveys suggest that thirteen to thirty percent of women veterans have experienced rape during their time in the force. It’s bad enough that rapes are committed, but the most absurd aspect of this widespread sexual assault issue in the military is that male soldiers are getting away with it.

In the military, males are considered the alpha and women are seen as second-class citizens. Therefore, when it comes to rape charges against male soldiers, “victims are blamed. Assailants are promoted. Unit commanders - whose promotions are dependent on the conduct and performance of the soldiers they supervise - have an incentive to see that allegations are few and convictions are fewer. As a result, the overwhelming majority of cases get swept under the rug” (Speier). This outrageous reality in the military has made it nearly impossible for women to feel safe in their barracks. In 2009 Technical Sgt. Mary Gallagher was allegedly sexually assaulted by one of her fellow sergeants. He forcefully pulled down her pants and massaged her private region while rubbing his penis against her vagina. When she reported the assault, command simply reassigned the perpetrator and lectured Sergeant Gallagher about how 96 percent of rape occurs when drinking is involved. Drinking, however, was not involved in this case. This is just one example of countless reported assaults that go unpunished every year in the military. While these ignored allegations are egregious, this problem has another negative effect on women in the military, the fear of coming forward and being further ostracized.

Steven Lee Myers, in his article “A Peril in War Zones: Sexual Abuse by Fellow G.I.’s” recounts the story of Captain Margaret H. White. She was sexually assaulted and then stalked by a fellow G.I. This stalking went on for months to the point where she, “felt safer outside the wire”. Nevertheless, she was reluctant to come forward. She is not alone in this fear as the Pentagon estimates that as few as ten percent of sexual assaults in the military are reported. This fear of coming forward is not unjustified. There is such a poor percentage of male soldiers who are successfully prosecuted for their acts of sexual assault that women have the right to be nervous about reporting their incidents. Another reason that women may not come forward is that they do not want to feel as though they are disrupting the larger mission at hand. Finally, women do not want to further alienate themselves within a profession that is already so heavily dominated and controlled by men.

The military has recognized that sexual assault is an issue that has gotten out of hand. The military says they have radically changed the way that sexual assault is handled. Apparently, access to treatment has increased and the rules on prosecution have tightened. While this remains to be seen, it does not appear to matter as women refuse to come forward about their cases of sexual assault. How can the military be the well-oiled machine that people expect, when eleven percent of its members live in constant fear of sexual assault?

It is hard from an outsider’s perspective to pinpoint a resolution to this widespread problem. However, it seems that, like many other women’s issues that have been exposed and improved in the past, women need to band together and publicize this matter and make it a ‘women’s issue’ as opposed to countless isolated incidents.

http://www.samhsa.gov/samhsanewsletter/volume_16_number_6/womeninmilitary.aspx

http://www.samhsa.gov/samhsanewsletter/volume_16_number_6/womeninmilitary.aspx

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/28/us/28women.html?ref=womenatarms

2 comments:

  1. I think everything you are saying here is extremely sad but also extremely true. I'm especially interested by what you bring up in your very last paragraph. I can't think of a solution to violence against women in the military...because the military and members of armed forced are supposed to be the people who protect, not the people who sexually assault. You noted that in order to solve this issue, women need to come together and raise awareness. I think that men need to be part of this movement, too. I think it would be very effective in men in the military started a campaign to end violence against women. If male perpetrators see other men stepping up and fighting to stop this violence in the military, then maybe the men who are committing these actions will realize how unacceptable they are.

    I almost wrote my Newflash on this article (below), which is about two NYPD police officers who allegedly raped a woman in her apartment, after they were called to the scene by a cab driver who thought the woman was life-threateningly drunk. This is just another example of how people who are supposed to protect, sometimes hurt.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/05/nyregion/05rape.html

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  2. I completely agree with you Jason. These women must actively resist sexual harassment in a collective manner to create a change in military dynamics. I find it disgusting that eleven percent of females in the military live in a constant fear of sexual assault. I couldn’t imagine that the military responded to Sergeant Gallagher’s reported sexual assault in the manner that they did. This make me question if I would ever allow my future daughters or granddaughters to enlist. Hopefully, in the years to come, both males and female will be perceived and treated as equals.

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