Women in combat: Pentagon opens door to front lines
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| Washington
The Pentagon Thursday cracked open the door for women to serve in combat, though聽they will still not be permitted to fight in battle 鈥 at least officially.
Many of the jobs that the Pentagon plans to make available to women 鈥 including the chance to serve as medics and radio operators in certain battalions 鈥 will likely put them on the front lines.聽
Senior US military officials acknowledge, however, that in the wars America has fought in Iraq and Afghanistan 鈥 rife with irregular battles 鈥 women have actually found themselves in combat for quite some time.
The new regulations 鈥 set to go into effect this summer 鈥 simply acknowledge that fact, they add.
鈥淚 have felt for the longest period of time that on a nonlinear battlefield there are no safe jobs,鈥 General Peter Chiarelli, who recently retired as the nation鈥檚 second highest-ranking Army general, told the Washington Post this year. 鈥淭here is a mistaken belief that somehow that through prohibiting women in combat jobs we can protect them.
More than 255,000 women have served in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and 145 have lost their lives to gunfire and roadside bombs.
Many women say they don鈥檛 want to be protected at all, but rather to simply be held to the same standards as their male counterparts. Women will continue to be barred from serving as infantry soldiers or in special operations forces.
鈥淭o continue such a ban [on women in combat] is to ignore the talents and leadership that women bring to the military, and it further penalizes service women by denying them the opportunity for future promotions and assignments that are primarily given to personnel from combat arms specialties,鈥 Anu Bhagwati, a former Marine Corps captain, said in a statement.
The Pentagon鈥檚 new regulations, scheduled to be announced in a聽congressionally-mandated report out Thursday,聽are 鈥渆xtremely disappointing鈥 because they continue to perpetuate a 鈥渂rass ceiling,鈥 Ms. Bhagwati, who now serves as the executive director of the Service Women鈥檚 Action Network advocacy group, added.
It was in 2008 that General Ann Dunwoody rose to the rank of four-star 鈥 the first woman in the US military to do so. She now serves as the head of Army Materiel Command, which is responsible for developing and maintaining weapons systems and other military supplies.
This month, the Air Force tapped Lt. Gen. Janet Wolfenbarger to become that service鈥檚 first four-star general 鈥 and the second-ever female four-star in the US military. She is slated to lead Air Force Material Command.
It has long been difficult for women to rise to the top ranks of the military without combat experience. 鈥淭wo top generals in 200 years isn鈥檛 exactly a stellar track record for upward mobility,鈥 Bhagwati notes.聽
That said, the new regulations 鈥 which may be reviewed by Congress 鈥 are a 鈥渉uge step鈥 forward for women in the military, Bhagwati acknowledges.聽
鈥淣ow, talented women will be serving alongside their male peers in infantry and tank battalions, for example, in skills that are critical to the unit鈥檚 operational success,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his policy will also present some relief to war-weary battalions by providing an influx of fresh personnel that will help alleviate the burdens that frequent deployments present to troops.鈥