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1 IN 7 U.S.
Military Personnel in Iraq is Female
By Shauna Curphey - Wenews Correspondent
LOMPOC Calif. (WOMENSENEWS)--At Vandenberg Air Force Base here,
Lucita Warglo and Kathryn Brady, both sergeants, are on stand by
to deploy to the Gulf region. While there, Warglo will serve as
an electrician, keeping runway lights and camps powered. Brady will
handle personnel issues. Neither woman knows where she will be stationed
or how long she will be there. But both know they're ready for the
assignment and the danger it may entail.
"We're
just like the guys. We're all going to be dodging bullets,"
says Warglo, pointing out that runways are major military targets.
"You don't
have to be on the front line to be somewhere your life is in danger,"
adds Brady.
Now that the
United States has gone to war with Iraq, it will likely to be the
largest deployment of women to a combat theater to date--and the
first major test of women's expanded combat roles since Desert Storm.
As women head
to the Gulf again, they make up a larger percent of the Armed Forces
than they did during Desert Storm. The percent of women in the active
duty population has continuously increased over the past two decades.
Women now make up approximately 15 percent of active military personnel.
Warglo and Brady's
upcoming tour in the Gulf also marks the culmination of a long history
of women serving during war.
Winning the
Right to Serve
Women currently
make up 6 percent of military veterans in the United States. Although
not officially recognized as members of the Armed Forces until 1901,
women have served in every major war in U.S. history. During the
Civil War, women joined both sides as spies and nurses, and one,
Dr. Mary Walker, received the Congressional Medal of Honor for her
service as a field surgeon and the hardships she endured as a prisoner
of war. She was the first, and only, woman to receive this honor.
Women became
an official part of the U.S. Armed Forces when the Army established
the Nurse Corps in 1901. Seven years later, the Navy created its
own Nurse Corps. World War I marked the first time women who weren't
nurses could join the military. Over 30,000 women enlisted during
the war, including 10,000 who served overseas. When the war ended,
they were discharged from duty.
Under the slogan
"free the men to fight," servicewomen's roles expanded
during World War II. Women served as nurses, parachute riggers,
mechanics, map-makers, translators, intelligence operatives and
welders, among other assignments. During the fall of the Philippines,
81 women were captured by the Japanese and spent 37 months in prisoner
of war camps. Over 400 women were killed in the war, and approximately
400,000 women served at home and overseas.
Gender Bar
Lifted After Two World Wars
In 1948, Congress
passed legislation that permitted women to serve during peacetime
as members of the regular forces--but a cap was placed on enlistment:
Women could not make up more than 2 percent of Armed Forces personnel.
The law also restricted women from combat units and from officer
ranks above colonel or captain.
Women continued
to enlist in spite of the restrictions. During the Korean War, over
600 women served near the front and more than 120,000 served stateside.
"Women
have always been an all-volunteer force. She's there because she
wanted to serve her country . . . and she ought to be proud of that,"
says retired Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Carol Mutter.
In 1967, Congress
removed the cap on the percentage of women in the Armed Forces and
dropped the legal ceiling on promotions that kept them out of the
highest officer ranks. Mutter joined the Marines as an officer that
same year and went on to become the first female three-star general
in the Marine Corps. She now chairs the Defense Advisory Committee
on Women in the Armed Services.
Approximately
7,500 American military women, mostly nurses, served in Southeast
Asia during the Vietnam War. Seven were killed in the line of duty.
"We flew
our asses off," says a 70-year-old Vietnam veteran. The retired
Air Force colonel does not wish to be named.
She recalls
that she served two years in Vietnam as a nurse on aircraft evacuating
wounded troops from the battle fields. Over a three-day period during
the Tet Offensive, her crew evacuated 1,500 wounded soldiers from
bases in Vietnam to make room for the casualties pouring in.
"You didn't
have time to cry. You didn't have time to be afraid," she says.
"I don't regret one day of it," she adds, "I never
questioned why I was a nurse again. I knew why I was a nurse and
I was a damn good one."
Storming
the Brass Ceiling in the Gulf Region
Desert Storm
marked the largest deployment of women to a combat theater in U.S.
history. More than 40,000 women served in the Gulf, flying helicopters
on reconnaissance and search and rescue missions, driving convoys,
staffing patriot missile placements, piloting planes and guarding
POWs, among other duties. Women comprised 7 percent of the deployed
force. Thirteen women were killed in the line of duty during Desert
Storm and two were taken as prisoners of war.
Army surgeon
Maj. Rhonda Cornum was taken captive after the Black Hawk helicopter
carrying her and seven other crew members was shot down by Iraqi
forces. Suffering from a bullet wound in her shoulder and with both
arms broken, Cornum spent eight days in captivity and was sexually
assaulted by an Iraqi guard. In 1992, Cornum's testimony before
a presidential commission on women in the military helped open up
further roles for women.
By the war's
end, servicewomen had helped to liberate more than Kuwait. Their
performance opened up new roles for women serving in combat. Shortly
after the war, Congress repealed the restriction on women flying
in combat roles. In 1993, lawmakers ended the ban on women serving
on combat ships.
"That change
in the law was a recognition that the barriers facing women were
artificial ones," says U.S. Rep. Heather Wilson, a retired
Air Force officer and the only woman veteran in Congress.
As Women
Return to the Gulf, Restrictions Remain
Adds defense
advisory committee chair Mutter: "I think this war will find
women in roles they weren't in, in Desert Storm. We will prove one
way or another whether that works, and I have no doubt it will."
Despite their
increased roles and representation in the ranks, women are not permitted
to serve in direct ground combat, which excludes them from infantry,
armored and special forces units. Submarine warfare also remains
closed to women.
"I don't
see major changes as we saw in the Gulf War coming out of this war,
but it's hard to predict that kind of thing," says Mutter,
who stressed she was expressing her personal opinion, and not the
policy of the defense advisory committee.
Ground combat
remains a controversial issue. The advisory committee came under
fire from conservatives because it recommended that women be assigned
to submarines, to the crews of vehicles that launch rockets from
the rear of combat areas, and to helicopter crews of special operations
units. The Defense Department disbanded the committee, wrote a new
charter, and recently appointed new members, Mutter among them.
"Women
in combat is not about equity or equal opportunity," says House
member Wilson. "The point is National Security . . . Some of
the best and most capable are women."
Though Wilson
played a part in the legislation that opened air combat to women,
she has reservations about allowing women in combat on the ground.
"Far fewer
women could meet the stringent physical requirements of ground combat,"
she says.
As they head
to the Gulf, Brady and Warglo don't think they have anything to
prove as women soldiers.
"If you're
working with someone . . . you don't think about how they are different
from you," says Brady.
"We're
pretty much equal," says Warglo "The people I serve with,
we're all a team."
Those sentiments
are reflected in a quote from Desert Storm survivor Maj. Cornum,
etched on a glass panel on the upper terrace of the Women in Military
Service for America Memorial in Washington, D.C.:
"The qualities
that are most important in all military jobs--things like integrity,
moral courage, and determination--have nothing to do with gender."
Shauna Curphey
is a freelance writer living in Long Beach, Calif.
For more
information:
Women's Education
and Research Institute-- - "Women in the Military": -
http://www.wrei.org/projects/wiu/wim/index.htm
Military Women
Veterans: - http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/index.html
The Department
of Defense Celebrates Women's History Month: - http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/womenshistory2001/
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Copyright 2003 Women's Enews. www.womensenews.org
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