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  • 10
    Apr
    2013
    11:24am, EDT

    Army employs video game to help curb sex assaults; critics call it 'affront'

    Courtesy WILL Interactive

    A screen grab from "Team-Bound," the interactive video game used by the Army to educate soldiers about sexual assault.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    The Army is using an interactive video game to train soldiers how to prevent sexual assaults in the ranks, and the technology has proven so popular, the branch just ordered a sequel, according to a spokesman for the company behind the video.

    But advocates for military-rape survivors vilify the video — and the philosophy behind it — as “a waste of taxpayer dollars,” an “affront to victims of sexual assault” and a tool “of limited value.”

    Titled “Team-Bound,” the program streams laptop-generated scenarios, allowing users to assume the roles of a male or female specialist who witness on-base sexual harassments and eventually — at a bar favored by soldiers — the warning signs of an alcohol-induced date rape. Players must choose multiple responses throughout the episodes then watch the consequences of either intervening or ignoring the observed behaviors.


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    If the video’s users pick passive reactions, an intoxicated female private is eventually raped in an Army barracks after leaving the bar with an aggressive, male private. In the video, the victim is shown ultimately reporting the attack then opting to leave the service, prompting an Army official to tell viewers: “A life damaged, a career ended, a unit falling apart. But it didn’t have to be this way. All you had to do was stand up and be strong.”


    Word of the Army's requested sequel — currently in production and scheduled to film this summer — follows Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel’s decision on Monday to crack down on generals who now possess the power to overturn sex-assault sentences rendered by military juries.

    Courtesy WILL Interactive

    Screen grab from "Team-Bound" video game.

    A spokeswoman for the Army’s Sexual Harassment/Assault Response Prevention (SHARP) Program did not immediately respond to emailed questions about the cost, content or implementation of "Team-Bound" or its sequel.

    But a spokesman for WILL Interactive, the Maryland company behind both videos, said: “As part of its overall program to address and eliminate sexual assault, the military commissioned WILL Interactive to develop ‘interactive video simulations’ that combine behavior modification role-playing with a video game element.”

    In 2010, the Army “engaged” WILL Interactive to produce “Team-Bound,” said Caleb Barnhart, an account executive with New York-based BLJ Worldwide, an outside communications firm employed WILL Interactive.

    “The program was so well received by service members and Army administrators that they asked WILL to develop a sequel,” Barnhart said.

    'Limited value'
    The original episodes were written after focus groups consisting of Army members suggested several real-life scenarios, said Marc Smrikarov, a vice president of BLJ Worldwide.

    In one scene, five Army buddies wearing civilian clothes arrive together at a nightclub where several female soldiers are relaxing, also wearing casual outfits. A narrator says: “Loud music, cold beer, hot girls, game on.” The actors then portray various behaviors, each triggered by users’ responses. Information about the Army’s sexual harassment policies, definitions, and how to prevent such behavior — and, ultimately, stop a rape — is offered throughout that segment and others.

    Courtesy WILL Interactive

    Screen grab from "Team-Bound" video game.

    But the program is being slammed by some experts on the topic. 

    “For decades, leaders in our military have thought that they can end the epidemic of sexual assault in the military simply through training programs, like the ‘Ask Her When She’s Sober’ campaign,” said Nancy Parrish, president of Protect Our Defenders, an advocacy group for military sex-assault victims. “This video game is another example of that line of thinking. Not only is it a waste of taxpayer dollars, it is affront to victims of sexual assault.

    “Rape and sexual assault in the military is often about the abuse of power. It is a violent crime and should be treated as such. According to the DOD’s own statistics, the majority of these crimes are committed by an individual of higher rank,” Parrish said. The video “continues to portray rape and sexual assault as a misunderstanding of a social situation — (as with) ‘Ask Her When She's Sober’ — and places the emphasis on the victim and bystanders to intervene in an assault, instead of placing the responsibility squarely on the perpetrator.”

    A leader of the Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN) — which seeks to curb sexual discrimination, harassment and assault inside the military — similarly criticized “Team-Bound” as an example of the Army trying to teach its way out of the sexual-assault problem rather than focusing on disciplining and removing offenders. 

    “My take is that it’s of limited value to focus on behavioral aspects (without) addressing the role of institutional deterrents,” said Rachel Natelson, the legal and programs director at SWAN. “Outside of the military, companies can’t simply ‘train’ their employees not to commit offenses — they also have to correct offenses once they occur or they’ll be held liable under the law.”

    Related:

    • Defense Secretary Hagel demands rape reform in military
    • Guidelines protect sex assault victims seeking security clearance
    • Training aims to improve how military sexual assaults are investigated
    • Senate panel members suggest overhaul of military justice system 
    • Accuser in Air Force sexual assault case 'frustrated' at overturned verdict
    • Civil Rights Commission urged to order audit of military sex-assault cases

     

    85 comments

    Having left military service 10 years ago I cannot say what state the Army's training is in today, but I know that during my service we had sensitivity and preventive training for just about anything you could think of, and guess what, it was not effective. You simply cannot change human nature, and …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, pentagon, military, video-game, rape, sexual-assault, service-womens-action-network, featired, protect-our-defenders, sex-assault-in-the-military
  • 8
    Nov
    2012
    7:46pm, EST

    SEALs punished for role in developing 'Medal of Honor' video game, official says

    Seven members of the Navy's SEAL Team Six have been disciplined for acting as paid consultants  to the makers of a video game called "Medal of Honor." Today's Natalie Morales reports.

    By Courtney Kube, NBC News

    Seven members of SEAL Team Six have been punished for supporting development of a video game released last month, according to a U.S. military official.


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    The SEALs worked as paid consultants for Electronic Arts, the company that made "Medal of Honor Warfighter." They received letters of reprimand and forfeited half of their pay for two months. The SEALs do not face jail time.

    The official did not say what, if any, information the SEALs revealed by participating in the video game's development. However, a written statement from Deputy Commander of Naval Special Warfare, Rear Admiral Garry Bonelli, indicates this is more about making an example of these sailors after a string of high-profile SEAL products.


    "We do not tolerate deviations from the policies that govern who we are and what we do as Sailors in the United States Navy. The non-judicial punishment decisions made today send a clear message throughout our Force that we are and will be held to a high standard of accountability," Bonelli wrote.

    The military official did not know how much the SEALs were paid.

    The video game hit store shelves on October 23. In a press release, EA said "Medal of Honor Warfighter" was "written by actual U.S. Tier 1 Operators while deployed overseas," and that it "features a dotted line to real world events and provides players a view into globally recognized threats and situations letting them experience the action as it might have unfolded." 

    In September, "No Easy Day," a book written under the pseudonym Mark Owen, was released to the public. The book gives a firsthand account of the killing of Osama bin Laden.

    medalofhonor.com

    A screenshot from the "Zero Dark Thirty" map pack for the video game "Medal of Honor Warfighter."

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    664 comments

    But it was OK for the Obama Administration to provide detailed info about SEAL operations to the makers of a movie about the killing of Osamba Bin Laden.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, video-game, navy-seal, featured, seal-team-six, medal-of-honor-warfighter, commentid-video-game

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NBC News contributor covering health, business, military and travel. @writerdude Author of "The Third Miracle: An Ordinary Man, A Medical Mystery and a Trial of Faith" (Random House, 2011).

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