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  • 24
    May
    2012
    3:45am, EDT

    Female soldiers sue to lift combat ban 'solely on the basis of sex'

    The Pentagon has changed some of its rules.  Women will be permitted in crucial and dangerous jobs closer to the front lines.  NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.  

    By Reuters

    WASHINGTON -- Two female soldiers filed suit on Wednesday to scrap the U.S. military's restrictions on women in combat, claiming the policy violated their constitutional rights.

    Command Sergeant Major Jane Baldwin and Colonel Ellen Haring, both Army reservists, said policies barring them from assignments "solely on the basis of sex" violated their right to equal protectio under the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution.


    "This limitation on plaintiffs' careers restricts their current and future earnings, their potential for promotion and advancement, and their future retirement benefits," the women said in the suit filed in U.S. District Court.

    Pentagon's new rules deploy women closer to combat

    Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Army Secretary John McHugh are among the defendants. Baldwin is from Tallahassee, Florida, and Haring lives in Bristow, Virginia.

    The Pentagon unveiled a new policy in February that opened up 14,000 more positions to women in the military. It still barred them from serving in infantry, armor and special-operations units whose main job is front-line combat.

    The Pentagon announces new rules that reflect changes brought on by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. NBC's Chris Clackum reports.

    NBC News: Pentagon to open more military jobs to women

    Defense Department spokesman George Little declined to comment on the lawsuit. He said Panetta was "strongly committed to examining the expansion of roles for women in the U.S. military, as evidenced by the recent step of opening up thousands of more assignments to women."


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    Women make up about 14.5 percent of active-duty military personnel. More than 800 women have been wounded and more than 130 killed in fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, the lawsuit said.

    "The linear battlefield no longer exists," Baldwin and Haring said. They alleged that women are engaged in combat even when it is not part of their assigned roles.

    From wannabe housewife to managing $822 billion military budget

    Army Chief of Staff General Raymond Odierno said last week the Army was considering letting women attend its elite Ranger School and opening up infantry and armor positions to women.

    Report: Growing number of military women see combat, serve in leadership roles

    More than 200 women had begun reporting to maneuver battalions and combat teams last week, he said.

    The case is Baldwin et al v. Panetta et al in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, No. 12-cv-00832.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    655 comments

    "This limitation on plaintiffs' careers restricts their current and future earnings, their potential for promotion and advancement, and their future retirement benefits," the women said in the suit filed in U.S. District Court."

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    Explore related topics: women, lawsuit, military, combat, featured, equal-rights, front-line
  • 28
    Apr
    2012
    6:18pm, EDT

    Secret Service prostitute scandal highlights lack of women in agency

    Matt Slocum / AP file

    Secret Service agents watch as Air Force One departs Midland International Airport with President Bush and first lady Laura Bush aboard in Midland, Texas, on Oct. 4, 2008.

    WASHINGTON -- Secret Service agents are often portrayed in popular culture as disciplined, unflappable, loyal — and male. A spiraling prostitution scandal that has highlighted the dearth of women in the agency that protects the president and dignitaries has many wondering: Would more females in the ranks prevent future dishonor?


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Only about a tenth of field agents and uniformed officers are women, a shortage some attribute to travel demands that can be especially taxing on women balancing families and careers. A scandal that risks portraying the agency as unfriendly to women, however, could set back efforts to close the gender gap.


    "I can't help but think that there would be some progress if there was more diversity and if there were more women that were there," said Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. "When you have a diversity of people there, it brings more accountability. What you see is a lack of accountability in this."

    Women make up about 25 percent of the agency's workforce, but only about 11 percent of agents and uniformed officers, said spokesman Ed Donovan. That's significantly lower than the 19 percent of female special agents in the FBI, though higher than the 9.7 percent of special agents who are women in the Drug Enforcement Administration. The Secret Service does not provide gender breakdowns on the agents assigned to presidential details, though women have been included on those assignments for years.

    In the wake of the scandal shaking up the ranks of the president's security detail, the Secret Service is reminding agents about the rules concerning off-duty drinking and fraternizing. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports.

    The agency has aggressively recruited women, targeting female-oriented career fairs and sending brochures to colleges.

    "We all recognize that we want to get more women into the Secret Service," Donovan said.

    But that wasn't easy even before the prostitution embarrassment in Colombia, which unfolded two weeks ago when a dispute over payment between a prostitute and Secret Service officer spilled into a hotel hallway. A dozen Secret Service employees and a dozen enlisted military personnel have been implicated. Although Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said it appeared to be isolated, the agency has since confirmed it's investigating if employees hired prostitutes and strippers ahead of President Barack Obama's visit to El Salvador last year. The agency on Friday also announced stricter measures, including assigning chaperones on some trips to enforce new rules of conduct for agents and employees.

    Paige Pinson, 45, spent 15 years with the agency and her father, W. Ralph Basham, is a former director. She said it wasn't the culture that encouraged her to forego her agent's position. After all, male agents were loyal to each other and fiercely protective of her. She'd drink alongside them at bars and laughed at the "groupies" who fawned over their status. It was, instead, the birth of her first child that inspired her to seek a less travel-intensive analyst's position. She left the agency in 2009.

    "You do miss birthdays, you do miss Christmas, and you miss piano recitals," Pinson said, "and maybe women are just more sensitive to that than men can be."

    The agency enjoys vaunted prestige in American popular culture, but the rigors of a protective detail — jet-setting the globe at a moment's notice to protect a dignitary, being on-call around the clock — isn't for everyone. It's the type of full-bore commitment that leads to canceled vacations and blown-off family obligations, an occasional workaday drudgery that, former agents say, can distinguish the Secret Service from other law enforcement agencies.

    "I know they work hard and long hours too, but at the end of the day, they go home at night," said Barbara Riggs, who spent 31 years with the agency, serving on presidential protective details for Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush — ascending to the role of a supervisor — before retiring as deputy director in 2006. "You can't say the same for being a Secret Service agent."

    Cavorting with prostitutes on the job isn't all that different from holding a business meeting in a topless joint: Both are hyper-sexualized activities that some men may condone but are bound to make women uncomfortable, said Donna Milgram, executive director of the National Institute for Women in Trades, Technology and Science.

    "Whenever you have a culture in which it's accepted that sexual activity as has been described is part of that culture — i.e. using local prostitutes — that is not going to be a culture in which women are going to be want to be in," said Milgram, who has advised law enforcement agencies on recruiting and retaining women. "Those are generally not cultures that want to have women."

    Other incidents over the past 15 years haven't helped the Secret Service come off as welcoming to women. Emails filed as part of a race discrimination lawsuit show workers sharing racially and sexually inappropriate jokes. An alcohol-soaked bar brawl involving off-duty agents in 2002 involved allegations that an agent had bitten off part of a man's ear — though no charges were brought and a jury sided with the agent in a civil trial. A 2002 U.S. News & World Report contained allegations of heavy drinking, pornography viewing at work and security lapses.

    Some former agents acknowledge a close-knit atmosphere where employees travel, dine and socialize together — sometimes in the form of so-called "wheels up" parties held in foreign countries after the departure of a president or other person under protection. But they say the prostitution scandal does not represent a cultural problem or reflect a broader disdain for women.

    The Secret Service began adding women in the early 1970s, a time when returning Vietnam War veterans signed up in bunches. Just as they do now, agents prided themselves on being physically strong and on a strict selection process for the presidential detail, said Joseph Petro, who joined in 1971 and a co-author of "Standing Next to History: An Agent's Life Inside the Secret Service." New recruits were expected to prove themselves.

    "We wanted to look at them — see what kind of shape they were in, how they fit, what their manner was. That goes on — and it should," said Petro, who after Vietnam spent 23 years with the agency as an agent and manager, helping protect Reagan.

    Some women had it tough in the early years, he recalled, bumping up against "hard-headed" men who had never worked with women. But some found niches through special skills, like horseback riding, and the atmosphere was genteel and respectable enough that Petro said he always felt comfortable bringing his wife and daughter on trips to Reagan's ranch in Santa Barbara.

    "There were a couple of guys who brought their wives and kids," Petro said. "That puts the brake on a lot of things."

    In the latest debacle, the Secret Service has forced eight employees from their jobs and was seeking to revoke the security clearance of another employee, which would effectively force him to resign. Three others have been cleared of serious wrongdoing. How much it sets back efforts to recruit women may depend on the pervasiveness of inappropriate behavior, Milgram said.

    "It's a way of operating," she said, "that I think most of us would consider a way that was left behind 30 years ago."

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    196 comments

    Is the article implying that if more women were in the Secret Service there would be no need for prostitutes?

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  • 18
    Apr
    2012
    6:20am, EDT

    Biden to lead push for domestic violence law

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Vice President Joe Biden will lead a Democratic push to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act, the 1994 legislation that now faces opposition from some conservatives.

    Biden will be joined Wednesday by Attorney General Eric Holder, Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, White House Advisor on Violence Against Women Lynn Rosenthal and Sharon Love, mother of Yeardley Love and founder of the One Love Foundation, to talk about the need to reauthorize the law.


    The New York Times has reported that the law would expand financing for and broaden the reach of domestic violence programs. 

    However, it said some Republicans say the measure unnecessarily expands immigration avenues by creating new definitions for immigrant victims to claim battery, and also dilutes the focus on domestic violence by expanding protections to new groups, like same-sex couples.

    The Washington Post reported that Biden will be joined by Maryland Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, a Democrat, whose cousin was killed by her estranged boyfriend in 2008.

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    370 comments

    No one condones domestic violence but here is the reality to this story. "Biden to lead push for domestic violence law"plus Democrats claim Republicans wage "war on women" equals political posturing. When are voters going to learn the political games that are being foisted upon us?

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    Explore related topics: congress, violence, women, politics, gop, gender, biden, featured
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    4:51pm, EDT

    Bodies in Detroit woods are those of missing women

    Elizabeth Conley / AP

    Relatives of Abreeya Brown and Ashley Conaway leave the scene where their bodies were found Sunday.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    DETROIT -- The bodies of two women found over the weekend in a wooded area in Detroit are those of two best friends reported abducted nearly a month ago, according to the medical examiner’s office.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Wayne County medical examiner's spokeswoman Brooke Blackwell said the bodies of Abreeya Brown and Ashley Conaway were found gagged and bound with duct tape in a shallow grave. Both women had been shot in the head, Blackwell said.


    Brown, 18, and Conaway, 21, were abducted Feb. 28 by two armed men outside their home in the nearby enclave of Hamtramck, according to Brown's stepfather, Charles McGinnis. He told police he exchanged gunfire with the captors before they drove away. Relatives said one woman was able to send text messages for a short time from inside the trunk, but that neither had been heard from since.

    Police earlier arrested Brandon Cain, 26, and Brian Lee, 24. Both men are scheduled together for a preliminary hearing on Friday on charges of assault with intent to murder.

    Family members of the slain women spoke with local media on Monday.

    “We should not lose our children, our daughters to such a travesty; we shouldn’t lose our children to evil and rotten men," Latrina Conaway, sister of Ashley Conaway, told the Detroit Free Press. "We’re just going to stand strong. We’re going to walk the judicial system down to the wire. We know justice shall prevail. But for me, this is just the beginning.”

    Lois Brown, mother of Abreeya Brown, said she was heartbroken.

    "She's in the kingdom of heaven," Brown told the Detroit News. "I am very glad we have the suspects in custody; now we don't have to chase them down. Now I am in mourning."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    6 comments

    My prayes are with the families. I can't imagine the terror these two young ladies felt, and I hope these two guys get the death sentence. All because the young woman wasn't romantically interested. This is just such an evil act.

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  • 9
    Feb
    2012
    6:41pm, EST

    Pentagon's new rules deploy women closer to combat

    The Pentagon has changed some of its rules.  Women will be permitted in crucial and dangerous jobs closer to the front lines.  NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.  

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Some restrictions on women serving in combat roles in the military will be relaxed, the Pentagon said on Thursday, reflecting the reality that women have served, and died, in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.


    The Defense Department would still prohibit women from serving in infantry, armor and special operations units, whose main function is to engage in front-line combat, defense officials said. But women will be allowed to move closer to the trenches by stationing them near direct ground troops in jobs such as tank mechanic and field artillery radar. Previously, women had been billeted away from smaller combat units.

    NBC News: Pentagon to open more military jobs to women

    The move is a reaction to what the Pentagon calls the “non-linear and fluid” nature of the modern battlefield.

    In addition, the Pentagon said it will develop “gender-neutral physical standards" for all service members, which the military will use in assigning future jobs.

    “Women are contributing in unprecedented ways to the military’s mission. Through their courage, sacrifice, patriotism and great skill, women have proven their ability to serve in an expanding number of roles on and off the battlefield,” Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said in a statement. “We will continue to open as many positions as possible to women so that anyone qualified to serve can have the opportunity to do so.”

    Report: Growing number of military women see combat, serve in leadership roles

    "It's a tiny step," Anu Bhagwati, executive director of the Service Women’s Action Network and former Marine, told The Washington Post. "It’s a bit of a slap in the face. We’re already doing this stuff.”

    Nearly 12 percent of U.S. forces deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan were women. They represented about 2 percent of U.S. military deaths in those wars.

    The Pentagon announces new rules that reflect changes brought on by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. NBC's Chris Clackum reports.

    Under a policy adopted in 1994, women are allowed to serve in combat units as medics, intelligence officers and other jobs at the brigade level, which is a force of around 3,500 people.

    But a woman could not be assigned to perform the same job in a battalion, which can be as small as a few hundred troops and whose forces are more likely to be directly exposed to combat.

    The military has sometimes gotten around the rules by attaching women to battalions, which allowed them to work in the smaller units but kept them from officially receiving credit for being in combat.

    Since combat experience is a factor in promotions and job advancement in the military, women have had greater difficulty than men in moving up to the top ranks, officials said.

    The Pentagon's plan to change its rules now goes to Congress, which may review the policy shift before it goes into effect, probably sometime this summer. During that period, Congress potentially could take action to oppose the policy changes.

    "We believe it's very important to explore ways to offer more opportunities to women in the military," Pentagon Press Secretary George Little told Reuters. "It doesn't stop today. We'll continue to look for ways to open more positions to women in the military."

    The decision on whether women should formally serve in combat positions will be determined in future reviews, officials told NBC News.

    NBC News' Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    124 comments

    I think women should be able to take any role they can do equally well as a man. Or be able to meet a minimum standard of some sort. If they can do that, why not. If they cant meet a minimum standard, then no. You cant have someone who cant do the job out there, it will get people killed. A group is …

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    Explore related topics: women, military, combat, featured
  • 8
    Feb
    2012
    9:19pm, EST

    Women 'dining in' at potlucks donate 'dining out' money to aid women globally

    Members of the organization Dining for Women are raising money for women around the globe each time they get together for dinner. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    By NBC's Kristen Dahlgren and msnbc.com staff

    Potlucks have a purpose beyond sharing food for thousands of members of Dining for Women. 

    "Basically a group of people get together to share a meal and learn about a grassroots non-profit organization," said Marsha Wallace, president and founder of the Greenville, S.C.-based organization that started with 20 women at one dinner about a decade ago and now counts 8,000 members in chapters across 38 states.


    The average donation at a monthly potluck is $32, about each woman's "dining out" cost.

    "When everybody does that it turns into $42,000," member Cari Class told NBC News.

    The money combined from all the chapters goes to a different charity every month to help women and their families, which also empowers the women who give, members say.

    They've helped in a wide variety of ways, such as saving girls from sex slavery in Nepal, donating sterile birth kits in Tibet, supporting an embroidery business in Afghanistan and sponsoring a girls school in Kenya.

    Dining for Women's website notes that the group gives only to women and girls internationally because 75 percent of the world's 1.3 billion people living in extreme poverty are women and children who live in developing nations. The website also gives information about starting new chapters and how programs are selected to receive donations.

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    12 comments

    The women who make up this group are inspiring people. It's a win-win situation. Each one cooks with love, I'm sure which reflects in the total atmosphere of the event and the proceeds go to other women who need assistance.

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    Explore related topics: women, san-jose, south-carolina, sexual-slavery, non-profit-organization
  • 8
    Feb
    2012
    7:21pm, EST

    NBC News: Pentagon to open more military jobs to women

    By Jim Miklaszewski and Courtney Kube, NBC News

    WASHINGTON - More military jobs will be opening up to women as the Pentagon on Thursday releases findings from a congressionally mandated report on whether they should be assigned to combat roles, officials said.

    Pentagon officials said they will announce that more than 14,000 jobs across the services will now be open to women – from communications to intelligence to mechanics -- but that does not mean they will be in direct combat roles, yet.


    The decision on whether women should formally serve in combat positions will be determined in future reviews, the officials told NBC News.

    Report: Growing number of military women see combat, serve in leadership roles

    Since women can already serve in most jobs in the Air Force and the Navy, most of these new positions will be for women in the Army and Marine Corps, officials said.

    Women have been serving and dying in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan since the conflicts began. Activists maintain that the military claims those women are "attached" to the combat units, but not "assigned" to them.

    Jim Miklaszweski is NBC News' chief Pentagon correspondent. Courtney Kube is NBC News' Pentagon producer.

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    156 comments

    with this candy a%& bunch in the administration and pentagon, they'll be hanging drapes in the barracks. it's time to stop this crap.

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  • 24
    Jan
    2012
    6:32pm, EST

    Number of homeless female veterans more than doubles

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Army veteran Tara Eid, 50, writes an essay at New Directions women's house, a long-term transitional program for female veterans dealing with issues of homelessness, trauma and addiction, in Los Angeles on Nov. 18, 2011. Eid was homeless many times over a period of 10 years.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The number of homeless female military veterans more than doubled from 2006 to 2010, according to new government estimates.

    Acknowledging "limited VA data," homeless female vets numbered 3,328 in 2010, according to a report by the General Accounting Office published on Monday, up from 1,380 in 2006.

    The report says actions are necessary to ensure homeless female veterans get the housing and services they need.

    The GAO says a lack of coordination among the Veteran’s Administration and Housing and Urban Development, two government agencies that provide housing and services to homeless veterans, is hampering efforts to help these.

    Report: Growing number of military women see combat

    “Absent more complete data, VA does not have the information needed to plan services effectively, allocate grants to providers and track progress toward its overall goal of ending veteran homelessness by 2015,” the report said.

     “In reality, the number of homeless women vets is probably much higher, maybe by a factor of one-and-a half times,” Patrick Sherlock, executive director Project Foot, a Florida group that helps homeless veterans, told msnbc.com on Tuesday.

    “They don’t count vets who are living in shelters,” Sherlock said. “And they don’t ask homeless people on the streets if they are veterans.”

    Homeless numbers down, but risks rise

    The increase didn’t come as a surprise, Sherlock said, because of the increase in the number of female veterans overall. But he said there is no doubt the problem of homelesseness among veterans is "getting worse."

    "Many returning vets have major psychological issues that leave them on the streets," Sherlock told msnbc.com. "Call it PTSD, shell shock or battle fatigue, they're not right."

    Two-thirds of the homeless female veterans were between 40 and 59 years old, the report said, and over one-third had disabilities. In addition, many of these women lived with young children.

    The report said homeless female veterans are often not aware of services available, and often shelters that are available do not take children.

    “Without improved services, women — including those with children and those who have experienced military sexual trauma — remain at risk of homelessness and experiencing further abuse,” the report said.

    The GAO urged the VA and HUD to collaborate to ensure proper data is collected on homeless female veterans, and ramp up services such as referrals to shelters and transitional housing.

    On any given night some 67,000 veterans are homeless, according to the National Coaltion for Homeless Veterans, with men making up an estimated 95 percent of the total.

    According to the GAO, officials from the VA and HUD “generally agreed” with the findings.

    The report also points out that the number of female veterans will continue to rise as service members return from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    “Some of these women veterans, like their male counterparts, face challenges readjusting to civilian life and are at risk of becoming homeless,” the report said. "Such challenges may be particularly pronounced for those women veterans who have disabling psychological conditions resulting from military sexual trauma and for those who are single mothers.”

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    125 comments

    What a country. A wealthy man who shelters his kids from service wants to be president, and the people who put their lives on the line to protect us are homeless. It stinks.

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  • 22
    Dec
    2011
    11:47am, EST

    Report: Growing number of military women see combat, serve in leadership roles

    Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images

    US Marine Corporal Jessica L. Williams (L) and Lance Corporal Shawnee Redbear of 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines Golf Company patrol in Basabad, Helmand Province, on March 9, 2011. The US Marines deployed about 40 Female Marines in Helmand province and Nimruz for the Female Engagement Team (FET) programme to interact with Afghan civilians, specifically women and children.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Women in the U.S. military are more likely than ever to see combat, says a study released Thursday.

    Though men continue to make up the bulk of the fighting force, the proportion of women in the military is soaring, says the Pew Research study, which also found a greater share of women than men in the military are black and a smaller share of females are married compared to their male counterparts.

    Female veterans are also more apt to be critical of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan than male veterans, the study found.

    Since 1973, when the U.S. ended the draft and established an all-volunteer force, the proportion of women in the military has soared. The ranks of enlisted females have increased from 2 percent to 14 percent, and the share of female officers has quadrupled, from 4 percent to 16 percent, according to the Pew study, "Women in the U.S. Military: Growing Share, Distinctive Profile." 

    "The presence of women is felt now more than in any other previous era," said Kim Parker, researcher and co-author of the report. "And what we see is that it’s not just in the enlisted ranks, but there are many more women in leadership role. The military has become a place of opportunity for both racial minorities as well as for women to take on leadership roles."

    Women are still less likely than men to go to combat, but their exposure to battle has increased because of long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and a policy change in the 1990s that allowed women to serve in a greater variety of combat-related roles, such as flying in combat aircraft and serving on combat ships. Only 7 percent of women service members before 1990 had served in combat zones, according to the study, while after 1990 that proportion rose to 25 percent.

    "The nature of the wars, where the battle lines are often uncertain, has exposed more women to combat," Parker said. "Even though they’re not the same roles as men. And women are reporting some of the same emotional effects of combat, like PTS (post-traumatic stress)."

    More women may see combat in the future. The Pentagon is considering a recommendation by an advisory panel commissioned by Congress that recommends that the military do away with a policy banning women from serving in combat units. That policy is under department review and when complete will be delivered to Congress, Cynthia O. Smith, Department of Defense spokeswoman, told msnbc.com.

    In the meantime, "Women will continue to be assigned to units and positions that may necessitate combat actions within the scope of their restricted positioning -- situations for which they are fully trained and equipped to respond," Smith said.

    According to the Washington Post, 138 women have been killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Despite their expansion of roles, active-duty women are more heavily concentrated in administrative and medical roles than men. The study found 30 percent of active-duty women are administrators, but only 12 percent of active-duty men serve in that capacity.

    Female veterans, it turns out, are also more critical than their male counterparts of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to the Pew study, which found 63 percent say the Iraq war was not worth fighting (men: 47 percent) and 54 percent say Afghanistan has not been worth it (men: 39 percent). Surveys of the general public have shown no significant differences by gender in the share of people who say the post-9/11 wars were not worth fighting.

    And women are also equally likey to have had emotionally traumatic or distressing experiences as men -- 47 percent of women, as opposed to 42 percent of men.

    Still, women and men overwhelmingly say their military experience was positive, and 78 percent of women (82 percent, men) say they would advise a young person close to them to join the military.

    The Pew report draws on two Pentagon studies on overall trends in military participation, as well as demographic and occupational profiles of male and female military personnel. It also draws on data from two surveys of military veterans: a Pew Research Center survey of a nationally representative sample of 1,853 veterans conducted July 28-Sept. 4, 2011, as well as a larger July 2010 Current Population Survey of veterans.

    90 comments

    I was in Iraq and on a front line combat FOB. The females there did guard duty, had our turn in the guard towers, went outside the FOB, flew over combat areas. We went out on patrol with the guys. Once on patrol a Major tried to leave me in a vehicle and I asked if it was because I was a female and  …

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  • 1
    Dec
    2011
    11:17am, EST

    From wannabe housewife to managing $822 billion military budget

    Marian Smith / msnbc.com

    Barbara Westgate, a senior civilian executive in the US Air Force, recalled how a general once patted her on the head and remarked on how "pretty" she was after he was told of her promotion. She now helps to manage more than $822 billion in Air Force funding.

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com

    LONDON — When Barbara Westgate joined the U.S. Air Force as a secretary in 1973, her career goal was to earn $5,000 a year.

    "I thought I wanted to be a housewife," she recalled.

    Today, Westgate is the civilian equivalent of a three-star general who helps to manage $822 billion (over five years*) in the Air Force's future defense program.


    Westgate was among the pioneering women serving in the military, intelligence and security services from around the world who gathered in London this week to discuss their experiences in leadership positions.

    She told msnbc.com how an older male general offered his congratulations when she was promoted to director of logistics for the Air Force's advanced tactical aircraft program in 1988. "Of course you got the job, Barb, you're just so pretty," he said, before patting Westgate on the head.

    "He was just from that generation," said Westgate, who is now a Washington, D.C.-based officer in the senior executive service of the Air Force. "He thought he was paying me a compliment." Furious as she was, Westgate didn't take it personally.

    Amid the neat uniforms, gold insignia, polished medals, ribbons and brass buttons, the stories were often similar. The Royal Norwegian Navy commander who was the world's first woman to serve on a submarine, the British Royal Navy commander who was the first female flag officer, the Swedish Air Force colonel who was the first woman to command a regiment. When the latter was asked how it felt to be a woman in command, she said, "Well, I’ve always been a woman."

    There was little bitterness. Delegates were quick to point out that their militaries had only really begun to open their doors to women in the past 20 years. It will take time for women to reach senior leadership roles, they reminded each other.

    U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Carol Pottenger said she started her career in 1978 on a tour in Pearl Harbor, a non-operational assignment far from any front line. It was a typical assignment for women then.

    In the 1990s, the Navy began opening up ships and other divisions to women. Now 93 percent of assignments allow them – including the Navy SEALs in support capacity roles. However, that's not 100 percent. Pottenger explained the reality of what that meant for her current role as deputy chief of staff for capability and development at NATO Headquarters Supreme Allied Commander Transformation in Norfolk, Va.: "I could command 40,000 sailors, but in one of the … [divisions] I commanded, women couldn't even serve."

    Marian Smith / msnbc.com

    Colonel Lena Hallin, center, is a Swedish defense attache.

    Speaking to a room full of nodding heads, she added: "If you're going to recruit and retain the best and the brightest, you can't afford to ignore half the population."

    Pottenger commended the mentorship programs and other policies that have opened up the military to women but urged young cadets to actively put themselves forward for more leadership roles and encouraged senior officers to aggressively support the policies from the top.

    'I guess the message got through'
    "Don’t be silly, we didn’t mean women,” Commodore Elizabeth Steele was told when she applied for a post with Canada's navy on a U.N. mission in Cambodia in 1992. She had joined the navy in 1986, when women weren't allowed to be maritime officers because of a policy that deemed them "not qualified."

    But by then sea logistics had opened up to women and Steele submitted her application for the tour. Disgruntled by the response she got, Steele shot back that they should have specified that women need not apply.

    "I guess the message got through because I ended up in Cambodia," she said.

    Steele, who is now the deputy chief of staff and associate deputy minister at Canada's department of defense, advocates the concept of gender intelligence – or recognizing the different strengths men and women have and using them effectively.

    "We have better teams … if we have teams that are diverse," Steele added.

    However, one of the most important results Steele has seen of women entering the military is the influence it has on people in countries like Afghanistan — where women are not considered equal citizens.

    It is important "for a young child to see women in a combat or military role," she said. “There is a connection that a female soldier makes with a person" that is unique and powerful.

    Hosted by the Royal United Services Institute, an independent think tank for defense and security, the Women in Defence and Security Leadership conference wraps up today.

    *The initial post failed to indicate that the $822 billion budget was over a five-year period.

    105 comments

    The article is about women in the military, not DoD spending. Times sure were different back then and bravo to those female pioneers who managed to make it in a man's world.

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  • 27
    Nov
    2011
    1:36pm, EST

    NYC Jewish women want to join all-male EMT group

    Kathy Willens / AP

    Yocheved Lerner demonstrates cardiopulmonary resuscitation technique during a women's-only CPR training session in the Borough Park section of New York, on Nov. 9.

    By Associated Press

    Most Orthodox Jewish women avoid touching men except direct relatives. They don't sit next to men on buses or even at weddings. They have separate swimming hours at indoor pools. But for an emergency birth, Orthodox Jewish women will usually turn to the all-male volunteer ambulance corps known as Hatzolah.

    Now a group of women in one of the country's largest Orthodox Jewish communities is proposing to join up with Hatzolah as emergency medical technicians to respond in cases of labor or gynecological emergencies.

    The proposal for a women's division has stirred up criticism within Orthodox Jewish circles, with one well-known blog editorializing that it amounts to a "new radical feminist agenda." And when a prominent elected local official, Assemblyman Dov Hikind, spoke about it on his weekly radio show, he was criticized for even bringing the subject up.

    Rachel Freier, a Hasidic attorney who is representing the women in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, said there is a need for emergency services that adhere to the community's customs of modesty, calling for the sexes to avoid physical contact unless they are related.

    "It has nothing to do with feminism," Freier said. "It has to do with the dignity of women and their modesty."

    She is careful to avoid framing the proposal as a critique of Hatzolah, whose work she says they respect. Instead, she says it is a matter of reclaiming a "job that has been the role of women for thousands of years" — that of midwife. "We are so proud of Hatzolah," she said. But, she added, "they can't understand what a woman feels like when she is in labor."

    The volunteer ambulance corps was founded by Rabbi Herschel Weber in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in the 1960s in response to a perceived delay in responding to emergency calls made by Jewish communities. Today Hatzolah, a Hebrew word that translates as "rescue" or "relief," has dozens of affiliates around the world, each of them operating independently and often in close coordination with the community they serve. Policies, such as whether women can volunteer, are usually set locally by each affiliate.

    It is unclear how many Hatzolah affiliates allow women to volunteer. But in Israel, for instance, United Hatzalah, which responds to more than 112,500 calls per year, has volunteers who are both male and female, as well as secular and Jewish, according to its website.

    And the new division being proposed in Brooklyn by the women Freier represents — it would be known as the Ezras Nashim, Hebrew for "women's section" — would be modeled after a program created more than a year ago in New Square, N.Y., a small, insular Orthodox Jewish community in New York City's northern suburbs.

    But a program for women, with women volunteers, in Borough Park would be far more ambitious in scope and size. Besides being one of the biggest Orthodox Jewish communities in the country, if not the world, the neighborhood had the city's highest birth rate in 2009 with 26.7 per 1,000 people, according to the Department of Health. That is a lot of babies that need to be delivered.

    Yocheved Lerner, 49, is one of the women who would like to work as a volunteer for a newly formed all-women Hatzolah division in Brooklyn.

    A state-certified emergency medical technician and mother herself, she said her group has a list of about 200 trained Orthodox Jewish women who could respond to medical calls in the neighborhood.

    "There are strict rules between men and women, except in the case of Hatzolah," she said. "The problem is that any number of men might respond to a call on Hatzolah." That has been a source of "tremendous embarrassment" for some women, she said.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    33 comments

    In order for religion to maintain its strength, it must evolve with the people and times. To still single out women and look down on them for wanting to do the same things men do, shows a stagnant and lifeless ideal system.

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  • 15
    Jul
    2011
    6:34pm, EDT

    The barbell is up, and the dresscode changed

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

     

    Charlie Neibergall / AP

    Kulsoom Abdullah, of Atlanta, competes during the national weightlifting championships on Friday in Council Bluffs, Iowa.

    Kulsoom Abdullah headed into Friday's USA National Weightlifting Competition with modest expectations, but even before she stepped up to the barbell she had won a major victory.

    Until two weeks ago Abdullah didn’t expect to compete because internationally sanctioned events didn’t allow her to compete with her arms and legs covered — and doing so without the covering ran counter to her Islamic faith and the modesty that she practices. So she went to the top — and persuaded the International Weightlifting Federation to change its rules.


    “I am going to do my best though I will only have had two weeks of preparation since registering,” Abdullah, 35, said prior to the competition. She’s in the 48 kg (105 lbs.) senior women’s weight class. (The Associated Press reported that Abdullah cleared a snatch of 41 kilograms, or just over 90 pounds, and 57 kilograms in the clean and jerk. That earned her a fifth-place finish out of six competitors in her weight class.)

    As we reported on June 27, Abdullah only learned she couldn’t compete at the national level when she managed to qualify last fall. USA Weightlifting officials denied her request for alternative dress, because the international body sets rules for competitions that ultimately can lead lifters to Olympic competition.

    She didn’t attend the December competition at Cincinnati, but neither did she take no for a final answer. Instead, with the help of a lawyer, she put together a 44-page appeal laying out her argument and detailing several long-sleeved, long-legged garments that would meet both modesty requirements and competitive needs.

    Her goal was to illustrate sports gear that would allow judges see if the knees and elbows were in the “locked” position, in order to declare whether the lift was successful.  

    Abdullah, bolstered by activist women and Muslims, then persuaded the US Olympic Committee to present her case at the International Weightlifting Federation annual meeting in Penang, Malaysia.

    Lo and behold, on June 29, the IW agreed with her and announced it would allow a close-fitting “unitard” with long legs and arms under the standard singlet that most competitors wear.

    “Weightlifting is an Olympic Sport open for all athletes to participate without discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, age, or national origin," stated Tamas Ajan, IWF President. "... This rule modification has been considered in the spirit of fairness, equality and inclusion."

    For Abdullah, getting to take part in high level competitions will allow her to focus her training, but she has greater hopes for her triumph over the old dress code:

    “It will help increase female participation in weightlifting, and possibly increase the participation in other sports, regardless of faith,” she said. “I hope to continue and be able to help others in similar situations,” she said.

    Click here to follow Kari Huus on Facebook  

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