The Delaware Gazette

Army opens jobs in combat battalions to women

Capt. Sara Rodriguez of the 101st Air­borne Divi­sion pours water on her face dur­ing the expert field med­ical badge test­ing at Fort Camp­bell, Ky., Female sol­diers are mov­ing into new jobs in once all-male units as the U.S. Army breaks down for­mal bar­ri­ers in recog­ni­tion of what’s already hap­pened in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. (Asso­ci­ated Press | Kristin M. Hall)


KRISTIN M. HALL

Asso­ci­ated Press

FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. — Female sol­diers this week are mov­ing into new jobs in once all-male units as the Army breaks down for­mal bar­ri­ers in recog­ni­tion of what has already hap­pened in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The pol­icy change announced ear­lier this year is being tested at nine brigades, includ­ing one at Fort Camp­bell, before going Army-wide. It opens thou­sands of jobs to female sol­diers by loos­en­ing restric­tions meant to keep them away from the bat­tle­field. Expe­ri­ence on the ground in the past decade showed women were fight­ing and dying along­side male sol­diers anyway.

Col. Val Keav­eny Jr., com­man­der of the 4th Brigade Com­bat Team that is among units pilot­ing the change, told The Asso­ci­ated Press that for the last decade it has been com­mon to have women tem­porar­ily attached to the com­bat units and serve along­side them.

“Women have served in our Army since the Rev­o­lu­tion­ary War and they have done phe­nom­e­nal work and con­tinue to do so today,” he said. “There is great tal­ent and now we can have it in the head­quar­ters of infantry, armor and cavalry.”

Under the new pol­icy, female offi­cers and non-commissioned offi­cers will be assigned to com­bat units below the brigade level. The change will open up about 14,000 new jobs for women in the mil­i­tary, but there are still more than 250,000 jobs that remain closed to women.

The new jobs within com­bat bat­tal­ions are in per­son­nel, intel­li­gence, logis­tics, sig­nal corps, med­ical and chap­laincy. The Army is also open­ing jobs that were once entirely closed to women, such as mechan­ics for tanks and artillery and rocket launcher crew members.

The 4th Brigade draws its lin­eage from the 506th Para­chute Infantry Reg­i­ment, whose World War II hero­ics led to books and a TV minis­eries called the “Band of Broth­ers.” But these days, Keav­eny said there are more than 350 women already serv­ing in the brigade and they will be open­ing 36 new jobs to women in the battalions.

“For the last 10 years, we have been fight­ing along­side women. In my expe­ri­ence I have seen that the Band of Broth­ers quickly inte­grate their sis­ters and they are a fam­ily,” he said.

Capt. Eliz­a­beth Evans, a 44-year-old mother of five, is one of the first women assigned to the com­bat bat­tal­ions. She will be serv­ing as a bat­tal­ion S1, whose job is to over­see per­son­nel issues within the bat­tal­ion, includ­ing awards, casu­al­ties, human resources and other admin­is­tra­tive respon­si­bil­i­ties. She said there is a lot of pride asso­ci­ated with serv­ing in an infantry unit.

“I think there’s a rich his­tory in the 101st and espe­cially the 4th Brigade Com­bat Team,” she said. “To me that means some­thing. It means some­thing to be a part of not nec­es­sar­ily his­tory, but to be a part of a once all-male battalion.”

Evans, who has deployed to Afghanistan, noted that women have been serv­ing in dan­ger­ous jobs in Iraq and Afghanistan for 10 years.

“With the flu­id­ity of the bat­tle­field and how there are no front lines, it just makes more sense to me to allow women to come into those roles, those non­com­bat staff roles,” she said.

Keav­eny said these changes will have min­i­mum impact on where women will be located while deployed. Bat­tal­ion head­quar­ters are gen­er­ally located at bases where women were already sta­tioned and the Army has been using female engage­ment teams to reach out to civil­ians in remote areas.

“Quite hon­estly we don’t see there’s going to be any fric­tion,” he said.

Kayla Williams, author of “Love My Rifle More Than You: Young and Female in the US Army,” served with the 3rd Brigade Com­bat Team under the 101st Air­borne Divi­sion dur­ing the ini­tial inva­sion into Iraq as an enlisted sol­dier in mil­i­tary intelligence.

Early in the war, she wasn’t even issued plates for her bal­lis­tic vest “because females can’t serve in com­bat,” she said. She said once she was tem­porar­ily attached to an infantry bat­tal­ion at Fort Camp­bell that had no female latrines.

As an Ara­bic trans­la­tor, she was attached to infantry units rather than assigned, but doing the same things as her male infantry coun­ter­parts, includ­ing going on foot patrols and liv­ing in remote com­bat outposts.

“Women have been serv­ing in very for­ward deployed roles, and women have been serv­ing side-by-side with com­bat arms per­son­nel, just not in a for­mal­ized assigned method,” said Williams, who is a fel­low at the Tru­man National Secu­rity Project.

She said these incre­men­tal changes could improve the pro­fes­sional devel­op­ment of both men and women in the mil­i­tary, but acknowl­edged that the mil­i­tary still has a long way to go to lev­el­ing the field for women.

“It is my per­sonal opin­ion that the insti­tu­tion­al­iza­tion of women as not being able to serve in com­bat arms has a way of sub­tly allow­ing sex­ism within the mil­i­tary,” she said.

Evans said she hopes the expanded roles will encour­age more women to con­sider a career in the Army.

“I think for females in gen­eral, it’s bring­ing us new avenues for accom­plish­ments, for pro­fes­sional growth. In my per­sonal belief, we are a part of sup­port­ing our infantry­man,” she said.

AP News Posted by on May 15 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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