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-   -   Women in combat policy to change (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=192325)

Onkel Neal 02-09-12 11:56 AM

Women in combat policy to change
 
http://security.blogs.cnn.com/2012/0...nge/?hpt=hp_c2

Is this being done primarily so military women can receive citations? :shifty:

I'm not sure I understand why in this time of complete equality that women are not allowed to serve in any capacity as a man? And why are women exempt from conscription? That's not equality.

I agree with this guy's comments
Quote:

Infantry vet here, Hey as long as the rules remain the same and a woman is willing to be in the field for 2 weeks at a time without a shower, cleaning with wetnaps and a few drops from a canteen then sure. I also feel there should be a combat MOS PT test vs the Male/Female PT test. Reason on the latter is that if someone else goes down most non-combat personal would not be in the shape required to fireman carry a 180LB infantry guy with battle armor 100meters and if a female is going into that MOS that requirement should stay. As long as that is met I have no other complaints about them serving in any capacity they qualify for.

August 02-09-12 12:05 PM

I agree with him too but the problem is that the rules won't stay the same. Any job that requires physical strength, Infantryman, tank mechanic, etc, will start out with one standard but when women start failing in greater numbers than men there will be charges of gender bias and then the military will do what they always do, which is lower the physical standards causing overall efficiency to suffer.

kraznyi_oktjabr 02-09-12 02:05 PM

I agree, fitness standards should be same. I have never been in military, they didn't accept me :( , but my brother served as NCO in Army. He told me about exercise during which company was ordered to move in squads as quick march to another position. There was one female soldier in my brother's squad who just wasn't strong enough for the job. Rest of the squad ended up carrying her equipment in addition of their own and even after that their movement took about 45 min longer than from other squads.

My brother, squad leader, wasn't very pleased.

GoldenRivet 02-09-12 02:23 PM

The important thing to remember:

There are women who dont want to serve in the military and couldnt care less about having similar rights as men. There are women out there that dont want to be submarine commanders, who dont want to fly fighter jets. There are women out there who are perfectly happy to contribute to a household by cleaning the house, taking care of the kids, making sure a good meal is prepared and managing the home. I happen to have one such woman and she is just as vital and important a part of this household as I am.

then...

there are women who want to have these equil rights, they want to roll in the mud and blood for weeks without hot showers, they want to be fortune 500 CEOs, they will not be happy unless they are flying their A-10 down flak alley at 350 knots bearing HARMs down on some SAM site. Some women just want to be one of the guys so bad they can taste it.

and hey, that's fine to want those things... but their crusade - is currently - will continue and always has screwed things up for a lot of women out there that didnt want to burn their bras.

i say give them what they want.

from this date forward all women at the age of 18 should have to sign up for selective service.

the physical and mental standards should remain the same as they have always been.

If any one of us men got drafted and hopped over into Canada we are labeled shameful draft dodgers... why shouldn't a woman have to live with the same choices and decisions?

I think from a perspective of discrimination - I'll have to insist on equality.

soopaman2 02-09-12 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kraznyi_oktjabr (Post 1836064)
I agree, fitness standards should be same. I have never been in military, they didn't accept me :( , but my brother served as NCO in Army. He told me about exercise during which company was ordered to move in squads as quick march to another position. There was one female soldier in my brother's squad who just wasn't strong enough for the job. Rest of the squad ended up carrying her equipment in addition of their own and even after that their movement took about 45 min longer than from other squads.

My brother, squad leader, wasn't very pleased.

In politically correct America, you will be labeled a sexist, and any valid point you made is automatically discounted.

That sarcastic comment aside I agree. My cousin and brother were both marines (My left leg is 2 inches shorter than my right, due to a car accident and substandard medical care given to uninsured 14 year olds from poor families, I walk with a permanent limp, they didn't let me in either)

I asked both their opinions on women serving alongside them, and they both agreed it is not a good idea.

Not out of sexist reasons, so hear us out.

In war, man is brought to the most primal of instincts, which explains the high amount of wartime rapes, throughout any war in history. Just look at how German women killed themselves to avoid the Russian army retaliations, or the rape of Nanking by Japanese soldiers.

Anything with a vagina would be nothing more than an impediment, yes that sounds incredibly mysogynistic, but it is not my intention. Men get extra sensitive over a woman falling in combat over another swinging "jimmy"

It sounds bad, I am having troubles articulating myself today. Not minimizing the woman warrior. Just trying to highlight the potential distraction to the male majority.

(no matter how I say it, I am an a-hole, it is not intentional, nor do I hate women, after all someone did marry me.)

CCIP 02-09-12 02:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by soopaman2 (Post 1836079)
In war, man is brought to the most primal of instincts, which explains the high amount of wartime rapes, throughout any war in history. Just look at how German women killed themselves to avoid the Russian army retaliations, or the rape of Nanking by Japanese soldiers.

Anything with a vagina would be nothing more than an impediment, yes that sounds incredibly mysogynistic, but it is not my intention. Men get extra sensitive over a woman falling in combat over another swinging "jimmy"

On the other hand, Soviet experience of women in combat in WWII frequently throws a wrench into this alleged historical inability of women to perform. Certainly not all women, and certainly not all of them were equally capable, but the Eastern Front provides many examples of women in WWII who fought on par and in some cases better than men. There are several exceptional cases of women as combat troops in front line units, as tank drivers, attack aircraft pilots. There are very large numbers of Soviet women who distinguished themselves as partisans and saboteurs, nurses and other frontline support troops, bomber pilots and air defense crews (i.e. these are roles they performed often, not rarely). There are also whole schools and units of women night bomber pilots and women snipers who, arguably, outperformed all-male units in the Soviet effort.

What does that say as a precedent, then?

There is, of course, the other side - the Soviet army was hardly a professional one (that is, it was a war emergency situation) and hardly dealt with political issues and rules in the same way as the modern-day US army does. But I think the difference here is one of motivation and politics, not necessarily ability. A woman who wants a US army career and social acceptance is probably not motivated by the same things as someone fighting for the survival of their country in a war emergency. It's nonsense to suggest that a woman in combat is always a liability, however. There are many historical cases where they proved themselves to be assets, rather, and the study of the Soviet WWII efforts shoots down a lot of these myths.

GoldenRivet 02-09-12 02:47 PM

Situation:

a unit is overrun and captured by an enemy force.

the unit has 2 female combatants and 15 male combatants.

the enemy soldiers separate the 2 females and any number of enemy soldiers proceed to rape them repeatedly in brutal fashion in view of the male combatants.

The senior military officer approaches the male combatants in their cell

"This can all stop if you just give us the information we want."

what happens?

Does someone talk at the expense of thousands of other soldiers?

Do the women talk to save themselves?

Knowing the vitality of the information you posses as one of the male combatants... would you feel more compelled to talk considering the torture of your colleague was especially heinous and unusual?

Either way the women and probably even the men involved are psychologically scarred - probably well beyond the normal psychological stress of war- for the rest of their lives.

an back to the draft situation.

Both of these girls are drafted:

http://trackandtrap.com/images/girl%...nter%20xcr.jpg

http://data.whicdn.com/images/139059...9440_large.jpg

which is more likely to be killed in the first 5 minutes of a deployment?

:rotfl2:

soopaman2 02-09-12 03:05 PM

CCIP sir. I see your point and am not minimizing the combat capibilities of a woman, war is a human instict. You are kinda comparing women defending the homeland to what I was comparing it to (imperialistic actions overseas, with no penalty to defeat, not like your losing your mother land), is women in aggressive combat situations far from home, for little sovereign gain to the agressors. (what is the US getting from Iraq and Afghanistan. China already bought the mineral fields we found in afghanistan.)

But the post below you by GoldenRivet illustrates my point, better than me.

What real man would let a woman be abused by savages, no matter how well trained they are, a mans paternal/protectionist instinct will take over, and can cost many lives in unecessary/vain bravado.

Please do not take me as being mysogynistic. But it is a fact men and women are built differently, it is this politically correct crap that forces us into eventual conundrums as GoldenRivet highlighted so well.

GoldenRivet 02-09-12 03:21 PM

regardless of the position one holds in the discussion... Human kind should try to rid itself of war... not search for new ways to add more people to it.

It is a costly endeavor - costly in life and capitol - and in the end it really accomplishes very little for the price.

MH 02-09-12 03:24 PM

Generally speaking i would not like my daughter to serve in combat field unit.

Have no problem with her doing just about anything else.
There are a lot of challenging things woman can do in armed forces.

CCIP 02-09-12 03:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GoldenRivet (Post 1836106)
regardless of the position one holds in the discussion... Human kind should try to rid itself of war... not search for new ways to add more people to it.

It is a costly endeavor - costly in life and capitol - and in the end it really accomplishes very little for the price.

Now that's a message I can get behind!

As far as women's rights and opportunities, I personally find it very unfortunate that all of this has ended up in political agendas and political correctness. There are definitely issues of discrimination to address, but the way in which they have been has in some ways made the situation worse. There is a difference between the language of opportunity and affirmative action, and I fear that because of politics much of this ends up slipping into the latter. Nothing new about military ranks being a field for political play, sadly.

RickC Sniper 02-09-12 03:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GoldenRivet (Post 1836091)

which is more likely to be killed in the first 5 minutes of a deployment?

:rotfl2:

That is a good post by you but I ask other questions.

Which of these two is more likely to get her squad mates killed?

If the weak get killed off the quickest is it or is it not actually beneficial to the rest? :hmm2:

soopaman2 02-09-12 03:33 PM

Is it any less noble for people to serve in aux roles?

My other cousin drove a truck for 3 years. He was just as important as the sniper in Tora Bora, or the tank commander in Tikrit.

This reeks of a gender based "pissing contest" which will end fast once the first videos surface of a pretty twenty-something female GI getting her head sawed off with a rusty knife on Liveleak.

It's ok when it is a male soldier or a journalist, lets see how you react when it is a pretty young female soldier. Let us see if that tugs at the heartstrings.

Actually I hope it happens, it might stir up the non fighting chickenhawks to stop stirring up wars on other people lives/dimes.

Or bring back the draft with no exemptions. That way, war would not be such an easy option for our fascist warmongering government. I want some congressmans sons to die in these endeavors, more than anything.

Stealhead 02-09-12 03:38 PM

In my experience in the USAF honestly the sex of the person made little difference there where woman that where just as good at the job which in my case was mechanical as any man.There where both men and women that where good and ones that sucked for one reason or another.As to the whole psychical strength part I think many only get half the picture there are plenty of males in the military that could not meet the requirements but simply had their buddy lie for them and say they did x amount of x in order to pass.I don't think it is a political thing to have allowed women in the military in fact after they stopped the draft and went to all volunteer they knew that they would not get enough males so they wisely choose back then to allow women to do 90% of the military jobs.

And to be honest the whole capture situation is silly to the truth is if they want to they will make you talk to some extent this fact was proven during Vietnam where most of the POWs did say something but you cant really blame them when you consider the things done to them.As a matter of fact they actually changed the code of conduct after Vietnam because some men died because they refused to talk and died from the torture the US military felt this was a waste of life because there was no information they could have given that would have been of much value.Also in the modern military only a very small amount of troops are ever in real danger so if your job is to be a mechanic or a radio operator something like this you are never going to see combat anyway.

The Soviets used so many women because they needed the manpower er human power that they provided modern armed forces have women for the same reason they need the manpower that they provide the US will never go back to the draft short of a world ending event occurring and there simply are not enough people willing to join the military as is right now women included to be honest if we did not have women right now wed have a much weaker military simple truth we need them like it or not.

"Or bring back the draft with no exemptions. That way, war would not be such an easy option for our fascist warmongering government. I want some congressmans sons to die in these endeavors, more than anything." that is never going to happen and you know it.


GoldenRivet has a nice idea ridding the world of war but we human beings have a long way to go before we get to that point if we ever do.

August 02-09-12 03:51 PM

My big problem with women in combat, aside from the strength limitations, is that a mixed gender combat force is a distracted combat force.

Our troops have enough to worry about in combat without adding sexual tension to the mix, and lets be honest, anytime you have a group of young men and women in close quarters there will be sexual tension and it will be a huge distraction.


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