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News > Congressional commission studies women in combat |
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Capt. Angela Kimler, 816th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron pilot, conducts post-flight operations on a C-17 Globemaster III at an air base in Southwest Asia March 10, 2010. Captain Kimler was the aircraft commander during a flight with an all-female crew deployed from the 14th Airlift Squadron at Charleston Air Force Base, S.C. A congressionally mandated committee has been evaluating and assessing the role of women in combat. Their report is due in March. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Kasey Zickmund)
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Congressional commission studies women in combat
Posted 1/14/2011
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by Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service
1/14/2011 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- Defense Department officials will review the recommendations of a congressional commission studying the role of women in combat when the group's report is complete, a DOD official said Jan. 14.
Congress established the Military Leadership Diversity Commission as part of the 2009 National Defense Authorization Act. The commission's task is to evaluate and assess policies that provide opportunities for promotion and advancement of minority members of the armed forces.
The commission's report, expected in March, will include the findings and conclusions of the commission as well as its recommendations for improving diversity within the armed forces.
"DOD will look at the recommendation and go from there," Pentagon spokesman Marine Corps Col. Dave Lapan said. "We'll see what the nature of the report is when it's done."
Congress repealed the combat exclusion laws in the January 1994 National Defense Authorization Act, but requires the services to submit proposed changes to existing assignment policy to Congress for review, Colonel Lapan said.
"For example, when the Navy recently changed its policy to enable women to serve on submarines, that would go through that process," he said. "So the Navy would have to inform Congress it was going to make a change."
The Marine Corps also triggered congressional review when it opened some intelligence positions to women, Colonel Lapan said, but female Marines serving on engagement teams in Afghanistan are in line with department policy on women's assignments.
Colonel Lapan said the U.S. military currently prohibits women from serving in combat units below the brigade level. The Marine women on engagement teams are not assigned to combat units, but are augmenting them for a specific mission, he said.
"Part of the reason to do that was because the infantry battalions that were out there didn't have any women, because they couldn't," he explained.
Women make up 14.6 percent of the active duty military. By service, the percentage ranges from 7.5 percent in the Marine Corps to 19.2 percent in the Air Force, according to statistics compiled by the Women in Military Service for America Foundation. |
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