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Reproductive Justice and Gender

At War With Ourselves: Battling Sexual Violence in the Military

By Dana Goldstein, RH Reality Check. Posted April 21, 2008.


U.S. servicewomen are more likely to be raped by a fellow soldier than killed by enemy fire. It's time we dealt with this national disgrace.
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The prevalence of sexual violence against American women fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan is a national shame.

U.S. servicewomen today are more likely to be raped by a fellow soldier than killed by enemy fire. At some Veterans Affairs hospitals, over 40 percent of female patients report having been sexually assaulted during their service, and almost one-third are survivors of rape.

Here in the States, a 2006 investigation by the Associated Press found that more than 100 high school-aged women were sexually assaulted or raped by male military recruiters. "Women were raped on recruiting office couches, assaulted in government cars and groped en route to entrance exams," the AP reported. Many recruiters found guilty of sexually assaulting women faced only administrative punishments, while a recruiter who molested teenage boys was sentenced to 12 years in prison.

These horrific statistics don't even take into account the experiences of American women working for government contractors in Iraq. A recent Nation magazine investigation by reporter Karen Houppert told the story of Lisa Smith (a pseudonym), who was gang-raped in Iraq this past January while working for Kellogg Brown & Root, the former Halliburton subsidiary. Houppert writes:

That dawn, naked, covered in blood and feces, bleeding from her anus, [Smith] found a US soldier she did not know lying naked in the bed next to her: his gun lay on the floor beside the bed, she could not rouse him and all she could remember of the night before was screaming and screaming as the soldier anally penetrated her while a colleague who worked for defense contractor KBR held her hand -- but instead of helping her, as she had hoped, he jammed his penis in her mouth.

Over the next few weeks Smith would be told to keep quiet about the incident by a KBR supervisor. The camp's military liaison officer also told her not to speak about what had happened, she says.

This brutal crime -- and KBR's subsequent cover-up -- are far from isolated events. Jamie Leigh Jones, who alleges that employees of KBR/Halliburton gang-raped her in Iraq in 2005, founded a non-profit to advocate for women who were assaulted while working as military contractors abroad. Jones' group is working with 40 victims. And a single Texas law firm is representing 15 women with sexual harassment, assault, rape, or retaliation (for reporting a sexual assault) claims against Halliburton and its affiliates.

Some will look at the breadth of the U.S. military's sexual assault problem and conclude that women should not be serving in combat zones. But that ignores the real and impressive achievements of female soldiers, who've stepped up as never before during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, in large part due to the growing obsolescence of the military's ban on women serving at the "front lines." Last month, Monica Lin Brown, an Army medic from Texas, became only the second woman since World War II to receive a Silver Star. During a roadside bombing attack, Brown saved the lives of wounded soldiers, running through insurgent gunfire to shield them from attack.

So how can we respect women's military service while simultaneously helping them fight a culture that puts them at serious risk of sexual harassment, assault, and rape? Here are some practical policy solutions:

1. Increase the DOD's rate of prosecution of sexual harassment, assault, and rape claims. As Congresswoman Jane Harman wrote in a Los Angeles Times op-ed last week, outside of the military, 44 percent of reported rapes result in an arrest, and 64 percent of those arrests result in a trial. But inside the military, only about eight percent of reported sexual assaults and rapes lead to a court martial. Under pressure, the Department of Defense reluctantly agreed last year to create a Sexual Assault and Response Office. It must be held accountable and given wide latitude to create training programs that change the military's sexual culture. And every sexual assault victim who comes forward should be given an advocate to represent him or her through the process to a court martial.


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I'm horrified
Posted by: odie-wan on Apr 21, 2008 1:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm horrified at the level of sexual assualt against women in the military. This doesn't mean women don't belong in the military. It means there is something seriously wrong with the military culture that breeds such behaviour amongst its men.

How do these men justify their actions? How do they get through each day pretending to be honourable soldiers and men when they've committed such abominable actions? I shudder to think that men like that are out there.

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It's Time To Dismantle The Military
Posted by: LMNOP on Apr 21, 2008 4:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America doesn't need a military. Most countries in the world don't have a military that could defend their borders, nor do they need one.

The US uses its military improperly. That military has killed, maimed, burned, and psychologically deformed millions of people since 1945 with barely a positive contribution to the world to offset that.

This article is about the rape of its own women. Another one this morning is about a mother whose son is about to go off to Iraq to fight for Exxon and Halliburton and make more enemies for the United States.

If we didn't have a military, we probably wouldn't have any enemies or any need for defense.

It's not that there aren't arguments for a military. It's just that America can't be trusted with a military any more than it can be trusted with a death penalty.

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Uniform Code of Military Justice
Posted by: Crazy H on Apr 21, 2008 4:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
920. ART. 120. RAPE AND CARNAL KNOWLEDGE

(a) Any person subject to this chapter who commits an act of sexual intercourse with a female not his wife, by force and without consent, is guilty of rape and shall be punished by death or such other punishment as a court-martial may direct.


Emphasis mine. While I tend towards disarmament for rapists, who I am to argue with the UCMJ?

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The punishment for raping a male
Posted by: Cathyblj on Apr 24, 2008 1:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is always more severe than for raping a female. An imprisoned child molester is safe from attack from other prisoners if he "only" raped/molested girls, but if his victims were boys, he is in serious danger. Why? Because the attackers fear he could molest them. But attacking girls - well, that's "normal."

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Why disguise the percentages, give me the numbers.
Posted by: Andrew_S on Apr 24, 2008 2:51 PM   
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Anyone have numbers, We always seem to hear harridan style rhetoric from VAWA afficiado's and patriarchal feminists. Give me the numbers, I suppose as always 40% of 0, is a fact. This shemale orientated number magic is no longer working on me. So come on, give me numeros, like let's have the truth, how many of those reporting rape were male and how many were female. That would equal how much percentage of what. Or shall we play political numbers, while people who believe in this country sacrifice, so that others can wallow in safety and fantasy.

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criminal element
Posted by: sophiej on Apr 29, 2008 1:51 PM   
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could this possibly have anything to do with the reported increased waivers to allow criminals to join the military?

can we ever expect our pundits and presidential candidates to talk about this and get away from jeremiah wright triva?

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