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- <text id=93TT1653>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: Annie Get Your Gun
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARMED FORCES, Page 38
- Annie Get Your Gun
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Under new Pentagon rules, females will be permitted to fly
- combat planes and serve on warships at sea
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--Reported by Nancy Traver and Bruce van
- Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> At the infamous 1991 Tailhook convention in Las Vegas,
- when male Navy officers and reservists were not assaulting
- frightened women or drinking from the navels of cooperative
- ones, they took part in a series of professional seminars. A
- female naval officer asked a panelist at one such session when
- women would be permitted to fly combat airplanes. Her question
- drew hisses and boos and the call "We don't want women!" from
- the audience. The senior officer on the panel, an admiral,
- treated it as a joke by ducking under the table.
- </p>
- <p> Female officers insisted those assaults and jeers at
- Tailhook were two forms of the manhandling that would go on
- until the second-class status of women in the Navy was ended.
- To get respect and a fair chance at promotions, they said, they
- would have to be allowed to serve on warships and fly jet
- fighters and bombers. "Women will never make it into the Star
- Trek generation," said Lieut. Paula Coughlin, who exposed the
- Tailhook scandal, "until they're given equal opportunity to do
- the jobs open only to men."
- </p>
- <p> The path to the stars, especially those worn on uniforms,
- was opened last week. Defense Secretary Les Aspin ordered all
- the services to remove restrictions on women flying combat
- aircraft and said he would ask Congress to lift the ban on women
- serving aboard warships at sea. The change has long been visible
- on the horizon, but it was hurried along by a Navy eager to do
- something to smooth the choppy wake left by its official report
- on Tailhook. As the damaging document was readied for release
- two weeks ago, Navy brass quietly assured servicewomen at the
- Penta gon that, as one put it, "something was coming up soon
- that we would really like."
- </p>
- <p> Aspin called the new role for women "historic." There are
- only about 800 female pilots in uniform now, so the number of
- women combat flyers will be relatively low for some time--a
- few hundred out of more than 41,000 pilots in all the services.
- It is still a dramatic departure in American society and its
- armed forces. The new era was symbolized at Aspin's Pentagon
- press conference by Air Force Captain Sharon Preszler, 28, a
- soft-spoken strawberry blond. "I can be a killer," she said
- firmly. "I can and will kill in defense of my country."
- </p>
- <p> That vision, of America's mothers and daughters going into
- battle and coming back maimed or in body bags, was precisely
- what traditionalist commanders had fought against for so long.
- Just last month, the Air Force Chief of Staff, General Merrill
- McPeak, told a group of female officers, "I think it is a
- mistake to open up bombers and fighters to women. I have a
- culturally based hang-up. I can't get over this image of old men
- ordering young women into combat." Elaine Donnelly, president
- of the Center for Military Readiness in Livonia, Michigan,
- blasted the Administration after last week's announcement,
- accusing Bill Clinton of preparing "to order the nation's
- daughters into killing zones and rape motels which he himself
- avoided."
- </p>
- <p> The general and the country were in fact overtaken by
- events. Whatever the rules may have said, 40,000 American women
- went to war in Operation Desert Storm as technicians, drivers,
- tanker and helicopter pilots and dozens of other hazardous
- occupations. Some were killed, some were captured, some earned
- Purple Hearts. "That was the defining moment for women in
- combat," says one of Aspin's senior aides. "All the old bugaboos
- were met and proved no big deal."
- </p>
- <p> "Women in combat is no longer a question," says Air Force
- Captain Sandy Kearney, who flew a C-141 cargo plane in the gulf.
- "We've already been there." Other Desert Storm veterans agree
- that women have proved that they can operate in combat as well
- as men. "War is not a hormonal event," says Major Rhonda
- Cornum, an Army flight surgeon who was shot down, wounded and
- captured by the Iraqis. "It is a profession with discipline."
- </p>
- <p> Although older officers still resist the idea of serving
- alongside women in combat, many younger male pilots thought the
- move was overdue. Women have long been handling difficult
- assignments in heavy transport planes and refueling tankers with
- great skill and professionalism. Navy Lieut. Michael Pocker
- flies helicopters along with women pilots at North Island Naval
- Air Station in San Diego. "We've been doing it for eight years,"
- Pocker remarks. "It works. The standards for men and women are
- the same, period."
- </p>
- <p> But there are standards, and there are double standards.
- On Navy supply and repair ships where women have been serving
- for years, male and female sailors privately talk about the
- subtle daily tensions. Men don't want women aboard; women say
- they aren't accepted. Men say the women are slackers who can't
- or won't do the hard, greasy work; women say they have to work
- twice as hard to get half as much recognition. Men only
- grudgingly take orders from women; women say they have to prove
- themselves every day on board and any mistake they make reflects
- on all women. Women complain of sexual harassment; men complain
- that officers favor women over men.
- </p>
- <p> "A lot of men in the Navy think women belong in the
- kitchen and pregnant," says Petty Officer 3rd Class James
- Guillory, aboard the U.S.S. San Diego. He says he favors greater
- opportunities for women--but that his wife does not. "She
- worries about me going to sea with women," he says. "She doesn't
- worry about what I'll do; she worries about what they'll try to
- do to me."
- </p>
- <p> If the services still want to bar women from certain jobs,
- they will have to provide official explanations of why and
- receive special approval. The Navy is likely to try to keep
- women off submarines and amphibious assault craft, mainly
- because of privacy. Its support ships have been reconfigured to
- provide separate bunk space and toilets for the 8,900 women
- already on sea duty, but submarines and some other ships are too
- cramped for this to work well. Even so, the number of women at
- sea will double or triple.
- </p>
- <p> The issue of women in combat is still not entirely
- resolved. Before Aspin's order went out, about half the 1.75
- million slots in the armed forces were closed to the 201,000
- women in uniform because they could not serve in combat units.
- Under the new rules, they are still ineligible for about 40% of
- the slots. The reason: those assignments are in "combat arms"
- of Army and Marine ground forces, mainly infantry, armored units
- and artillery. While a few slots might open up for women in
- missile artillery, no one is talking about putting women into
- tanks or foxholes. A reporter last week asked General Gordon
- Sullivan, the Army Chief of Staff, if he would favor women
- "hitting the beach." Sullivan replied, "No."
- </p>
- <p> In fact very few women are calling for the chance to
- become a grunt. "Nobody is pressuring us on this count," says
- a Defense official. Women Air Force and Navy pilots are
- officers, eager to rise through the ranks to senior command.
- Combat units in the Army and Marines are made up mostly of
- enlisted personnel without the same opportunities. Some women
- do argue that any female who meets the physical requirements for
- combat units should be able to volunteer, but there is no sign
- of a ground swell. Captain Melea Riley, who commands a training
- battalion including both men and women at Fort Jackson, South
- Carolina, says, "I have never come across a woman who said she
- would like to be in a combat infantry unit." Cornum, the
- bemedaled flight surgeon, now back at Fort Rucker, Alabama,
- confirms that. "Personally," she says, "I've never met a woman
- who wanted to be in the infantry."
- </p>
- <p> Last week's decision does open the door to another
- intriguing debate--about the draft. The Supreme Court ruled
- in 1981 that women were excluded from registration because any
- reinstated draft would be intended to increase the pool of
- people available for combat. Now that combat planes and ships
- are open to women, might they be considered part of the
- available personnel pool in a major conflict? The Pentagon says
- that for now it has no plans to ask for any changes in the
- Selective Service system.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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