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Keyword: militarywomen

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  • Pentagon moves to let women in Navy serve on submarines

    02/24/2010 12:04:39 PM PST · by kingattax · 27 replies · 696+ views
    Boston Globe/AP ^ | February 24, 2010 | Anne Gearan
    WASHINGTON - The Pentagon seeks to lift a decades-old policy that prohibits women from serving aboard Navy submarines, part of a gradual reconsideration of women’s roles in a military fighting two wars whose front lines can be anywhere. At issue is the end of a policy that kept women from serving aboard the last type of ship off-limits to them. The thinking behind the previous policy was that the close quarters aboard subs would make coed service difficult to manage. Defense Secretary Robert Gates notified Congress in a letter signed Friday that the Navy intends to repeal the ban on...
  • Navy to Lift Ban on Women Serving Aboard Subs

    02/24/2010 1:04:01 PM PST · by Bulldawg Fan · 58 replies · 1,247+ views
    aol.com ^ | Feb 24, 2010 | Mara Gay
    The military isn't asking, it's telling. In a letter to Congress last week, Defense Secretary Robert Gates notified lawmakers that women will be allowed to serve on submarines for the first time in the Navy's 110-year history, ABC News reported. Congress has 30 days to pass a law to stop or delay the policy, but if it remains silent, women could be aboard Navy submarines in 18 months. The lifting of the ban removes one of the last glass ceilings for women in the military. Unless Congress steps in, women could be serving on Navy submarines for the first time...
  • Let women work on subs, Navy secretary says

    09/24/2009 10:20:38 PM PDT · by Nachum · 41 replies · 1,604+ views
    usatoday.com ^ | 9/24/09 | William H. McMichael and Andrew Scutro, Navy Times
  • Pentagon to Allow Women to Serve Aboard Navy Submarines

    02/23/2010 4:57:11 PM PST · by Bottom_Gun · 76 replies · 1,381+ views
    The Pentagon will lift a decades-old policy that prohibits women from serving aboard Navy submarines. WASHINGTON -- The Pentagon has moved to lift a decades-old policy that prohibits women from serving aboard Navy submarines, part of a gradual reconsideration of women's roles in a military fighting two wars whose front lines can be anywhere. At issue is the end of a policy that kept women from serving aboard the last type of ship off-limits to them. The thinking was that the close quarters aboard subs would make coed service difficult to manage. Defense Secretary Robert Gates notified Congress in a...
  • US Navy lifts ban on women in submarines: officials

    02/23/2010 4:37:04 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 85 replies · 1,416+ views
    AFP ^ | 2/23/2010 | AFP
    The US navy has decided to allow women to serve on submarines, Pentagon officials said on Tuesday, ending one of the last all-male bastions in the American military. Defense Secretary Robert Gates approved the recommendation and sent letters to Congress on Monday informing lawmakers of the plan, officials said. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus and Admiral Gary Roughead, chief of naval operations, had briefed Gates on the change and "he's endorsed it and sent it on to Congress," press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters. Lawmakers have 30 days to comment on the move before it goes into effect, officials said. American...
  • Exclusive: Navy to Lift Ban on Women Serving Aboard Submarines

    02/23/2010 11:15:53 AM PST · by SloopJohnB · 101 replies · 2,231+ views
    ABC News ^ | February 23, 2010 | DAVID KERLEY and LUIS MARTINEZ
    Women are a big step closer to serving on U.S. Navy submarines. ABC News has learned that the Navy has decided to lift the ban on female submarine crew members. Subs are one of the last places in the military from which women are excluded.
  • Mothers in Combat Boots

    02/18/2010 8:14:17 AM PST · by AreaMan · 20 replies · 622+ views
    Hoover Institute ^ | Feb-Mar 2010 | Mary Eberstadt
    February & March 2010Table of ContentsFeatures:Mothers in Combat Boots By Mary EberstadtReassessing a military policy font-size: 300%; float: left; color: #000000; font-family: sabon,garamond,serif; In november 2009, one of the uglier fruits of the current practice of seeding mothers into the American military burst briefly onto the national stage. Ordered to Afghanistan from Hunter Army Airfield in Georgia, an Army cook named Alexis Hutchinson refused to go. A 21-year-old single mother, she explained that there was no one to care for her infant son because initial plans to leave him with her own mother had fallen through. What happened next should...
  • Gender Shock

    02/13/2010 2:02:27 AM PST · by myknowledge · 7 replies · 526+ views
    Strategy Page ^ | February 12, 2010
    The United States Veterans Administration (VA), despite over half a century of experience in taking care of veterans, suddenly finds itself in unknown territory. That's because the last decade has produced, for the first time, a large number of female combat veterans. There are nearly a quarter million of them, including over 5,000 receiving disability benefits (for injuries received in combat, or non-combat, operations). The female veterans do not respond to the stresses of military service, or the physical injuries, the same way as men do. This has forced the VA to adapt, or at least try to. For example,...
  • Army discharges single mom who wouldn't deploy

    02/11/2010 3:08:23 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 93 replies · 2,272+ views
    SFGate.com ^ | 2/11/10 | Henry Lee
    A single mother from Oakland has been discharged from the Army for refusing to leave her infant son behind to go to Afghanistan, but she will not be court-martialed, her attorney said Thursday. Alexis Hutchinson, 21, had faced criminal charges at a court-martial for refusing to accompany her unit when it deployed in November. Although that is no longer a prospect, Hutchinson has been demoted from specialist to private and will lose all military and veteran benefits, said her attorney, Rae Sue Sussman of San Francisco. She said Hutchinson had been given an other-than-honorable discharge. In a statement, Hutchinson said...
  • Women in Polish Army (PICTURE GALLERY)

    02/10/2010 4:22:26 AM PST · by lizol · 60 replies · 4,353+ views
    various
    Before After
  • First Female Black POW Speaks Out in Book

    02/05/2010 6:12:09 PM PST · by Redcitizen · 140 replies · 2,613+ views
    cbs ^ | WASHINGTON, Feb. 3, 2010 | unknown
    (AP) Shoshana Johnson survived gunshot wounds to both legs and 22 days as a prisoner of war in Iraq. Life wasn't so easy when she came home, either. In a new book out this week, the 37-year-old single mother describes mental health problems related to her captivity and tells how it felt to play second fiddle in the media to fellow POW Jessica Lynch, who was captured in the same ambush. "It was kind of hurtful," the former Army cook said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "If I'd been a petite, cutesy thing, it would've been different."
  • Pentagon to Offer Emergency Contraception to Military Bases Worldwide

    02/05/2010 9:48:25 AM PST · by BIOCHEMKY · 22 replies · 649+ views
    Fox News ^ | Feb. 4, 2010 | Justin Fishel & AP
    For the first time ever, the Pentagon is requiring military bases worldwide to offer the so-called morning-after pill. WASHINGTON - The Pentagon for the first time will require military bases worldwide to offer emergency contraception or the so-called morning-after pill, a military spokesman told Fox News Friday. The decision follows a recommendation by an independent panel of doctors and pharmacists in November, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said. The panel determined that emergency contraception should be added to the military's list of medications that must be stocked at each military facility. The decision represents a policy shift from the Bush administration...
  • Obama Admin Forces Military Hospitals to Stock Morning After Pill

    02/05/2010 9:38:05 AM PST · by julieee · 7 replies · 333+ views
    LifeNews.com ^ | February 5, 2010 | Steven Ertelt
    Obama Admin Forces Military Hospitals to Stock Morning After Pill Washington, DC -- Late Thursday, the Obama administration issued a new order for the U.S. military requiring all military hospitals and health centers to stock the morning after pill. The Department of Defense will soon begin having military medical facilities stock the Plan B drug, which can sometimes cause an abortion. http://www.lifenews.com/nat5967.html
  • Pentagon to offer emergency contraception abroad

    02/04/2010 7:41:41 PM PST · by Nachum · 8 replies · 262+ views
    Breitbart ^ | 2/4/10 | KIMBERLY HEFLING
    WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon for the first time will require military bases worldwide to offer emergency contraception or the so-called morning-after pill, a military spokeswoman said Thursday. The decision follows a recommendation by an independent panel of doctors and pharmacists in November, said Defense Department spokeswoman Cynthia Smith. The panel determined that emergency contraception should be added to the military's list of medications that must be stocked at each military facility.
  • 90 Year Old WASP Reflects on Her Aviation Past

    02/04/2010 3:22:56 AM PST · by 999replies · 2 replies · 262+ views
    Metrowest ^ | 999replies
    At 90, Anna Monkiewicz has a lifetime of stories and memories. The ones about flying start here. "My father had driven us over to see the planes take off and land" in Framingham, which, by the mid-1930s had two airfields: one at the Musterfield, used primarily for military planes, one for charter planes and flying lessons on Western Avenue near the Sherborn line. When she was a girl, there was also a small airfield in Natick, off Rte. 9, near the Wellesley line, the former Anna Flynn recalled.
  • Women Airforce Service Pilots to get Congressional Gold Medals

    01/24/2010 2:31:31 PM PST · by Jet Jaguar · 3 replies · 442+ views
    Stars and Stripes ^ | January 24, 2010 | By Nancy Bartley,
    SEATTLE — They were mavericks of their day, taking to the skies when the nation was at war and most women were at home caring for families. At a ceremony this spring, 11 Washington state women will join the 200-some surviving Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) in receiving Congressional Gold Medals for service during World War II. Sixteen more medals will be given to local WASPs posthumously. Congressional Gold Medals have been awarded nearly 150 times since the nation was born in 1776. The women join polio-vaccine inventor Dr. Jonas Salk and poet Robert Frost, as well as two other...
  • Royal Navy to allow women to serve on submarines

    01/03/2010 2:24:53 PM PST · by Free ThinkerNY · 34 replies · 1,329+ views
    dailymail.co.uk ^ | Jan. 3, 2010 | Daily Mail Reporter
    Women could soon be allowed to serve on Royal Navy submarines for the first time. Senior naval figures have opposed allowing women on subs due to the cramped conditions on board and the dangers posed by fumes inside the vessels to a foetus if a woman is pregnant. But a review of the ban was ordered last year following pressure from Labour figures keen to introduce full equal opportunities for women in the Armed Forces. The Royal Navy's new Astute attack submarines could easily be adapted to accommodate women and the Ministry of Defence has said that in the design...
  • In Iraq, soldier finds a new faith (Muslim converts to Catholic faith)

    12/27/2009 11:37:29 AM PST · by NYer · 18 replies · 1,044+ views
    Times Union ^ | December 27, 2009 | Paul Nelson
    1st Lt. Marjana Mair is confirmed as a Catholic at Tigris River Chapel in a ceremony presided over by Chaplain Maj. Tyson Wood. You could call it something of a religious trifecta for Marjana Mair. The soldier from Albany was among seven service members with the 1st Air Cavalry Brigade who just six days before Christmas were confirmed as Catholics while serving in Iraq. 1st Lt. Mair was also baptized and received her first communion.She was a Muslim for many years but wanted to become Catholic after studying the faith."I grew up (Muslim) for 18 years, but when I...
  • Pregnancy Equals Prison for US Troops in Iraq

    12/22/2009 2:21:55 PM PST · by BobMcCartyWrites · 27 replies · 857+ views
    Bob McCarty Writes ^ | 12/22/09 | Bob McCarty
    Early last month, Army Maj. Gen. Tony Cucolo (left) issued General Order #1 as a means of informing those assigned to his Multi-National Division North (a.k.a., "Task Force Marne") that becoming pregnant -- or assisting in the effort -- is one of several types of conduct deemed "prejudicial to the maintenance of good order and discipline" among members of the 22,000-strong task force headquartered in Tikrit, Iraq. In fact, it ranks alongside alcohol, drugs, guns and similar vices on the general's list of prohibited activities.
  • Exclusive: General Backs Off on Court Martials for Pregnant Soldiers

    12/22/2009 8:41:51 AM PST · by BradtotheBone · 36 replies · 993+ views
    ABC News ^ | Dec. 22, 2009 | LUIS MARTINEZ and SARAH NETTER
    An Army general in Iraq backed away from his threat today to court martial female soldiers who get pregnant. "I see absolutely no circumstance where I would punish a female soldier by court martial for a violation ... none," Maj. Gen. Anthony Cucolo III wrote to ABC News in an exclusive statement. " I fully intend to handle these cases through lesser disciplinary action." Cucolo triggered debate, some of it angry, when his Nov. 4 policy forbidding pregnancy among his soldiers became public recently. His policy statement said violation of the rule could be punishable by court martial, and that...