Posted on 12/07/2004 4:36:16 PM PST by heye2monn
Air Force Academy Blamed for Sex Scandal Dec 7, 5:33 PM (ET) By JOHN J. LUMPKIN
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon's inspector general says a series of commanders at the Air Force Academy failed to recognize and deal with reports of sexual assaults against female cadets on campus, officials said Tuesday.
"We conclude that the overall root cause of the sexual assault problems at the Air Force Academy was the 'failure of successive chains of command over the past 10 years to acknowledge the severity of the problem,'" Inspector General Joseph E. Schmitz wrote in a Dec. 3 memo to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, quoting his own report.
"Consequently, they failed to initiate and monitor adequate corrective measures to change the culture until recently," Schmitz wrote.
Last year, nearly 150 women came forward with accusations that they had been sexually assaulted by fellow cadets between 1993 and 2003. Many alleged they were punished, ignored or ostracized by commanders for speaking out.
Schmitz's full report was not released. A summary blamed - but didn't name - eight Air Force officials for their roles in the program that oversaw sexual-assault reporting at the academy.
In a press conference, David Chu, undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, said the Pentagon would soon implement a new military-wide policy protecting the confidentiality of people who report being sexually assaulted.
"First and foremost, we want victims to come forward for help," Chu said.
Outside investigations concluded the culture of the academy created conditions that contributed to the problem. That included lingering resistance to having female cadets at all: Last year, a survey of cadets found 22 percent did not believe women belonged at the academy, more than a quarter of a century after they were first admitted.
Academy officials say matters have improved since the assaults came to light.
Schmitz's report said academy leaders should have been better role models and should have kept a closer watch on their commands.
The Air Force also released a second report, from its own inspector general, finding that formal investigations of sexual assault at the academy were generally handled properly.
Chu, however, said, "The problem is deeper than handling of individual cases."
Gen. Michael "Buzz" Moseley, the Air Force's vice chief of staff, noted that all senior leaders at the academy had been replaced since the allegations came to light.
The military has had to deal with sexual assault issues across the services.
In May, a Pentagon task force found that victims of rape and other forms of sexual assault in the military have too often suffered additionally from a lack of support from commanders, criminal investigators and doctors.
The report, ordered in February by Rumsfeld after a number of sexual assaults against soldiers in the Iraqi theater came to light, described inconsistencies throughout the military in the treatment and investigation of such assaults.
Bite me, groundpounder!
I may be mistaken, but I believe Mr. Rogers is a fighter pilot. But I could be wrong. Maybe I'm mistaking him for one of my old squadron buddies. That happens when one starts to get senile, you know. Rather condescending comment though, don't you think? I suppose not. You said it.
If we did not maintain air superiority over Iraq, your casual grunt gripes would be afforded some respect.
Huh?
But we do, so why are you groundpounders blaming airmen for your faults?
Sorry. I thought this was a discussion of the sexual harassment of Amazons in the military by Neanderthals, not groundpounders vs flyers...
Airmen have died over Iraqi skies for almost a decade before you groundpounders even got invited into the fight.
"Groundpounders" (I'll try not to use the word dismissively) have died in every war, as well as airmen.
Maybe I've missed something, but I can't recall any airmen dying over Iraq from Desert Storm to Iraqi Freedom. I can't remember anybody being "invited" into the fight, either. It seems most were "ordered". It was dangerous business to be sure. But I don't recall any shootdowns. Did I miss something?
Don't diss your superiors.
With an attitude like that, it's little wonder you are getting dissed by the gallant Mr Rogers.
...Excuse me. I think I just heard "second call" for the third ladder of our shuffleboard tournament. I must go now. I'll see you later if I can manage to get out of bed tomorrow the morning....
Lord have mercy on me, but you make a lot of valid points!
I guess all I am saying is that women should be able to prove their worth, same as men. If they measure up, great! If not, so be it. But they should not be treated as second class citizens or frowned upon as being "weak" simply because they are women. I have read every post up to now and have learned a lot. I appreciate every opinion. But may I ask you your honest opinion? Don't you think that these men that harrasss the women cadets do so because they feel a bit threatened? I'm just curious as to what your thoughts on this are, from a male perspective. Thanks!
"Get rid of the girls and the trouble will stop."
Hallelujah! You've solved the problem of rape. All we have to do to control men's aberrant behavior is to remove women from their society. Just think, if those girls who want to serve their country would just stay the heck out, those poor put-upon boys wouldn't be placed in situations where they're be forced to unzip their trousers and insert their penises into them. Oh wait, the Taliban have already tried that.
>
There is no evidence that their presence wins wars more effectively then if they were not there.
Much the same can be said of, say, Texans. Would you therefore want to keep Texans out of combat? And yes, I know Audie Murphy was a Texan, but heros are a military oddity who almost never make any difference in the outcome of the war.
>
Probably a legitimate question, but one tests hypotheses only after hypotheses are offered. No one ever suggested prohibiting Texans from combat positions would win wars more effectively.
On a battlefield women eat about the same amount of food but achieve a bayonet thrust force in foot pounds a great deal less than a man. It's clearly not an efficient concept, for infantry, and I suspect they are still prohibited from those positions.
Similar physical strength realities no doubt exist for loading ordinance on airplanes or repairing ship engines.
Given that the positions in question are officer positions, then one is faced with a woman in command of, perhaps, LODEO people who load bombs on airplanes -- but she is incapable of doing the same. Puts her in a difficult role as "leader". There will never be a lead by example possibility in that instance.
Much of this came about because women were assigned Human Resource jobs or various admin jobs and they did them well as officers. But then they found it hard to get promoted above a given level because their competition had combat experience.
This policy evolved to permit promotions. Not to win wars. Bad precedent.
"The problems, as you put it, did not exist until women were admitted to the academy. Therefore, logically, it appears that those who do not believe women should be at the academy have a valid point."
The racial problems of the South in the 60's did not exist until blacks started sitting at the front of the bus and at the same lunch counter as white folks. Therefore, logically, it appears that those who did not believe black folks belonged in such places had a valid point. Yeah, I think it sounds ridiculous, too, but it's your logic.
Nineteen year old guys have the hormones going wild and the girls are trying to take advantage of it and most likely doing it. Hey why is it that men have to accept them, draw them into they're social circle women don't bring the men into their social circles. The ladies might not be able to jump thru the hoop but can get the guys to do all day long.
In their traditional rolls they are fantastic. The medical and administrative, logistics, communications but they just ain't gonna be no pro tightend.
As Gritty points out (and you should have suspected from my post), I come from a fighter background - some 2500 hours worth. I'm now at the 21 year mark in my career. I don't dump on groundpounders, 'tho - spent 2 years as an ALO and have great respect for what the Army brings to the fight.
If we did not maintain air superiority over Iraq, your casual grunt gripes would be afforded some respect. But we do, so why are you groundpounders blaming airmen for your faults?
HUH? Where did I blame an airman for anything? If this is your idea of logic, you discredit all your arguements.
Airmen have died over Iraqi skies for almost a decade before you groundpounders even got invited into the fight.
I spent a lot of time over Iraq, and have been shot at - but I don't remember 10 years of us losing folks slying over Iraq. Must have happened on the other shift...
Don't diss your superiors.
I pray you aren't in the USAF. Doesn't sound like it - haven't met that many truly stupid airmen, and you have the attitude of a military wanna-be.
Gritty - thanks for the support.
Thanks for your perspective, sandviper. Gives me something to think about!
I agree 19 is old enough to be accountable. However, the statistics I heard in a 'sexual assualt' brief indicate the vast majority of these assaults occur when BOTH are drunk and when she invited him into her room.
Afterwards, she says it was assault and he says it was consensual. With the only two witnesses disagreeing, and with both admittedly very drunk at the time, what to do?
If you do nothing, you may well be allowing a man (and at 19, as you have pointed out, he is a man) to commit rape.
If you nail him, you may well be ruining his life for having sex with someone who wanted it at the time.
In Korea, the minimum drinking age has been raised recently to 21 for all military. Folks are briefed on the risks - for both sides (ie, don't take a drunk female back to her room without witnesses, and don't ask a guy to take you back to your room if you've been drinking).
Of course, the first sign you've had too much is you don't know you've had too much.
Frankly, I don't care how provoked one of these guys might be by the sight of women failing to perform the same physical training as the men, but it's my tax dollars at work and I'm not investing them in his libido!
This sort of thing is a fraud on the public treasury. Best thing we can do for these fellows, and any like them who come along thinking it's a free feel and a free feed at the public trough, is to stuff them in the county jail for 6 months to 2 years!
Col. Laurie Sue Slavec (pictured, left) made her comments to an air force investigator looking into allegations from female cadets who said leadership at the academy was indifferent to their claims that they were sexually assaulted. They said that in some cases, leaders punished the purported victim for violating academy rules.
Portions of the interview transcript were among the thousands of pages of documents released this week by the Air Force investigative panel.
"Partying is encouraged and partying is a ticket to the acceptance community and partying becomes an environment and you introduce alcohol into that which then dilutes the judgments, then sexual assault becomes an issue," Slavec said. "I've never been party to or witnessed somebody who was ... taken by force, which if you look at that end of the spectrum, a true rape or a true violent assault, I've never seen that happen."
She said in the cases she was aware of, there was "contributing flirtatious activity."
The arguements about coed service withstanding, rapists are rapists. There is no blame here - when a woman says no she means it.
I think the business of "a commander should never ask his people to do what he can't do himself" is basically macho nonsense. Every major commander routinely bosses thousands of people whose jobs he can't do; a very senior Army officer, for instance, doesn't have anything like the physical strength his young troops do. For that matter, he probably can't type nearly as well as his clerk-typist can, or cook for 200 like the staff in his chow hall.
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