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Female prisoners of war: feminism's triump?
TownHall.com ^ | Monday, March 31, 2003 | by Rich Lowry

Posted on 03/31/2003 9:41:03 AM PST by JohnHuang2

The captured American Army Specialist Shoshana Johnson, by all accounts, had no intention of becoming a feminist icon.

A note of unseemly glee has greeted the tragedy of her falling into the hands of the Iraqis, as if to say, "Look, women can be prisoners of war, too!" The New York Times ran an editorial titled "The Pinking of the Armed Forces," hailing Johnson's capture a reminder of how the American military has evolved, slowly and sometimes reluctantly, into an organization where the dangerous jobs of war are performed by both sexes."

One can only wait for other leaps ahead in social mores, like seeing American women gassed, pulverized by tank rounds and sniped at in block-to-block urban warfare.

Johnson is the victim of a feminist revolution that swept the military in the mid-1990s. As part of the backlash against the frat-boy excesses of the Tailhook Convention of 1991, critics of the male-dominated military pried open direct-combat positions, in aviation and the Navy, for women.

Ground combat was still taboo -- but barely. In 1994, President Clinton's Secretary of Defense Les Aspin relaxed the definition of "direct-ground combat," removing "inherent risk of capture" as one of the considerations. And he axed the Risk Rule that barred women from combat-support units that would encounter some of the same threats as direct-combat units.

"The new policy," crowed a Defense Department press release at the time, "means that women will no longer be excluded from military specialties simply because the jobs are dangerous." Feminists hailed the change for opening tens of thousands of new positions to women.

One of the major potential problems with the 1994 definition was obvious, and identified in a 1998 General Accounting Office report: The "definition of direct combat links these [combat] tasks to a particular location on the battlefield -- 'well forward.' In making this link, the definition excludes battlefields that may lack a clearly defined forward area."

Precisely like the battlefield in Iraq. Johnson, a single mom, joined the military with no thought of encountering the enemy. She signed up to get cooking experience. Unfortunately, women like her were now to be afforded "an equal opportunity" to get captured on the battlefield.

"Since soldiers must do what they are told," Elaine Donnelly of the Center for Military Readiness writes, "the young mother was 'cross-trained' for a maintenance unit in support of the infantry." Two women were captured with the 507th Maintenance Company: Johnson, and 19-year-old supply clerk Jessica Lynch, fate unknown.

Johnson's aunt has expressed understandable surprise that she wasn't safe somewhere in Kuwait: "I was really shocked. I thought that she was going to be doing something in the background, you know, the cooking does not take you to where she ended up being."

Male prisoners can be abused, but aren't vulnerable in the way women are. Women get raped, a crime that any civilized society considers particularly horrific.

One of the two female POWs in the first Gulf War was sexually abused immediately upon her capture (she had two broken arms at the time). The other has never publicly talked about what might have happened to her.

There is something odd about the same feminists who, rightly, make campaigning against rape one of their highest priorities applauding the fact that American women -- who might, like Johnson, have no idea of what they were signing up for -- have been put in danger of terrible abuse in Iraq.

There is a reason that almost all societies in human history -- with a few exceptions, like the desperate, and brutal, Red Army in World War II -- have avoided putting their women in danger of falling into enemy hands. Because the consequences are too awful to contemplate.

In contemporary America, however, the paradigm of gender equality trumps all. The tide runs so strong that it might well be impossible to reinstate the Risk Rule. Feminists can savor that victory. They shouldn't pretend that they have done Shoshana Johnson any favors.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: femalepows; feminism; iraqifreedom; pows; womenincombat
Monday, March 31, 2003

Quote of the Day by Texas Eagle

1 posted on 03/31/2003 9:41:03 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
A little sanity.
2 posted on 03/31/2003 9:43:59 AM PST by wideawake (Support our troops and their Commander-in-Chief)
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To: JohnHuang2
I am against women in combat roles, so I welcome this article. However, a little perspective is need here. Shoshana Johnson was not a soldier, she was a cook. Her capture was no different than if she had been a nurse who got ambushed.
3 posted on 03/31/2003 10:05:02 AM PST by WaveThatFlag
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To: JohnHuang2
She was a real eschelon troop who got caught up in the fluid front line..

The main troops moving so fast blow through the Iraqi lines that collapse behind them..

As the support troops move up...they sometimes get caught in the collapsing lines

We needed more troops imo to pacify the areas behind the big push..

The support troops also got lost and instead of skirting the towns that were isolated islands of reisitance (the enemy isnt able to fall back to support Baghdad...so they were bypassed)

Had the support personnel followed the main force they would have been ok..

They got confused in the fog of war and a bad sandstorm and wandered into one of these unsecured areas..

Kinda like the glee club from White Folks Bay wandering into the south side of Chi town after midnight

I agree the women should have been left behind until after the area is secured if only for what we know muslims will do to female personned in US military uniforms..

Look what they do to their own...
4 posted on 03/31/2003 10:47:16 AM PST by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: JohnHuang2
triump?

**Rich Lowry, Editor**

How's your spelling these days, Rich?
5 posted on 03/31/2003 10:52:09 AM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: WaveThatFlag
Madam: cooks -- who happen to be single moms -- don't do convoys through enemy territory until the coast is clear.

I suggest we immediately send Kate Michelman [NARAL}, Molly Yard,[NOW] Gloria Steinham [MS Magazine], Hillary, Fay Clayton [Planned Parenthood] , Eleanor Smeal [Feminist Majority] et al to be cooks for the 101st Airborne.
6 posted on 03/31/2003 11:19:07 AM PST by victim soul
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To: JohnHuang2
I've said before, and been flamed for, saying that the feminist movement is a psychotic disease that thrives off of making women miserable rather than building them up.
The feminist movement has done more to make women mere sexual objects than any man has done on his own. The feminist movement thrives off of women being raped, because they then scream about how they are being viewed more for their bodies rather than brains, and then they turn around and state that it's okay to have multiple partners and yet you can't say she's a tramp.
In short, and getting back to my point, they NEED the rapes and the abuse to justify their existence and continued activism.
7 posted on 03/31/2003 11:23:00 AM PST by Darksheare (Nox aeternus en pax.)
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To: victim soul
And don't forget good ole crybaby Patsy Schroeder, Dem. Colorado, who once it all got passed, didn't run again. The B____! I have daughters.
8 posted on 03/31/2003 1:33:49 PM PST by hadepe60
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To: hadepe60
Hey, how does Colonel Hilary Clinton sound. She could lead those post menapausal(sp) troops right into the thick of things. It would probably scatter the Republican Guard all over the desert trying to get away from the shrill screaming.
9 posted on 03/31/2003 1:45:37 PM PST by wheels
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To: JohnHuang2
Previously posted.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/878602/posts

10 posted on 03/31/2003 10:25:09 PM PST by Dajjal
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