Mac45 | April 27, 2016 at 10:59 am
By Rowan Scarborough
- The Washington Times
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Two years ago, Army Gen.
Martin E. Dempsey, the nation’s top military officer, laid down an edict on
the Obama administration’s plan to open
direct land combat jobs to women: If women cannot meet a standard, senior
commanders better have a good reason why it should not be lowered.
Today, the “Dempsey rule” appears to
have its first test case.
The Marine Corps just finished research
to see if female officers could successfully complete its rigorous Infantry
Officer Course.
An IOC diploma is a must to earn the designation of infantry officer. Of 29
women who tried, none graduated; only four made it through the first day’s
combat endurance test.
Corps public affairs said it did not have the data on which tasks proved the
toughest for women. But one particularly demanding upper-body strength test is
climbing a 25-foot rope with a backpack full of gear. A candidate who cannot
crawl to the top fails the test.
Traditionalists see the 0-29 performance as a call to arms by those inside the
Pentagon who are determined to have significant numbers of women in the
infantry. They are on the lookout for standards they believe are no longer
relevant in today’s battlefield.
“The pressure is on the services from the White House’s politically correct
crowd vis-a-vis Obama’s Pentagon appointees, who will force the services to
accept degraded standards,” said Robert Maginnis, a retired Army officer and
author of the book “Deadly Consequences: How Cowards Are Pushing Women Into
Combat.”
In January 2013, then-Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta and Gen. Dempsey, the Joint Chiefs chairman,
appeared in the Pentagon press room to make a historic announcement. They had
lifted the rule that prevented women from serving in direct ground combat, such
as infantry, special operations, artillery and armor.
The cancellation began a far-reaching process by each military branch to
evaluate female candidates and the standards they must meet. The giant study is
scheduled to end in January, when Defense Secretary Ashton Carter will decide
which, if not all, occupations will be opened. If a service — the Marine Corps, for example — decides
infantry should remain closed, it must prove why its standards cannot be
lowered.
Gen. Dempsey laid down the law this way:
“If we do decide that a particular standard is so high that a woman couldn’t
make it, the burden is now on the service to come back and explain to the
secretary, why is it that high? Does it really have to be that high?”
On its face, the Corps might encounter
stiff opposition to maintaining its officer standards in light of the fact
women have passed enlisted infantry school, albeit a less-demanding course.
Gender neutrality
Dakota Wood, a retired Marine Corps
officer and an analyst at The Heritage Foundation, said the Corps has to be prepared for a bureaucratic
fight.
“I personally think there will be people in the administration, both in the executive and
appointees in DOD, who will pressure the Corps,
seeking the opening of all occupational fields to women,” Mr. Wood said. “My
hope is that Marine Corps leadership are
able to rationally justify current standards and hold to them.
“If the standards are arbitrary, they won’t hold up to scrutiny. But I believe
the Corps has decades of experience on
which to base requirements.”
He added: “It certainly hasn’t been an issue to have high failure rates for men
all these years. Any argument to lower the standards just to accommodate women
would have to be justified based on how such a change improves combat
effectiveness in the infantry.”
In the last Marine IOC class, nine of 90 male candidates failed to finish.
Elaine Donnelly, who directs the Center for Military Readiness and has issued
papers arguing against women in direct land combat, said all standards for
special operations, Army infantry and the Marines are “very much in jeopardy.”
“Over time, and it wouldn’t be long, the ‘Dempsey
rule’ would apply, meaning, ‘If it’s too hard for women, it’s probably too
hard,’” she said.
Capt. Maureen Krebs, a Marine Corps
spokeswoman, said the ongoing review of standards is a double-check to make
sure each one is specific to a particular job, is relevant to the operation and
is “gender-neutral” — meaning each one must be the same for men and women.
“We’re looking at all of our standards for the ground combat arms right now to
ensure that they hit all three of those requirements,” she said.
‘Different expectations’
The Corps is just not looking at
officers. It also sent 350 enlisted women, fresh from boot camp, through the
Infantry Training Battalion Course at the School of Infantry in North Carolina.
Of those, about 120 completed the course, meaning that if the infantry were now
open to women, they would be on that career path.
The fact that so many women could pass the enlisted program points out the
difficulty of the Infantry Officer Course.
“The main reason enlisted women made it through has to do with the ITB course
itself,” Mrs. Donnelly said. “It is not the equal of the IOC. Not even close.
There has to be a big difference, because officers have the responsibility to
lead others into battle.”
The Marine Corps says the ITB women did
the same tasks as the men. But Mrs. Donnelly is skeptical. She points to
documents the Corps submitted to
Congress in 2013 that said women are allowed to do fewer pullups than men in
the basic physical fitness tests. It’s called “gender norming” to account for
male-female physiological differences.
Capt. Krebs said the basic physical fitness tests are separate from standards
that must be met for a particular occupation, such as infantry, where women
must achieve the same as men.
As for why enlisted women could pass the ITB, she said, “There is a significant
difference between the Infantry Training Battalion Course and the Infantry
Officer Course,” noting that IOC is 86
days, about 30 more than the enlisted class.
“There are different expectations on Day One of our infantry officers versus
that basic rifleman who is out there who is supposed to know his job and his
job only, whereas the officer must know every single job and be the physical,
mental and moral leader of that unit,” she said.
She added: “The women and the men in all of our courses we have had women go
through with men — the women are [held] to the same exact standard as men. [In]
the Infantry Training Battalion they’re held to the same exact standard as the
men. [In] the IOC they’re held to the same exact standard as the men.”
Reluctant points of view
CBS News’ “60 Minutes” followed one female Marine on the 14-hour Combat
Endurance Test at Quantico, Virginia. On the hottest day of the summer, she
struggled through the obstacle course until it was time for the rope climb. She
tried three times but never reached the top.
Brig. Gen. George Smith, who is overseeing the Corps’ women-in-combat integration process,
told “60 Minutes” that the Corps sees no
reason to lower the standards.
“The realities of combat aren’t going to change based on gender,” he said.
Gen. Smith’s candor is striking in an institution that conservatives say is increasingly
politically correct under the Obama
administration.
Anna Simons, a professor of defense analysis at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate
School in Monterey, California, said she recently met with a group of officers
reluctant to share their women-in-combat views.
“Officers who balk at the idea of women serving in ground infantry units or on
Special Forces Operational Detachments Alpha (ODAs) won’t publicly say so, let
alone publicly explain why,” she wrote April 15 at WarOnTheRocks.com, a forum
for national security commentary. “They worry about retaliation that could hurt
their careers. In contrast, those who have no reservations — usually because
they won’t be the ones who have to deal with the fallout from integration at
the small unit level — slough off the challenge as just another minor problem
or ‘ankle biter.’”
The Marine Corps had hoped to attract
about 90 to 100 female volunteers to the IOC. It found 27, plus two women who,
as prospective ground intelligence officers, were required to pass the infantry
course.
Though the research phase is done, the course will remain open to intelligence
officers who need to fulfill the requirements of that MOS, or military occupational
specialty.
“Maybe a woman could pass the Infantry Officer Course,” Capt. Krebs said. “She may not
have come along yet.”