Women in the Military

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Gender integration in the military has always faced the question of social acceptance, whether society can accept how women will be treated and respected in the military. Throughout the history of the military, our leadership has always sought ways in how to integrate without upsetting the general public if our females were captured as prisoners of war, raped, discriminated or even blown up in combat. My paper will discuss three situations pertaining to the first female submariner, fighter pilot and infantry graduate. I will also discuss some of the arguments that male military leaders and lawmakers opposed the integration of women: lack of strength, endurance, and the disruption of unit cohesion. I will end this paper with my personnel experience as a female NCO responsible for other female subordinates within my command and share some of their experiences while deployed in combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The story of America’s military woman can be traced to the birth of our nation. During the American Revolutionary War, the 18th and 19th centuries, where women served informally as nurses, seamstresses, cooks, and even as spies and were subject to Army’s rules of Conduct. Though not in uniform, these women shared soldier’s hardships including inadequate housing and little compensation. Women have formally been part of the U.S Armed Forces since the Inception of the Army Nurse Corps in 1901. In 1973 the transition to the All-Volunteer Force marked a dramatic increase in the opportunities available for women to serve in the military. As of September 30, 2009, the total number of active duty women in the U.S was 203, 375, and women made up 14.3 percent of the U.s armed forces (Robinson). Women are a crucial role in c...

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...oup, 2013.

Fellman, Sam. 3 Female Submariners Make History. New York: The Penguin Group, 2013. Navy Times: A Gannet Company. Web. Jan. & Feb. 2014. .

Raddatz, Martha. Female Fighter Pilot Breaks Gender Barriers. ABC News. Web. Sept. & Oct. 2012. .

Robinson, Amy L. TRADOC Leads Review of MOS Standards, gender Integration. Army Times. Web. July 2, 1013.

Seck, Hope H. First Female Marines to Graduate Infantry Training: 'It Takes Everything You Got'. Marines Times: A Gannett Company. Web. Nov. & Dec. 2013. .

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