| Committee finds women play
increasing role in military but still face barriers By Lisa Burgess, Washington bureau
VIENNA, Va.
Women have made enormous progress in their pursuit of equality in the military, but
lingering prejudice and quality-of-life issues still deny servicewomen an equal playing
field with their male colleagues, according to the military advisory group on womens
issues.
Members of
the Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services (DACOWITS), which celebrated its
50th anniversary last week, said increased deployments, inadequate pay and compensation,
child-care shortages, health-care shortfalls, "glass ceiling" promotion problems
and a lack of woman-to-woman mentoring are some of the most pressing issues facing women
in the armed forces today.
Less easily
quantified, but a constant theme during the committees weeklong conference in
Northern Virginia is the persistent presence of "hangover attitudes" among some
male military members, especially senior officers and noncommissioned officers, according
to DACOWITS members.
"Men
who refuse to listen to and respect their female subordinates and counterparts not only
depress morale, but also set a bad example for younger servicemen," a Navy officer
said during one committee session Thursday.
The
DACOWITS committee, which includes anywhere from 30 to 40 civilian and military men and
women in any given year, was established in 1951 by Defense Secretary George C. Marshall
to provide the Pentagon with recommendations regarding the women serving in Americas
armed forces.
Over time,
the committees findings have resulted in tremendous changes to the Pentagons
policies on women, including the number of occupational specialties women are allowed to
choose.
Well into
the 1980s, women who joined the military had little choice other than to serve as
health-care providers, secretaries or other traditionally female-held occupations.
Today
almost all military occupations are currently open to women: 91 percent of Army
occupations, 93 percent of Marine Corps occupations, 96 percent of Navy occupations, all
but a few Air Force occupations and 100 percent of Coast Guard occupations.
"Women
play an increasingly important role today," Gen. Henry Shelton, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, said Thursday during the DACOWITS anniversary celebration at Arlington
National Cemetery. "They fly our planes, command our ships and lead our troops."
However,
"women in the military have been given positions of responsibility and authority not
because they are women, but because of their demonstrated ability to do the job,"
Shelton said.
In 1973,
women made up less than two percent of the active duty force. Today, women account for
more than 14 percent of U.S. active armed forces.
"Today,
women are sharing in the same responsibilities and risks that our men face as we defend
Americas interests around the globe," Shelton said.
"Few
people could have predicted 50 years ago all the progress that women have achieved in both
the civilian and military sectors of our society," Shelton said. "In fact, I see
a new spirit of acceptance and camaraderie within the military and in other occupations,
as well."
Despite
Sheltons optimistic assessment of womens progress, the DACOWITS committee had
no shortage of topics to address during its spring conference meeting here.
The
committees three primary subcommittees equality management, quality of life,
and forces development and utilization each met to develop recommendations on
topics ranging from womens health needs during deployment to womens promotion
and retirement issues.
The
subcommittees will consolidate their recommendations on Sunday and determine what future
actions should be taken.
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