By John Corry on 12.4.02 @ 12:04AM
Now that the N.Y. Times is confident women soldiers will do our fighting in Iraq, it's free to devote all its attention to the plight of women at Augusta.
There it was, at the top of page one, the picture that was used
to illustrate the
lead story in last Sunday's New York Times. "Soldiers
from the Army's V Corps in Germany yesterday before taking off for
joint exercises in the Persian Gulf," the caption said, and when
you read it your first thought was that the Times had
developed a sly sense of humor. It was sticking it to conservatives
and anyone else who thought the military was for men only. The
story, after all, was about preparations for a war with Iraq, and
the three soldiers in the picture were girls.
Two were white, and one was black. One of the young white women
looked pensive, but the other was smiling. The young black woman
was looking appreciatively and cheerfully at someone or something
slightly behind her and off to one side. They all had flashlights
with red filters clipped onto their fatigues, and American flags on
their right sleeves. In dress and gear, at least, they were
indistinguishable from the boys.
Coincidentally I spoke that day with an old friend, a veteran
newsmagazine journalist, and asked him if he had seen the
Times picture. "The one on the front page," I said. "You
mean the one with the soldiers," he said. "What about it?"
My old friend, the veteran newsmagazine journalist, said he saw
nothing unusual about the picture; it only showed some soldiers.
But he is, of course, a serious liberal, and it is an article of
faith with him that boys and girls are interchangeable. Deep in his
heart he may know that if the Army goes house-to-house with the
Republican Guard in Baghdad, it would be better served by young men
than by young women. It would be a breach of his liberal faith,
though, if he had to admit it.
The thinking at the Times, I suppose, is much that way,
too. On the other hand, the Times has long favored opening
up more combat jobs in the military for women. So it may be that in
the paper's uppermost reaches, where the publisher and his high
editors dwell, and where pictures are chosen for page one, it
really is believed that gender in war is irrelevant. A Beth or Lisa
apparently can go house-to-house just as well as a Charlie or John.
This may defy thousands of years of military history, but times
have changed, according to the Times, so there you
are.
Anyway the Times is growing increasingly eccentric in
its institutional thinking, and it is something of a game now to
identify its latest aberration. Thus the new issue of
Newsweek notes that late last
month the Times had a front-page story -- "CBS Staying
Silent in Debate on Women Joining Augusta" -- on whether women
would be allowed to join the National Golf Club, the host for the
Masters Tournament. It was, as Newsweek pointed out, the
32nd piece on the subject Times had published in less than
three months.
The Times story, Newsweek reported, criticized
CBS, which will televise the Masters, for "resisting the argument
that it can do something to alter the club's policy" on admitting
women as members. But as Newsweek also reported, "it was
unclear who -- other than the Times -- was making the
argument."
That issue of Newsweek arrived in subscribers'
mailboxes last Monday. Then on Tuesday the Times raised
the Augusta issue again. It noted,
on page one, of course, that Thomas Wyman, a former chief executive
at CBS, had resigned from the golf club to protest its refusal to
admit women.
The Times has not yet published an editorial praising
Wyman for his brave stand, or at least it hasn't as this column is
being written, but chances are you may see one soon. It will be of
absolutely no interest to anyone other than the publisher, high
editors and a few feminists, but it is better the Times
concerns itself with that than a more serious issue like war.
topics:
Sports, Military, Iraq