The Washington Post reports today that women in the National Guard and Reserves
suffer sexual assault or harassment in disproportionate numbers --
we're talking 60% versus 27%. And 11% of women have been victims of
rape or attempted rape, versus 1.2% for men. These statistics are
the product of a report requested by Congress in 1999, completed in
2003, and withheld until now. It also found that these rates of
sexual assault are similar in active duty forces.
Through all the solutions of better counseling and health care,
the author doesn't ask the most obvious question: why are we
placing these women in harm's way? If you've followed her work in
the last year, Post reporter Ann Scott
Tyson seems to be the
in-house
women-in-combat
booster. Questioning women's new role in the military is
verboten. And the Bush administration seems similiarly unwilling to
address these emerging problems, George
Neumayr explained in the spring.
topics:
Health Care, Military