55 responses to “In defense of the women NOT in combat”

  1. Matt Weems

    The Mongols were physically small. They rode horses no larger than ponies and survived on few calories. They conquered most of Asia and the middle east, so size and strength aren’t everything. They used the bow, however, women archers are less effective than men because it is an upper body thing.

    Europe made fun of Frederick the great for insisting his soldiers be tall, close to six feet, on the assumption he was focusing too much on parade appearance. But their long arms made reloading their muskets easier and faster.

    The British made an army 150,000 to 500,000 strong out of Indian soldiers. The cut down the size of the muskets and sabers to make them more manageable for the smaller native troops. The Sepoys were very effective soldiers anyway. discipline and training are just more important than strength.

    I’d rather serve in a well trained and disciplined all-female unit than an all-male militia with poor training and discipline.

    Are you sure your motive for not liking women in combat is the well being of existing male troops? Could it be you think the combat role should be male for some other (good or bad) reason?

  2. Donald Douglas

    Cao: Are you serious about this? What if some women would just like to fight and die in combat like any other red-blooded American?

  3. Matt Weems

    I’m not sure strength is so important that it rules women out of combat. Weaponry uses chemical power now, not muscle. And a lot of fighting is done from vehicles where small stature is an advantage. A handful of women who want promotion may be one advocate, but I think a principal against discrimination is another. Personally, I think women are physically more suited for combat than they are emotionally.

  4. Matt Weems

    If women are %60 of men’s weight, surely there are easier to carry out of combat when wounded? Size isn’t that important – your own data shows the Marines will take a man who is 5′6″ but refuse a man who is 6′7″.

    I do think there is an issue with socialization – I suspect the killing taboo will be harder to overcome in female soldiers because they have less testosterone and perhaps more of an empathetic nature.

    But all these are averages. Surely we could make these choices on an individual basis? Some women can handle a rifle, carry another person their own size, learn to kill other people without emotional breakdown. The army screens male recruits, refusing those who are unlikely to be good soldiers. Surely they are capable of screening women for the same purpose? They would have to accept less upper body strength, maybe turn away a larger portion of female recruits, but there are women who can fight.

    I thin your problem with women in combat has to do with Feminists. You seem to feel if it is something they want, it must be bad. Don’t let your enemies teach you what to think.

  5. vanessa

    Woman should have every chance to serve in combat. They should have to meet some strength requirements, but it should be reasonable. Being physically strong is not the only thing that makes a good soilder. A very strong,but week minded person may hurt more people than he can save.

    And there are techniques for a smaller person who doesn’t have superior physical strength to be able to lift and carry people to saftey. There or female poilce officers and fireman whol do very well becasue they are trained well.

  6. Donald Douglas

    Women aren’t currently allowed in the Green Berets, so that indicator’s no good. In any case, equality of opportunity is actually a conservative principle. If we have an all-volunteer military, why would you seek to prohibit women from fighting and perhaps dying for the country, particularly if they are willing and able? I’m not igorant on this point either. Geez, why have women in the work force at all? Your argument sounds less against feminism than favoring the “protectionist” claim for the more “delicate” and “timid” ***, prominent in the 19th century!

  7. Matt Weems

    And your point is that anything feminists and communists are for we should be against? Wouldn’t it make more sense to ignore what they have to say and decide the issue on the merits?

    “As long as they’re qualified” sounds pretty straightforward.

    Anecdote doesn’t really prove much. I can point to many instances of unfit male soldiers, doesn’t mean men can’t make good soldiers.

    I went to an all male boarding school, it had it’s advantages, but it had disadvantages as well. In any case arguing that women will ruin small unit cohesion is an easy one to disprove. Talk to men who have served in mixed gender units.

  8. Predator Intelligence

    The military should be designed to further American foreign policy. It is not a place for social engineering.

    In terms of combat that is one of the most physically demanding things anyone can do. By and large women do not have the physical strength of men.

    Why attempt to change everything to accommodate a few women who may possess the same physical abilities of men?

    The armed forces are not about making sure we have an equal number of men and women in combat units. The goal is to make sure we win. Men are better suited to that.

  9. Predator Intelligence

    Here is an interesting study: http://www.cmrlink.org/international.asp?docID=113

    Some highlights:

    An extensive study ordered by British Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon has reportedly recommended that women should not be allowed to fight in the front line. Citing evidence gathered over 18 months, the “Combat Effectiveness Gender Study” concluded that females lack the strength and stamina needed to serve in the infantry, armored regiments, Royal Marines or the RAF Regiment, the Air Force’s infantry unit.

    In a test requiring soldiers to carry 90 lbs. of artillery shells over measured distances, the male failure rate was 20%. The female failure rate was 70%.

    · In a 12.5-mile route march carrying 60 lbs. of equipment, followed by target practice simulating conditions under fire, men failed in 17% of cases. Women failed in 48%.

    · Females were generally slower in simulated combat exercises involving lengthy “fire and move” situations, in which participants had to sprint from one position to another in full battle dress.

    · In close-quarter battle tests, including hand-to-hand combat, women suffered much higher injury rates.

  10. vanessa

    Do you think woman are second class citizens?

    A lot of men think this way so when woman themselves think they are only made for certain roles its bad.

    Being a female you should want to see other females advance in society.

  11. Predator Intelligence

    Once again…it is not about women being second class citizens. It is about reality. However you may look at why it is that way…from God…or from evolution…men are physically stronger than women. That is fact.

    Combat is a physical activity in which the strong have a better chance of survival…and of course success than the weak.

    To say that men are better suited at combat due to their physical nature is in no way is a slight upon women. Women are not second class citizens.

    We are simply dealing with reality. Men and women are different…and by stating the obvious it does not mean we are degrading or consider women to be second class.

  12. vanessa

    You don’t think woman should have the same opportunities as men so thats putting them below men. I would consider that 2nd class. There areplenty of woman out there that are strong enough to preform some of these task you talk about. Why shouldn’t they be allowed to? You want the best PERSON for the job. And the doesn’t automatically mean a man.

  13. GM Roper

    For those who wish to see women in combat I have a single question: Why have you let your sence of political correctness overrule your common sense?

  14. TJ

    Cao – excellent post, and not just because I agree wholeheartedly!

    Vanessa – It has nothing to do with women being second class citizen; it has everything to do with women *for the most part* being ill-suited to close combat, and forcing the military to adapt and support the .01% of combat-ready females is not feasible. “Being a female you should want to see other females advance in society.” … is that like a right to die argument?

    Oh, and also, Vanessa – as a male I want to see females (and males … and dogs …) advance in society, your statement is just a bit sexist, don’t you think?

    /TJ
    PS – the .01% is totally a guess / made up, I haven’t done any research on that aspect :)

  15. Matt Weems

    Some women do want this, obviously, or it would not be an issue.

    That British study:

    In a test requiring soldiers to carry 90 lbs. of artillery shells over measured distances, the male failure rate was 20%. The female failure rate was 70%.

    · In a 12.5-mile route march carrying 60 lbs. of equipment, followed by target practice simulating conditions under fire, men failed in 17% of cases. Women failed in 48%.

    Would we not want to permit the 30% of women who passed the test in combat units rather than the 20% of men who failed?

    I’m not advocating women in combat, by the way, I could care less. I just find it weird you want a female who wants the role, who worked hard enough to pass the requirements, excluded on the basis of gender.

  16. vanessa

    Im not adding anything. You and a couple others are saying woman shouldn’t have equal rights. I am not saying every woman should jump in the trenches. Just like every man shouldn’t have to either. The army is volunteer and there is no draft. So these people want to be there. And i know there are several fields to go into. The 90 % who don’t want to go into combat didn’t join to do that. They help in other ways. The 10 % that want to or are willing should get the chance to prove themselves.

    And there are a couple of girls if you put on roids probably could play in the NFL.

  17. Donald Douglas

    Hey there! This is some interesting debate, considering this blog promotes macho images of women, a la Linda Hamilton. I’m with you Cao, and you’re not making much sense. Frontline infantry combat position AND elite special forces units are closed to women. Why? Pentagon’s policy of protection. This discriminatory policies date back to the 19th century and earlier, when women were deliberately subordinated — in culture and in law — in the family household unit. I, for one, am not dismissing gender diffenrence, nor do I promote a radical femi-nazi-style egalitarian. I see in your comments, though, a denigrating element of gender uniqueness (men can’t bear children, but they sure as hell can care for them). I don’t care who this Sally such and such is! She indeed probably needs to fill some damned quotas to make her bosses happy. That doesn’t preclude me from arguing that women should be entitled by right to opportunities based on their desire to achieve to the best of their ability. Duh, they’re not going to play on the football team and get creamed. Yet, a lot of smart chicks will kick some testosterone-butt in law schools. We can make traditional distinctions, but societies do progress, often on the base of need. I don’t think the U.S. Armed Forces couldn’t use a few good women in the ranks, front and center, wiping out some al Qaeda ***!

  18. Matt Weems

    Cao –

    I think you have a paranoid fantasy of a Feminist movement or agenda. Today it’s very weak as a movement and what there is doesn’t have the values eroding sinister agenda you seem to feel it does.

    I grew up in the seventies just as the movement lost it’s way and developed a man-bashing taste to it. I went to Berkeley when feminist women were wondering whether they should have anything to do with men at all, which was very demoralizing. Who wants to date people who think you are somehow damaging to them?

    My father was in the marines and from the south and he thought the whole thing was a breakdown in gender relations and a bad sign for our culture. Now he sees it very differently. Overall, with the excesses now died down, the women’s liberation movement has had a positive effect. If we could afford it, my wife would rather stay home while our children are small, and I would prefer this as well. But I defiantly want her to have the choice, rather than be forced into something she resents, even the right thing. I would have taken you for a libertarian, but here you seem to want the government to make the choice for us. Isn’t that the magic of freedom? Every possible door is open so citizens may come to the best choices without coercion by law or government?

    I suspect combat doesn’t have the romantic sheen for girls it has for boys, but if the door was thrown open some women would try it out. Military culture is not such a rarified and delicate thing that it cannot survive change like any other aspect of our culture. I think we would find that after the initial tryout, few women want the combat roles in the long run anyway, so the whole question is a tempest in a teacup.

  19. vanessa

    I think I am getting off subject a bit. I just believe equality should mean equality. I’m personally not strong enough physically or mentally to be in combat, but if I was I should be allowed. Men weren’t teachers many years ago and now they are. Times change and change is good. It can only make are spieces more advanced.

  20. vanessa

    cao is your real name June Cleaver? People evolve. society evolves. Look how much things are differnt from 200 years ago.

    And its equal oppertunity. If I wanted to be told where my place was I would move to the Middle East.

    My dad,who is a man, said I can do and be anything I want.

    We could go on for days. So this is what I am getting… You think men and woman have differnt roles and thats that?

  21. Predator Intelligence

    Vanessa…per your comment above you state:

    “I think I am getting off subject a bit. I just believe equality should mean equality.”

    Yet earlier you stated: “Woman should have every chance to serve in combat. They should have to meet some strength requirements, but it should be reasonable.”

    So should the requirements be equal…or in your mind reasonable?

    Already you are implying that women shouldn’t be held to the same standard.

    Interestingly if you look at the physical fitness requirments for the Marines and the US Army you will note that the requirements for women to pass are LESS then what is required from men.

    Do we really want to reduce the fitness requirement for women to allow them in combat? Don’t you want your strongest and most physically fit to do the dirty work?

    Remember we are talking about combat units.

    I want our armed services to win. I don’t want them to play the politically correct game of trying to get a certain percentage of women in to satisfy some interest group who feels there is some type of discrimination.

    And to Matt Weens:

    In response to this item I posted:

    In a test requiring soldiers to carry 90 lbs. of artillery shells over measured distances, the male failure rate was 20%. The female failure rate was 70%

    Your comment was:

    “Would we not want to permit the 30% of women who passed the test in combat units rather than the 20% of men who failed?”

    First off…those 20% who failed (men) don’t pass and don’t get those assignments.

    Secondly: It is an inefficient use of resources to test a group of women to find the 30% who pass a physical test (which is not even as tough as that provided to men) when you can get what you need much easier and with less cost just focusing on men.

    We want our military (combat units) to be as efficient…and deadly as possible. Testing that many women to get such poor results is bad policy and not efficient in terms of resources.

    The goal of the military is to win. It is not a place where we should be concerned about counting heads and making sure we are politically correct.

  22. Matt Weems

    The reason I say your position is anti-libertarian is you would have the law forbid a person from applying for a job on the basis of gender, forbidding them the chance to prove they are (or are not) qualified as an individual.

    I think you don’t care whether a woman might be qualified as a combat soldier, that you belive a female combatant threatens what you think gender roles should be. If that’s the case, say so. I don’t like that kind of legally enforced social policy, but at least we can stop arguing over women’s qualifications for combat.

  23. Predator Intelligence

    Matt…I know your last response was for Cao…

    However…from a libertarian standpoint…

    We dislike waste and want to minimize what the government spends. It costs a lot more to find a couple of women who might be up to combat standards.

    It is a far better use of funds to focus on a group that consistently produces a much higher percentage of people who qualify for combat duty.

    Gender roles?

    To be honest if women were physically equal I wouldn’t have any problem with them in combat.

    Furthermore if women were more physically capable then men…then I would argue for women in the military…and would likewise argue men shouldn’t be there since as a group they don’t match up.

    Really very simple.

  24. vanessa

    Its not about being politically correct. Itsreally simple. If a woman can meet requirments she should be allowed to do whatever it is. There might only be 10 American woman that can do it well enough. So those 10 woman should be allowedin combat. I’m not saying let the underqualified serve.

  25. Matt Weems

    “I don’t claim to be anything but me, so stop trying to pigeonhole me into some type of stereotype with that anti-libertarian garbage. I am not anti- anything.”

    That’s not true – you are anti-feminist, which is what this is all about.

    Given the trends over that last 100 years, blacks integrated in the military, women voting, I’m guessing combat positions will be opened up to women in the military. Probably **** will be allowed to serve there openly as well.

    I can’t say I care very much either way, except I prefer that people be allowed to apply for whatever position they desire, and not be turned away for anything other than not meeting the requirements.

    If you think feminists are out to destroy the foundations of our culture go ahead and fight them, I think you are wasting your time attacking phantoms though.

  26. Matt Weems

    I think if you asked those %80-%90 the question “should women be allowed to try out for combat posts?” Instead of “Would you like to go into combat?” you would get different numbers.

  27. Matt Weems

    PI

    I think the waste argument doesn’t really stand up. Universities could say “We don’t have time to consider black applicants for professors because most blacks aren’t educated enough and we don’t want to waste the time and money.” It’s just an excuse. Start with a physical test, you can rule out women who are unfit from the start. What about women on the police force? Some of them don’t cut it, some make good officers, let the requirements decide.

  28. Matt Weems

    I remember in college a really bright aggressive girl who wanted to fly jets. The military was the only place she could fly the kind of planes she wanted to, but as a woman she would have been stuck flying transports. So she never went in the military.

    There are plenty of single examples on each side of the argument. Anecdotes don’t count for much.

  29. Matt Weems

    That is an interesting question. I don’t know very much about how women police have worked out – but I’ll bet there are studies out there. I’ll go look for them.

  30. vanessa

    If any of you happy people care I took the writtne and the physical test for the poilce department.I had to lift and run the same as the guys and not to bragg I did better than a lot. I am also in really good shape too. Afetr starting the interview process I realized this is not what I wanted to do. I would have been physically able. Thats the point I’m trying to make. And cao if there was a shortage of soilders and my country needed me I would in a heart beat

  31. vanessa

    it was the same standards for men and woman. A lot of guys could not meet requirments so I don’t think the test has been altered. or at least notrecently. It was a couple years ago so I don’t remeber the exactly, but it was 3 miles under 22 min. youhad to run a course under 3 min that involved clibming walls sprinting and lifting and carrying 150lb like 10feet. there was a couple other things. Its not demanding like the military ,but my point is from what I saw woman who holding there own.

  32. Mike

    I’ve only scanned through the comments, but I didn’t see anyone with any actual experience here. Allow me to rectify that.

    While the media was reporting that “Women are proving that they can perform equally” during Desert Storm, men were carrying women’s equipment, setting up their tents, changing their tires, and doing the jobs they were afraid to do, like driving trucks on dangerous Arabian roads. The women compensated them by providing a steady supply of ***.

    Combat is still hard, physically and mentally, and no technology will ever change that. Combat support is pretty hard, too, and can turn into combat quite easily, as we saw with Jessica Lynch’s unit. Most women and some men don’t have what it takes. So, why not allow those very few women who might be able to handle it to do so? Many reasons, but here are some of the most important:

    1. Combat unit cohesion is based on male group dynamics, and has been tried, tested, and refined over centuries. Put one woman in the unit and the whole dynamic disintegrates.

    2. ***.

    3. Virtually no women, unless they’re on steroids or testosterone, have the physical strength and stamina required. Many men don’t, either. The exceptions among women are so few as to make them statistically insignificant.

    4. Psychology has now shown what most of us knew all along: men and women are different mentally and emotionally. Women are simply not suited for combat, which, by the way, involves killing people. Our ancestors figured this out a long, long time ago. Remember the true story of Jessica Lynch? Her weapon jammed and she fainted. Want her in a foxhole with you?

    4. Men might be raped or sexually abused if they are P.O.W.s, but it is rare. Women WILL BE. It’s not publicized because it would be damaging to the feminist cause, but it happened in Desert Storm and in the current war. And even with the few men who are, they aren’t coming back carrying an enemy soldier’s baby.

    5. Feminists like to tell us that our natural male instinct to protect women is patronizing and wrong. Bull. It’s right and good, and most women wouldn’t want it any other way. Even if they did, it’s hard-wired and not going away, so we just have to accept that that’s the way it is.

    The women-in-combat agenda is being pushed to further the feminist agenda of neutering society, and for the sake of career advancement for a few female officers who want to be able to attain the highest positions in the military, which are reserved for combat officers. But the armed forces do not exist to provide career opportunities for a few climbers, nor a captive-audience experimentation lab for social engineers. They exist to defend our country and our way of life, and anything that is detrimental to that mission needs to go away.

  33. Wil

    As a retired Infantryman I know firsthand the difference between men and women in combat. When I went to Iraq women would cry anytime we were mortared, meanwhile the men were gearing up and running out the gate on foot. If they want to be in the infantry, they should be held to the same physical standards: for pushups a 21 year old man must do a minimum of 42, women in the same age bracket must only do 19! Tell me why I would want someone like that with me.

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