ON WOMEN IN MILITARY COMBAT
by Romi Elnagar

There is extensive news coverage of the announcement two days ago by Defense 
Secretary Leon Panetta that the 
military will end its ban on women serving in combat.  Except for extreme 
conservatives, nearly 
everyone, including the party which expanded the war in Vietnam--the Democratic 
Party--and its supporters in the mainstream media (MSM), seems very happy with 
the prospect of women 
being fully integrated into the America's war machine.

I, too, am a feminist, but I am utterly appalled at the direction of this 
discussion about women in combat operations has taken. 


We need to ask ourselves why we are sending women or men 
into combat in distant lands.  Is it really for freedom and democracy, 
either there or here, or is it so that we can have oil and gas in our 
cars, uranium in our reactors and bananas on our breakfast table?

I don't 
want women going off to distant lands to fight so that big corporations 
can mine coltan in someone else's country, even though I like the 
convenience of a cell phone.  And I don't want anybody, male OR female, 
fighting wars for oil, even though I drive a car.  I will be very glad when we 
depend on renewable resources for heating our homes 
and driving our cars instead. 

And I want men AND women 
back in this country building bridges, teaching in classrooms and 
growing good food for human 
beings, not shooting people who simply want the right to live in their 
own country in their own way. I cannot forget that one of the most 
searing photos of Abu 
Ghraib was of female soldiers humiliating Iraqi prisoners. It is not 
the kind of equality I want to see if women are equally culpable of war crimes. 


The traditional reason for not having women fight except in a desperate 
struggle against annihilation is because women represent the tenderness 
and loving care that is necessary to raise infants. Such qualities are 
often considered to be incompatible with shooting and killing living 
beings.  Now, instead of creating sensitivity in our men, so that they, 
too, will be more aware of the value of life, we have--as a 
society--chosen a different kind of equality: that of making women equally 
insensitive to the value of life.

Let us not fool ourselves:  while "support" roles, which traditionally have 
been given to conscientious objectors and women, can appear to be 
consistent with humanitarian values (even though the soldiers doing them still 
have to go through the dehumanization of boot camp), killing for a living does 
not contribute to creating human values in either men or 
women, although a few souls do come back from war with an understanding 
of just how terrible taking a human life is.  


But how many men come back from war shattered by their experiences?  How 
many veterans have you seen on the streets, unable to hold down a job or even 
form coherent sentences, because of the trauma of killing and 
watching their comrades be killed?  How many men can never father 
children because they were exposed to depleted uranium in the Middle 
East? And how many men come home so angry, so bitter, and even so 
dehumanized that they shoot and kill their wives and sweethearts?


And now women are entitled to those very same PTSD symptoms, those very 
same concerns about amputations and DU and spousal abuse.  We need to 
ask ourselves, "Why?"

Our country is not on the verge of being conquered by a merciless foe.  Our 
homes are not being invaded by a ruthless enemy and we are not watching our 
children be killed by jack- booted thugs who storm the driveway and kick in the 
doors.  If this were the case, then everyone should be called upon to defend 
the country and women as well as men should be expected to grab whatever weapon 
was 
available and fight off the threat.

Instead, now women will have the privilege of being those jack-booted thugs, of 
storming family compounds in Afghanistan and Mali, and kicking in the 
doors of frightened villagers in any other nation that dares to demand 
that we leave them and whatever natural resources they possess alone.


So, to the women in the military who want equal pay for equal "work," (the 
work of killing innocent civilians and people resisting our tyranny), to the 
women who want the privilege of an equal share when retiring on the taxpayer's 
dime, I have this to say:

"You need to be clear with yourself that you are not fighting for America's 
freedom or for the freedom of the people in whose country you have been 
stationed.  You are fighting for big corporations, for oil and for Israel.  
If you choose to insist that you want equality, then that is your choice and 
your problem.  But do not choose blindly:  by participating in what some of us 
consider illegal and immoral wars, you are choosing material benefits at the 
cost of other people's freedom.  You will get shot at 
by people who are fighting invaders and those of us who oppose wars of 
aggression will have no more 
sympathy for you than we did for Vietnam veterans, who at least had the 
excuse that they were drafted and forced to serve."

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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