View Full Version : OT: Women on subs
copeab
04-29-2010, 04:36 PM
US women to be allowed to serve on submarines. I find it interesting who allegedly is most upset about this ...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100429/ap_on_re_us/us_women_on_submarines
pmulcahy11b
04-29-2010, 06:19 PM
I know it's wrong, but I keep thinking about the movie Operation Petticoat...I'm not normally that chauvinistic!
Matt Wiser
04-29-2010, 09:00 PM
Or the 1970s TV series, with a young Jamie Lee Curtis as one of the nurses. Anyway, it's about time. And it's a good idea to have women first on the boomers and the SSGNs, and then gradually get them onto the fast-attack boats. And despite what Elaine Donnelly and Phyllis Schafly would have you think, this was a non-issue for Congress. (I wish those two would just shut up!)
pmulcahy11b
04-29-2010, 09:47 PM
I think a logical next step would be for the Army and Marines to open up the attack helicopter field to women.
Fusilier
04-29-2010, 10:40 PM
I think a logical next step would be for the Army and Marines to open up the attack helicopter field to women.
To me the next logical step would be to open up any field.
Matt Wiser
04-29-2010, 11:26 PM
The attack helo field has been open to women since 1993 in both the Army and USMC. The only fields closed are:
Infantry
Armor
Field Artillery
SOF (SEALs, Rangers, Army SF, AF PJs and Combat Control Teams)
Battlefield Air Defense (Stinger teams, Humvee Avengers, Bradley Stinger)
Though I imagine that will change, since the current Army Chief of Staff and the Chairman of the JCS have called for a reevaluation of these restrictions.
headquarters
04-30-2010, 02:20 AM
To me the next logical step would be to open up any field.
Me too. We have had equal opportunity military since the 1970s.
If a woman can pass selection and make it through training as well as a man she is in up here .Fighter pilots,infantry,artillery,subs etc .I have yet to hear of a female SF operator though..But considering the selection process..It is so brutal that hardly anyone makes it at all.probably women have tried and failed .But it is of course all secret .
Fusilier
04-30-2010, 02:31 AM
I have yet to hear of a female SF operator though.
Canadian JTF2 has/had at least one. I don't know any details though, only saw her when I was doing enemy force.
Targan
04-30-2010, 02:53 AM
US women to be allowed to serve on submarines.
Nice to see that Australia is ahead of the game in this area.
copeab
04-30-2010, 03:04 AM
I have yet to hear of a female SF operator though.
There have been rumors for many years that Delta Force has a small number of women used for intelligence-gathering (not combat) missions. Given the highly secretive nature of Delta Force, we are unlikely to ever know if this rumor is true or not. It is certainly plausible though, given the missions they are tasked with.
headquarters
04-30-2010, 03:06 AM
There have been rumors for many years that Delta Force has a small number of women used for intelligence-gathering (not combat) missions. Given the highly secretive nature of Delta Force, we are unlikely to ever know if this rumor is true or not. It is certainly plausible though, given the missions they are tasked with.
In your opinion - will these Special Forces operators be especially hot ?
:D
Rainbow Six
04-30-2010, 03:09 AM
Canadian JTF2 has/had at least one. I don't know any details though, only saw her when I was doing enemy force.
I've read media articles stating that a small number of women served with the SAS and other clandestine units in Northern Ireland during the 70's and 80's. I think* they were officially attached to the Intelligence Corps rather than the SAS, so not SOF in the strictest sense of the word.
*(For obvious reasons there wasn't much by the way of specifics in the article).
Edit. Just seen Copeab's post about rumours of women serving with Delta Force, and I think the British women I'm referring to had a similar role.
Mohoender
04-30-2010, 03:11 AM
I have yet to hear of a female SF operator though..
Here you go: the French 1st RPIMa currently has 43 women within its ranks.;)
Fusilier
04-30-2010, 03:33 AM
I think* they were officially attached to the Intelligence Corps rather than the SAS, so not SOF in the strictest sense of the word.
Yeah I'm familiar a little with that and also think they were intelligence corps... If memory serves, I believe 2 Int Company sounds right or something like that. The unit was more secretive than the other usual Int units.
copeab
04-30-2010, 03:43 AM
In your opinion - will these Special Forces operators be especially hot ?
:D
If you need them to be, sure ;)
(Most likely, they would be fairly average looking, to better blend into the population)
headquarters
04-30-2010, 03:49 AM
Here you go: the French 1st RPIMa currently has 43 women within its ranks.;)
Now that you say it , I was thinking about OUR army .But ,in retrospect I hadnt heard of females in the SF globally either.
Until now that is .
headquarters
04-30-2010, 03:50 AM
If you need them to be, sure ;)
(Most likely, they would be fairly average looking, to better blend into the population)
..I do.
Mohoender
04-30-2010, 05:59 AM
Now that you say it , I was thinking about OUR army .But ,in retrospect I hadnt heard of females in the SF globally either.
Until now that is .
Something else is interesting especially toward T2K. In the current French Army, women represent 20% of all new recruits, 14% of all army personnels and only 4% of the complement in that SF unit. They are equally allowed in the foreign legion but, so far, none has completed the tests.
mikeo80
04-30-2010, 08:33 AM
If a woman can do the job, let her.
Another thought....IF the worst were to happen, and the Trident subs emptied their cargo of death, the subs MIGHT be the only un radiated population left.
ex3313
04-30-2010, 08:33 AM
having served on 2 boomers I forsee lots of problems there a certain ego built into bubbleheads and that will be rough on ladies also the old radition manuals required pregant women be removed from rad areas
pmulcahy11b
04-30-2010, 01:26 PM
Now that you say it , I was thinking about OUR army .But ,in retrospect I hadnt heard of females in the SF globally either
It's never been confirmed, but it has always been rumored that Delta has some female operators, either specialists with certain skills or as intelligence assets.
pmulcahy11b
04-30-2010, 01:28 PM
To me the next logical step would be to open up any field.
Yes, but you know how military inertia is. You have to do things in steps...integration of women is never going to happen all at once, at least not in the US military.
Adm.Lee
04-30-2010, 03:43 PM
having served on 2 boomers I forsee lots of problems there a certain ego built into bubbleheads and that will be rough on ladies also the old radition manuals required pregant women be removed from rad areas
Hopefully before they become too big to fit through the exit hatch! {I'm thinking about my own bathroom, to be honest, my wife had to turn about 20 degrees to get past the sink.}
pmulcahy11b
04-30-2010, 03:52 PM
having served on 2 boomers I forsee lots of problems there a certain ego built into bubbleheads and that will be rough on ladies also the old radition manuals required pregant women be removed from rad areas
I would imagine, given the close quarters and the nature of working near a nuclear reactor, they would remove the woman to land duty until her post-pregnancy leave was over. But as offspring are most vulnerable to mutations during the embryonic phase -- that is a worry.
Matt Wiser
04-30-2010, 08:48 PM
The Delta outfit that has women is called "The Funny Platoon." It's not a Charlie Beckwith invention, but his successor created it in the late '80s. The women can disguise themselves as reporters, airline employees, and other civilians whose jobs might take them into a high-threat area and they can recon a target. No word, given Delta's OPSEC, on whether or not these lovely and lethal ladies have gone on ops, but it's more than likely that they have.
Abbott Shaull
05-03-2010, 05:16 AM
I would think the ladies in Delta could hold their own in any type fight. Especially since being one who can go places without immediate backup would need to know how to take care of herself.
Abbott
headquarters
05-03-2010, 05:57 AM
I would think the ladies in Delta could hold their own in any type fight. Especially since being one who can go places without immediate backup would need to know how to take care of herself.
Abbott
they are probably tough as nails.I guess after mating they rip the head of their spouse and devour him .
You dont end up an operator regardless of genitalia - if the handlers dont know you could bring a city block down on your own.
Abbott Shaull
05-03-2010, 06:27 AM
Honestly, I think we have been in the cave man mode for too long. Then again as long as she can pull her weight she welcome to the position. Yes, it always surprising that it seem to be some of the biggest women 'liberators' who object when they get their wish. I have been one who believes that if they want to join the military then, they should have same PT testing standards, but that is just me.
Honestly, with the Maintenance Company that got lost during the opening stages of operation in Iraq. Then take into account the number of females who are in such units a Military Police units that are on the front-lines no matter what people back in Washington want to believe. Many of them have shown they can and do carry their own weight. Even remember a news article or two about some Company grade officers too, about how they were leading basically combat mission in their role.
It just silly that they are kept out of Infantry, Artillery, and Armor. When basically the MP, Engineer, and Aviation they have been assigned too are just as close if not closer to the front-line with the other units. With them doing the jobs in those branches it only a matter of time before they get into the last three hold outs.
Special Operation Units well, since they all have Operation security, one can never tell how many and what function they serve. Granted, I doubt you will see one serving with the 75th Ranger Regiment any time soon, but once they are allowed into Infantry, it won't take long for them to be sent to the Ranger School and Q-course. It all a matter of time.
waiting4something
05-03-2010, 08:15 AM
I used to be a fan of women joining combat units until I joined the military. Sure it seems sexy or fair for women to have the same chances as guys, but war isn't going to be either of those. I think having women working besides you in a infantry unit atleast, would be dreadful. Dudes would be always trying to get laid instead of focusing at their job. Plus you can't slow down for cramps and vaginal bleeding. If they get knocked up what are you gonna do? Make them the company clerk? You can only have so many of those.
Yeah, I know there are some tough ladies out there that can compete, but they are still a walking conquest for guys. The pog units that I saw with women were like this too. Dudes flirting with them, them flirting with dudes. It was just down right unprofessional. When I was on ship one of the female sailors got set back stateside, because she was knocked up. I just see things not working well.
Women in combat units will most likely happen someday, it's a sign of the times. Maybe, they should start with all women units.
copeab
05-03-2010, 08:42 AM
I used to be a fan of women joining combat units until I joined the military. Sure it seems sexy or fair for women to have the same chances as guys, but war isn't going to be either of those. I think having women working besides you in a infantry unit atleast, would be dreadful. Dudes would be always trying to get laid instead of focusing at their job. Plus you can't slow down for cramps and vaginal bleeding.
On the upside, combat medics would have a ready-supply of tampons for plugging wounds.
If they get knocked up what are you gonna do? Make them the company clerk? You can only have so many of those.
There was a story I read in a book on US POWs of WWII, probably apocryphal ...
In the spring of 1945, a POW camp was liberated by a Russian combat unit. The Americans were shocked to see armed female soldiers mixed in with the troops. One Yank asked what happened if one of the female soldiers got pregnant. A Russian soldier replied grimly: "She is taken out and shot."
I'll note that those few cultures with the "sworn virgin" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sworn_virgin) tradition (which included Albania) are very unlikely to have this last problem.
pmulcahy11b
05-03-2010, 11:13 AM
...it won't take long for them to be sent to the Ranger School and Q-course. It all a matter of time.
In view of the probable existence of the Funny Platoon in Delta, I'll bet that's already happened -- or some Delta analogue of those schools.
Matt Wiser
05-03-2010, 08:47 PM
There was a book a while back called Imperial Grunts (I think that was the title) where the author looked at the Army's experience in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He visited the 5th SFG's HQ, and found out that the SF liked having women be "attached" to their units for searching local women, talking to them (they got quite a bit of intel that way), and so on, and that the then-CO of 5th Group was already reccommending that SF find a way to get its own females, as units that had women "borrowed" for the SF complained about the poaching, and that the women were needed in their regular jobs! The females who had been borrowed, to the last woman, enjoyed their time with SF, and most wanted to join full-time, despite the prohibition. Even the current Army Chief of Staff has called for a review of the ban on women in combat units, and probably before the current president's first term is over, it will probably be gone.
waiting4something
05-04-2010, 02:03 AM
There was a book a while back called Imperial Grunts (I think that was the title) where the author looked at the Army's experience in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He visited the 5th SFG's HQ, and found out that the SF liked having women be "attached" to their units for searching local women, talking to them (they got quite a bit of intel that way), and so on, and that the then-CO of 5th Group was already reccommending that SF find a way to get its own females, as units that had women "borrowed" for the SF complained about the poaching, and that the women were needed in their regular jobs! The females who had been borrowed, to the last woman, enjoyed their time with SF, and most wanted to join full-time, despite the prohibition. Even the current Army Chief of Staff has called for a review of the ban on women in combat units, and probably before the current president's first term is over, it will probably be gone.
I understand that women could be very useful at times, but I don't think them just hanging out with a Special Forces unit and doing what they do is the same thing. They would make great cops and interrogators when it comes to dealing with other females, but I can't see them carrying 150 pounds rucks. Maybe they could be used in the bravo teams, but I can't see them running around on the ground with a Special Forces A-team. As for them liking to hang out with Special Forces, well everyone does. They are not as anal and your not going to do what they do.
Fusilier
05-04-2010, 02:10 AM
I think having women working besides you in a infantry unit atleast, would be dreadful. Dudes would be always trying to get laid instead of focusing at their job.
To me that sounds quite like there is a general lack of professional discipline, which isn't saying much about the unit. If that's the case, then having females in their ranks is probably not their most burning issue that needs to be addressed.
waiting4something
05-04-2010, 02:44 AM
To me that sounds quite like there is a general lack of professional discipline, which isn't saying much about the unit. If that's the case, then having females in their ranks is probably not their most burning issue that needs to be addressed.
Maybe so, but all dudes talk about is sex, especially when they aren't getting any. ;) Plus, you have to remember some of these girls that where average in the real world now can become the bell of the ball. Maybe it's just my view, because I never had to work with them directly. I stupidly chose to be part of a CJT(REALLY BAD IDEA!) and had my first semi dealing with them and it was not good. But, these people were the bottom of the barrel.
One time we had this female first sergeant call us to attention and we all burst out laughing and chuckling. Later she went around and took down all our t and a pictures.:( Then there was one that told people she liked getting it on with other girls, a captain and a corporal that hung out all the time until someone final mentioned it, and this one captain dressed up for the Christmas party with a outfit that showed off her tramp stamp and her ass crack.:confused: A male 1st Lt and female 1st Lt got sent home for getting it on. It was a joke of a task force, a total disgrace. More shit went on, but that will take too long to cover. I'm just saying what I have seen was not a pretty picture.
Mohoender
05-04-2010, 05:16 AM
To me that sounds quite like there is a general lack of professional discipline, which isn't saying much about the unit. If that's the case, then having females in their ranks is probably not their most burning issue that needs to be addressed.
I agree to that. I also agree with W4S about the sex issue, especially as we are forced to send kindergarten kids to first line duty (no offense, I'm nearing 40 and if you were forcing me to do what these boys and girls do, I'll simply end up shooting a bullet in your back ;) ). However, what the F... if they get laid down from time to time?
The problem is when it goes too far. I have recently read that 7 women soldiers in Iraq got pregnant and were, off course, thrawn out of the army. However, I also read that the commander in chief back up and finally decided not to court martialed them and renounced to ask for prison time. That, IMO, is a huge mistake on the part of US command. As long as getting pregnant is against rules they should have been court martialed and punished along with the men who had slept with them (provided they were soldiers of course! If they were civilians, the fault lies entirely on the women's shoulders). Did I understood well or am I wrong?
headquarters
05-04-2010, 06:23 AM
females serve along side our guys in all arms/branches in half a dozen overseas missions and in our forces on hometurf .
Sexual harassment,illegal pregnancies and failure to cooperate are minor issues if any at all .
In one engagement against Afghan insurgents a female CV-90 gunner recieved commendations for having engaged and "neutralized" 25-30 enemy.
Thats not to say there couldnt be problems - just saying that we are a western ,modern army ,we deploy to Afghanistan,Tchad,Somali waters/Aden bight,been to Iraq,Bosnia,Kosovo,kongo,Lebanon etc etc for over 30 years with women troops intermixed with the guys.
I had girlie -squaddies in two of my squads -one who deployed overseas with us .Pretty good with the .50 cal actually and the HK 40 mm GL
Yes - there were a few incidents of someone messing up with the girls in our battalion.But mostly the chicks were soldiers and treated as such -as well as acted as such.
I do realize that everyone takes different views though .I see it as working with our forces-some else might not agree when recollecting his own experiences.
Rainbow Six
05-04-2010, 06:29 AM
The problem is when it goes too far. I have recently read that 7 women soldiers in Iraq got pregnant and were, off course, thrawn out of the army. However, I also read that the commander in chief back up and finally decided not to court martialed them and renounced to ask for prison time. That, IMO, is a huge mistake on the part of US command. As long as getting pregnant is against rules they should have been court martialed and punished along with the men who had slept with them (provided they were soldiers of course! If they were civilians, the fault lies entirely on the women's shoulders). Did I understood well or am I wrong?
Am I following this correctly? The US Army puts women in jail for getting pregnant?
That surely can't be right?? Or have I misunderstood?
Abbott Shaull
05-04-2010, 06:33 AM
In view of the probable existence of the Funny Platoon in Delta, I'll bet that's already happened -- or some Delta analogue of those schools.
Oh I am sure the women of the Funny Platoon are going through some of the most grueling training to make sure they are up to it.
copeab
05-04-2010, 06:43 AM
Am I following this correctly? The US Army puts women in jail for getting pregnant?
That surely can't be right?? Or have I misunderstood?
Welcome to the military ...
Military justice is primarily concerned with maintaining good order and discipline. Anything that threatens those two things is punished.
Abbott Shaull
05-04-2010, 06:58 AM
Am I following this correctly? The US Army puts women in jail for getting pregnant?
That surely can't be right?? Or have I misunderstood?
Actually it not too far fetch in the Zero Tolerance social club of the US Army. With that aside, they tend frown upon you doing things that make you none deployable or cause you be expedited out of combat zone.
What is sad in the military all females are lump together in trying to get out of duty. Even if some of the may have sent over pregnant, without realizing or showing on tests at the time. There have been enough female troops and officers who have went out of their way to become pregnant so they could have free pass to stay home, while these women are in the minority. Yet, there enough to led some to paint with broad brush. As for the one who have gotten into the situation while base overseas, well it is one of the issues that units have to deal with.
Well as far as sex goes. Many of the women I had met in the military, they weren't actively looking to sleep with everyone. Yet, some of these issue that crop up are due to reflection of how they view society outside of the Military. It part of the culture why they have been kept out of so-called combat unit, and the t and a picture only keep the caveman mentality in some of those units.
I agree it lack of professionalism if all either a male or female troop was looking for was getting laid. On the other hand, I do understand that being human sometime you can't help/stop needs and urges with mix troops in such close quarters.
Rainbow Six
05-04-2010, 07:24 AM
Thanks for the clarification guys...I can fully understand how a unit commander might be pissed off if someone either a) can't deploy or b) has to be sent home.
But to send someone to jail for getting pregnant...wow...
Mohoender
05-04-2010, 07:50 AM
Am I following this correctly? The US Army puts women in jail for getting pregnant?
That surely can't be right?? Or have I misunderstood?
No actually it didn't. They got pregnant while on duty. Of course, that is forbidden by the rule, for obvious reasons.
From what I understood they were thrown out and that's it (kind of in formal way). The commanding general, for a time, talk about court martialing them and putting them in jail. I agree that putting them in jail might be a little too much.
However, not pursuing them at all is as stupid. I'm more than supportive of women in armies but an army is in no way a democracy. I find perfectly understandable for women in the field to be forbidden of getting pregnant. Therefore, if they don't follow the rule they should be prosecuted as any soldiers. In that case along with the men as women hardly get pregnant by themselves. Then, I agree with rainbow, putting them in jail would certainly not be the best of choice. Nevertheless, I would find normal for the men to get some times in jail. Women in armies don't have to get a favored treatment.
However, another solution would be to allow them pregnancy at will. Still, that could quickly become a funny issue in a nuclear submarine, undersea for 6 month in a time like that of T2K.:D
One last think, I understand Rainbow but, in that case, these troopers are simply not doing their jobs. And I'm including the male with the female. Don't they ever here of condom, pills, abortion... Of course, they might be against these for religious reasons but, then, they belong to church and not to the army.
Here is the article
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34524436/
copeab
05-04-2010, 09:12 AM
Don't they ever here of condom
Yeah, it's what you use to keep water out of your rifle barrel.
Mohoender
05-04-2010, 09:18 AM
Yeah, it's what you use to keep water out of your rifle barrel.
LOL :D. And what you use to split that same water on the passing general???;)
perardua
05-04-2010, 10:33 AM
I would like to say that at no point did someone I know, whilst on stag, manage to engage in a sexual act with a US servicewoman over the barrel of a .50cal. Furthermore, this act did no take place literally opposite the medical centre which had condoms readily available, nor did the servicewoman concerned become pregnant. These are nothing but rumours.
Mohoender
05-04-2010, 12:04 PM
I would like to say that at no point did someone I know, whilst on stag, manage to engage in a sexual act with a US servicewoman over the barrel of a .50cal. Furthermore, this act did no take place literally opposite the medical centre which had condoms readily available, nor did the servicewoman concerned become pregnant. These are nothing but rumours.
It's nevertheless a warzone.
They are adults and should be accounted for their acts. The medical center has nothing to do with it. Of course, I said earlier that they are kindergarten kids and that point tend to confirm it. I'm not sure I would give a .50 cal to kindergarten kids.
If there are only rumors, this is the most important information (sorry from my part as it looked very serious as this article comes out of MSNBC). As a result, all of this discussion becomes purely theorical but interesting, nevertheless.
I would maintain that military regulations concerning men/women relations are obsolete when applied to troopers at home. After all, it is their problem.
On the other hand, they should be maintained, and strictly enforced, in what can be considered a combat zone :
- currently Afghanistan, Iraq, Middle East base, probably every home base involved in the supply chain.
- In any time, a sub should be considered a combat zone because of the very mission of these ships.
In my opinion, women under arms are no longer women but troopers and they should act as such no matter their gender (from what I read, even if rumors, women were not considered responsible; men were considered guilty as well). From my point of view, women and men can do whatever they want when it comes to sex, even during war times. However, if a woman gets pregnant (either because of her, him or both not taking proper preventing measures) during war time, I would consider that this is equal to abandoning its post.
Still theorically, I would consider the general first reaction to be slightly exagerated but the idea of a court martial would be a proper course of action. Theorically, if the upper chain of command put pressure to avoid any prosecution they have comited the worse possible mistake. This would be discriminatory and this would hamper the position of all these female troopers doing their job properly.
This is an opinion only, of course. Thanks to everyone else as I have seen some very interesting points.
Mo
perardua
05-04-2010, 12:19 PM
Sense of humour failure? In the event described that did not happen, at all, ever, the opinion of most was that the use of the .50 for this purpose was a marvellous act of masculinity in the finest military tradition, whilst the total lack of precautions was an act of sheer stupidity that, rumour has it, resulted in a shotgun marriage. Good drills.
Seriously though, when you put large numbers of young men and women in the same place, without much to do other than work, these things are bound to happen. I would say that it is unrealistic to expect soldiers even (or especially) on operations to remain wholly chaste, especially given the increasing tour lengths they are being asked to do.
However, I disagree with court-martialling pregnant female soldiers, for a two reasons. Firstly, contraception is the responsibility of both people involved, and I would be surprised to see a male soldier court-martialled for impregnating a female soldier. Secondly, what happens when a female soldier becomes pregnant at home before deployment, or on R&R during a deplyment? She still becomes non-deployable and someone else still has to cover for her, yet no-one has suggested courts-martial, or that people should seek permission from their chain of command to start families. Some form of action should be taken to discourage it, and contraception should be (and is) freely available.
Anyway, if, as was suggested, someone is willing to get themselves pregnant to get out of a deployment, are they really the kind of person that you want there in the first place?
Mohoender
05-04-2010, 02:10 PM
Sense of humour failure?
Happens:D
Seriously though, when you put large numbers of young men and women in the same place, without much to do other than work, these things are bound to happen. I would say that it is unrealistic to expect soldiers even (or especially) on operations to remain wholly chaste, especially given the increasing tour lengths they are being asked to do.
Perfectly agree and that's why I would consider military regulation to be out of date.
However, I disagree with court-martialling pregnant female soldiers, for a two reasons. Firstly, contraception is the responsibility of both people involved, and I would be surprised to see a male soldier court-martialled for impregnating a female soldier. Secondly, what happens when a female soldier becomes pregnant at home before deployment, or on R&R during a deplyment? She still becomes non-deployable and someone else still has to cover for her, yet no-one has suggested courts-martial, or that people should seek permission from their chain of command to start families. Some form of action should be taken to discourage it, and contraception should be (and is) freely available.
Explanation failure this time on my side (LOL). I meant to court-martial both man and woman involved. I perfectly agree that both are equally involved. I thought I had been clear on that. It seems not.
Anyway, if, as was suggested, someone is willing to get themselves pregnant to get out of a deployment, are they really the kind of person that you want there in the first place?
I don't have an opinion on that. If it was to be proven such woman would be guilty of treachery and, then, I would be supportive of her being put in jail. Proving it is much more tricky.
Whatever, I love the idea of nuclear submarines in T2K with augmented crews
Los Angeles-class: 80 men, 47 women and ... 12 newborns.
Ohio-class: 108 men, 49 women and 25 newborns. Missile complement reduced to 8 in order to make room for a day care and two nurses.:rolleyes::p
Triomphant-class (France): 80 men, 31 women, 42 kids, 9 nurses (1 for every 5 kids, by law). Missile complement reduced to 0.;)
pmulcahy11b
05-04-2010, 03:07 PM
Sense of humour failure?
Failed his sense-of-humor savings throw?
I've only been in one unit when I was in the Army where there were both men and women -- G3 at 2ID HQ. Flirting is constant, but usually innocent. After hours is different, but most troops were professional enough not to do something too stupid -- no one wants to be forced into a marriage and have more of a conscience than to just abandon their kids. Yes, there were plenty of romances -- I had one of my own -- but abject stupidity or lack of common sense isn't as common as you might think. It might be the unit involved -- you don't end up at division HQ by chance, you're selected, and you can't apply for it. But in my experience, everyone isn't constantly screwing everyone (except maybe career-wise sometimes).
perardua
05-04-2010, 03:47 PM
I agree, it's not something that is common. The entirely anecdotal example I gave is the only case I ever heard of where it got that far, and certainly it's not something that happens much in the UK (apart from with the ubiquitous station bike, if you're that way inclined) or while deployed. Certainly within units you rarely get more than flirting. In fact, I think that inter-unit, service or (as in this case) international flings are more common in these situations, a bit of the old "what goes on tour stays on tour".
However, my point (which I made badly) was that it's unrealistic to think it won't happen. Interestingly, part of the brief on arrival in Afghanistan was being told that STDs are increasingly a problem around Kandahar Airfield, mainly due to people being stupid on R&R, but increasingly due to bored troops getting some while on tour.
Mohoender
05-04-2010, 07:51 PM
What Paul's said seems obvious to me. And I agree with Perardua's point as well. Then, my point is that even if it has to happen, you have to react agaisnt it with some strength nonetheless.
Funny how circumstances can make you act in a very different manner.
As a civilian I would tend to let go.;)
If I was in the military within real life I would tend to punish this mildly.:spanka:
If we were playing a T2K game and the situation would occur in my group, I would probably abandon the woman to herself and shot down the man responsible for it.:crossbone:sagrin:
waiting4something
05-05-2010, 12:14 AM
Happens:D
Perfectly agree and that's why I would consider military regulation to be out of date.
Explanation failure this time on my side (LOL). I meant to court-martial both man and woman involved. I perfectly agree that both are equally involved. I thought I had been clear on that. It seems not.
I don't have an opinion on that. If it was to be proven such woman would be guilty of treachery and, then, I would be supportive of her being put in jail. Proving it is much more tricky.
Whatever, I love the idea of nuclear submarines in T2K with augmented crews
Los Angeles-class: 80 men, 47 women and ... 12 newborns.
Ohio-class: 108 men, 49 women and 25 newborns. Missile complement reduced to 8 in order to make room for a day care and two nurses.:rolleyes::p
Triomphant-class (France): 80 men, 31 women, 42 kids, 9 nurses (1 for every 5 kids, by law). Missile complement reduced to 0.;)
Whoah, that like 2 dudes for every chick. I bet those submarines have a lot of dudes doubling up on a chick.:D Lots of 3 somes going on aboard.:p I forgot how you say that in French. For this reason I believe that submarines should be crewed by women with a 2 to 1 ratio over guys.;) I not sure but, doesn't the French Foreign Legion forbid it's troopers for the first few years from getting married?
Mohoender
05-05-2010, 02:26 AM
I not sure but, doesn't the French Foreign Legion forbid it's troopers for the first few years from getting married?
I don't know. Anyway the foreign legion doesn't obey regular military rules. This is due to the fact that anyone enlisting in it (including Frenchmen) have to drop any citizenship. Legionnaire belong to the Legion and to the Legion only.
Fusilier
05-05-2010, 08:35 PM
Legionnaire belong to the Legion and to the Legion only.
Is there any hard numbers on peacetime desertion in the FL?
I'm under the impression its quite high compared to other units. A few years ago the FL were over and after talking to them they made it seem like your life is total shit once you join - that you belong 100% to the legion with no time for yourself.
Curiously enough, before their unit left it was reported that 3 of them deserted, obviously choosing to disappear into Canada's bigger cities rather than stick out their contract and go for legal immigration later. I always wondered if it was the same guys I talked to.
Anyways, just wondering, since none of the ones I met seemed to like it.
Mohoender
05-05-2010, 09:57 PM
No clue about that
What I can say is that people joining today have changed. An increasing number of them join because they were unemployed and these often leave quickly.
What you describe (no time for themselves), seem to correspond to the training time. From what I know, nowadays, more people leave before the end of this training period (which is quite long). However, once they fully jojn, I don't think there is that much desertion.
pmulcahy11b
05-05-2010, 11:24 PM
What I can say is that people joining today have changed. An increasing number of them join because they were unemployed and these often leave quickly.
Isn't there a minimum term of service (assuming you don't wash out)?
Mohoender
05-05-2010, 11:51 PM
Isn't there a minimum term of service (assuming you don't wash out)?
Yes but there is a fairly long training period before full incorporation. Selection time is about 2 weeks. Then, you sign a 5 years contract. This is followed by 3 months of training. Of course, officialy, you are already fully part of the legion but, for real, you are not considered a legionnaire before the end of that period.
Still the level of desertion is around 5%. Most of it during the first 6 months. All of it during peace time. Almost all deserters are from EU and Gaulois (French). Usual condamnation is 3 months of prison with no time effectively done in jail.
Graebarde
05-08-2010, 07:12 PM
1. IF the female can pass the qualifications I agree it should be open to them if they choose. There needs to be ONE standard of performance however, not one for men and one for women. Make it or fail.. one and all. I know many female 'warriors' that would put the average male 'warrior' to shame in 90% of the task. (I was married to one for 17 years)
2. IF a female gets pregnant, she is non-deployable. SOME get that way so they don't have to 'perform their duties'. I'm old and crass.. if they are non-deployable and have a good service record, it's one thing.. medical reassignment. IF on the other hand they are bricks before, then seperation from service. How many do not have someone to take care of the child? Same story.. Yeah like I said, I'm a old crass fart.
3. Male chauvanism gets in the way of 'prgress'. It also makes for dangerous situations in combat. There is a ingrained thought I think that males will tend to be protective of the female at their own risk. And there are females that take advantage of that same thinking. I served with females... some great 'warriors' many fell into the latter... The bottom line is WHY people join the armed forces.. usually for the WRONG reasons... 'gee I didn't join to go to war, I joined for college, or the paycheck, or what ever lame reason'
I shall now step off the soap box.. and thank the makers that I am not in the service now... and hope the MEN can handle it.
Webstral
05-08-2010, 11:40 PM
It's a thorny issue. Mixing men and women causes problems wherever you do it. Sting said it best: "There is no political solution/for our troubled evolution." ("Spirits in the Material World") Substitute policy or administrative for political, and you have something to apply to the military. Men and women can have fraternal relationships, but men and women in their breeding prime (especially men) want love and sex--not necessarily in that order of priority. Ignoring this unavoidable fact is just immature. Given our oddly puritanical attitudes towards sex, it's not surprising that the US military is struggling with integrating men and women in a fashion that is fair, impartial, and workable.
I'll be honest: I struggled with the mixing when I was MI. The combat engineers and the infantry are just easier in that way. Fortunately for me, I don't flirt well, and I know it. I kept female soldiers at arm's length because I don't dance well enough to manage anything else. While I daresay that many male soldiers have my attitude, at least as many are eager to find themselves in the company of female soldiers for all the wrong reasons. I won't repeat the things I heard at an EO seminar; young soldiers are looking to get some.
It's not all one-sided, either. In my various XO positions for MI AIT companies at Huachuca, I was constantly in the company of young female soldiers. The command team (the commander, the first sergeant, and I) had a runner assigned to us whenever snowbirds, blackbirds, or light duty types were available. The runner occupied a desk in my office, which was between the CO's and 1SG's offices. Many's the day I walked into my office and got a "Hi, sir..." greeting that told me I needed to be out and about all day.
After PT one day, I discovered that I didn't have enough time to drive home and shower before an early appointment. I kept a spare set of BDUs in my trunk for just such an occasion. I showered in the seldom-used VIP shower in the barracks. The private assigned to clean that area came in and struck up a conversation with me through the shower door. She was one of the "Hi, sir..." types. She ignored hints that I was just about done with my shower. She did not leave when I shut off the shower and dried off. I told her I was going to have to get out of the shower and get dressed now. She said, "That's okay, sir."
I solved the problem by telling her to find the senior drill sergeant right away. There was a pause, then she left. When the senior drill sergeant arrived, I told him that under no [expletive deleted] circumstances were any of the trainees to enter the VIP shower while anyone was in there. He gave me a three-bags-full. I think he understood.
While it may be true that fraternization represents a lack of discipline, asking for monastic discipline on top of combat discipline may be more than one can ask. We don't want choir boys in the Army, and we don't recruit monks. We want killers. For better for for worse, the kinds of men who sign up to kill people against whom they have no particular gripe want to [expletive deleted] women. If government-sponsored brothels were available, then I'd say the Army would have a case against fraternizing in the field. In lieu of providing authorized outlets, the Army needs to grow up and accept that its killers never signed on for celibacy. Men and women under stress are going to have sex just as surely as a bullet fired in the air will come down someplace.
If I were in charge, I'd set up brothels that were under strict military control and issue ration cards or some other rationing system for access. Then we'd have an argument that male and female soldiers should not be finding solace in each others' arms.
Webstral
pmulcahy11b
05-09-2010, 02:28 AM
Fortunately for me, I don't flirt well, and I know it. I kept female soldiers at arm's length because I don't dance well enough to manage anything else. Webstral
I struggled with that one my whole life. After my nervous breakdown, I just gave up on the whole idea, and pretty much now, I'm too old to even give the idea of romance a thought any more. (Except when I watch romantic movies -- my guilty pleasure.) Romances have always been tough for me to start, impossible to maintain, and usually started almost by accident.
My best friend, however, is female; her name's Gladys. We met in college and have known each other since. We've nursed each other through tough classes, bad family lives, busted romances, and worse -- and better (I was there through her first pregnancy, after her husband left her when he found out she was pregnant. If you ever get a chance to be in the delivery room, take it). We never thought of each other romantically in the least -- it's almost like we were long lost brother and sister. So it doesn't always have to be either romantic or platonic.
Mohoender
05-09-2010, 04:40 AM
A few tricks
1) Need to be polite (not servile). Keep learning: you'll never stop. Here are basic rules.
- If you wear a hat, always take it off when speaking to a woman.
- Always let them go first when you go through a door in a place you know. However, in a place you don't know (restaurants for exemple), you enter first. Most people have forgotten about that rule but the explanation is simple. You don't know who might be behind the door and you have to protect her. You might have to explain it to her but trust she will appreciate.;)
- When climbing a stair you let her go first. You are polite and get the best view.:D
- When going down a stair (especially dangerous ones), you always go first (so you can catch her if she goes down). After all you are her charming prince. (again you might have to explain it)
- Hold the door of your car (increasingly hard with remotes) and be careful not to close the door on her leg.
- Listen to what she says and I mean listen.:rolleyes:
- If you cross another woman and look at her (you look at the gorgeous and hideous ones not matter how much you try it), don't deny it. Of course when you look at that woman, just don't do it too obviously (except if she is of hideous type). Anyway, your girl friend look at other man going by (You like nice boops, they love nice asses). Then, if you are caught, tell your mate than that woman passing by was nice looking but that she is ten times more gorgeous.
- Help her sit down (it's tricky) when going to a restaurant (and why not at home)
- Don't sit down at a dining table unless they are seated. If you are seated don't forget to stand up.
- If you are invited and the hot meal is already in your plate, don't wait to eat (that's an insult to the cook). Widely forgotten, therefore, make sure it doesn't hurt anyones feeling.
- To salute her leave the initiative. Some will shake your hand as a man others wont.
- Handkiss is still working but do it in a less formal way (with some sense of humor)
- If you offer her red roses, it has to be an uneaven number unless married (1-3-5-7-9...). Heaven numbers brutally means you want to fuck her. Usually she does too but better to be less aggressive.
(I'm sure I'm forgetting a lot of rules). Rules of politeness works especially well with American women.
2) Don't ever share the bill, always propose to pay but don't forget to let her do it from time to time.
3) Don't offer them gifts and flowers all the time (needless) but don't forget to do it from time to time. For my part, I often forget my wife's birthday (oops).
4) If you know how to cook, you have done half the road. On that matter women and men are the same. :)
5) Anyway, unlike what most men think, men don't hunt women, it's the other way around. However, don't ever let them know you understood it (unless you are married and your wife has a well developped sense of humor). There is no need to flirt at all, in fact. Just be present and kind, they will hunt you if you please them. That also explains the trick with the red roses.
6) Compliment them and I mean compliment them. Don't even hesitate to overdo. She'll know you are facking it but it works nonetheless. If she resist and tells you you are an hypocrit, push it forward.
7) From time to time, go shopping with her or you'll never be able to surprise her. I know its painful but there is no need to do it each time and you can put some limits.
And to those who think this is OT, it is not. We are talking military matters all day and women are exactly like the stronghold you want to take. That's why military strategist and politicians have often been successful with women.
I'm married, never cheated on my wife, but I can't help it. I still find women (most of them) to be the most beautiful thing in life.;):) As an Iranian friend told me once as he was looking at a girl with beautiful legs and short skirts: That girls is gorgeous, praise god that she is willing to share it with us.
Mohoender
05-09-2010, 04:43 AM
My best friend, however, is female; her name's Gladys. We met in college and have known each other since. We've nursed each other through tough classes, bad family lives, busted romances, and worse -- and better (I was there through her first pregnancy, after her husband left her when he found out she was pregnant. If you ever get a chance to be in the delivery room, take it). We never thought of each other romantically in the least -- it's almost like we were long lost brother and sister. So it doesn't always have to be either romantic or platonic.
I'm almost 40, I have been married with my wife for 5 years now and we have dated for 7 years. The tricky part is that we have known each other for 35 years. Took us almost 30 years to move forward. There still is hope for you, then.:)
Nowhere Man 1966
05-09-2010, 04:01 PM
1. IF the female can pass the qualifications I agree it should be open to them if they choose. There needs to be ONE standard of performance however, not one for men and one for women. Make it or fail.. one and all. I know many female 'warriors' that would put the average male 'warrior' to shame in 90% of the task. (I was married to one for 17 years)
2. IF a female gets pregnant, she is non-deployable. SOME get that way so they don't have to 'perform their duties'. I'm old and crass.. if they are non-deployable and have a good service record, it's one thing.. medical reassignment. IF on the other hand they are bricks before, then seperation from service. How many do not have someone to take care of the child? Same story.. Yeah like I said, I'm a old crass fart.
3. Male chauvanism gets in the way of 'prgress'. It also makes for dangerous situations in combat. There is a ingrained thought I think that males will tend to be protective of the female at their own risk. And there are females that take advantage of that same thinking. I served with females... some great 'warriors' many fell into the latter... The bottom line is WHY people join the armed forces.. usually for the WRONG reasons... 'gee I didn't join to go to war, I joined for college, or the paycheck, or what ever lame reason'
I shall now step off the soap box.. and thank the makers that I am not in the service now... and hope the MEN can handle it.
I do agree with you where there should be one standard. I'm squeamish about women serving aboard subs in a coed manner. Webstral has a point too where Sting of the Police (at that time) pointed out about the problems of human nature. If I may bring about another musical group example, I would use the song from The Partridge Family where "I am willing to meet you halfway." Maybe we need to test a sub or two with all female crews and see how they perform and take it from there. I'm normally against experimentation in the military but I think we can spare a boat or two and just see what happens.
Chuck
pmulcahy11b
05-09-2010, 06:13 PM
I do agree with you where there should be one standard. I'm squeamish about women serving aboard subs in a coed manner. Webstral has a point too where Sting of the Police (at that time) pointed out about the problems of human nature. If I may bring about another musical group example, I would use the song from The Partridge Family where "I am willing to meet you halfway." Maybe we need to test a sub or two with all female crews and see how they perform and take it from there. I'm normally against experimentation in the military but I think we can spare a boat or two and just see what happens.
Chuck
I agree with you that there should be one standard, but I also think that coed units are a place where men and women, especially young men and women, need to grow up about their professional relationships with each other. That kind of immature attitude can happen in coed units. To a large extent, curbing this attitude is also a leadership problem. Men and women can work together professionally --I've seen it happen.
waiting4something
05-10-2010, 08:06 AM
It's a thorny issue. Mixing men and women causes problems wherever you do it. Sting said it best: "There is no political solution/for our troubled evolution." ("Spirits in the Material World") Substitute policy or administrative for political, and you have something to apply to the military. Men and women can have fraternal relationships, but men and women in their breeding prime (especially men) want love and sex--not necessarily in that order of priority. Ignoring this unavoidable fact is just immature. Given our oddly puritanical attitudes towards sex, it's not surprising that the US military is struggling with integrating men and women in a fashion that is fair, impartial, and workable.
I'll be honest: I struggled with the mixing when I was MI. The combat engineers and the infantry are just easier in that way. Fortunately for me, I don't flirt well, and I know it. I kept female soldiers at arm's length because I don't dance well enough to manage anything else. While I daresay that many male soldiers have my attitude, at least as many are eager to find themselves in the company of female soldiers for all the wrong reasons. I won't repeat the things I heard at an EO seminar; young soldiers are looking to get some.
It's not all one-sided, either. In my various XO positions for MI AIT companies at Huachuca, I was constantly in the company of young female soldiers. The command team (the commander, the first sergeant, and I) had a runner assigned to us whenever snowbirds, blackbirds, or light duty types were available. The runner occupied a desk in my office, which was between the CO's and 1SG's offices. Many's the day I walked into my office and got a "Hi, sir..." greeting that told me I needed to be out and about all day.
After PT one day, I discovered that I didn't have enough time to drive home and shower before an early appointment. I kept a spare set of BDUs in my trunk for just such an occasion. I showered in the seldom-used VIP shower in the barracks. The private assigned to clean that area came in and struck up a conversation with me through the shower door. She was one of the "Hi, sir..." types. She ignored hints that I was just about done with my shower. She did not leave when I shut off the shower and dried off. I told her I was going to have to get out of the shower and get dressed now. She said, "That's okay, sir."
I solved the problem by telling her to find the senior drill sergeant right away. There was a pause, then she left. When the senior drill sergeant arrived, I told him that under no [expletive deleted] circumstances were any of the trainees to enter the VIP shower while anyone was in there. He gave me a three-bags-full. I think he understood.
While it may be true that fraternization represents a lack of discipline, asking for monastic discipline on top of combat discipline may be more than one can ask. We don't want choir boys in the Army, and we don't recruit monks. We want killers. For better for for worse, the kinds of men who sign up to kill people against whom they have no particular gripe want to [expletive deleted] women. If government-sponsored brothels were available, then I'd say the Army would have a case against fraternizing in the field. In lieu of providing authorized outlets, the Army needs to grow up and accept that its killers never signed on for celibacy. Men and women under stress are going to have sex just as surely as a bullet fired in the air will come down someplace.
If I were in charge, I'd set up brothels that were under strict military control and issue ration cards or some other rationing system for access. Then we'd have an argument that male and female soldiers should not be finding solace in each others' arms.
Webstral
Now this is the kind of guy we need in charge! But, he has common sense, so he could never become a General.:p Really you hit the nail on the head.:smileysho
pmulcahy11b
05-10-2010, 08:55 AM
...We want killers...
Webstral
I probably just misunderstood your phrasing here, but I didn't and don't want someone next to me who wants to kill. I made a pointed effort to get two such people out of my squad, people I believe actually wanted to go to war and kill someone. I want someone who is capable of killing, but still has his essential humanity intact. People who actually want to kill shouldn't be allowed to even touch a weapon.
Webstral
05-10-2010, 04:29 PM
I probably just misunderstood your phrasing here, but I didn't and don't want someone next to me who wants to kill. I made a pointed effort to get two such people out of my squad, people I believe actually wanted to go to war and kill someone. I want someone who is capable of killing, but still has his essential humanity intact. People who actually want to kill shouldn't be allowed to even touch a weapon.
I agree that in an ideal world the military would be full of folks who would feel suitably reluctant to press the [metaphorical] trigger and suitably remorseful afterwards. The combat arms in particular present us with rather a Catch-22. Rifleman, tankers, cannon crew, etc. have to be willing to kill and highly motivated to train to that end without falling victim to the not-always-covertly bloodthirsty combat arms subculture. It's a tightrope act that not everyone can manage. If a rifleman must fall off the rope, we'd rather he fall on the side with too much aggression than the side with too little. Beggars can't be choosers; an Army staffed by volunteers and which offers no real incentives to be in the infantry other than membership in the brotherhood of killers is going to find itself with a fair number of men looking to take lives. As for the rest of us, if we were really opposed to taking life, we'd be able to find ourselves positions in the AG or JAG.
Rene Belloq (Raiders of the Lost Ark) tells Dr. Jones: "[We] are not so different as you pretend. I am but a shadowy reflection of you. It would only take a nudge to push you out of the light."
Webstral
perardua
05-10-2010, 04:45 PM
I was always a fan of what my instructors used to tell us they were trying to do, which is to give people the ability to 'flip a switch' in their heads and go from being the bloke in the pub to being able to kill, and back again. The whole 'warrior culture' thing has always vaguely unsettled me when I've encountered it, though it seems to be quite a big part of the US military (at least in my experience). But then, real and perceived differences in military culture between nations could probably be a whole other (quite interesting) thread.
Anyway, back to the topic in hand: Whilst fraternising within a unit is frowned on, and rightfully so, I think there has to continue to be an acceptance that inter-unit relationships, short and long term, will happen, and that trying to stop them is a bad idea. This is especially true on large bases which are effectively towns in their own right, and where, especially for the younger troops, their main social life is with each other.
Webstral
05-10-2010, 04:59 PM
A splendid book called The Kinder, Gentler Military by Stephanie Gutmann explores the idea of a gender-neutral (female friendly) military and asks whether such a military can be as effective as the military it replaces. The author admits that she started the project with the intent of exposing the military as just another boys' club that needed to be forced to mend its degenerate ways. Partway through her research, she became convinced that the military is a separate subculture that needs to be preserved so it can do its job and so the civilian population can remain blissfully unexposed to the brutality of war. Women who want to join the world of the military, Gutmann insists, need to adapt to the military way of business rather than demanding that the military adapt to the woman's way of doing things. She also acknowledges that the majority of women she interviewed believed this, and that the real problem comes from female members of Congress who haven't served but think they know best.
Gutmann recommends exactly what so many have said in this thread already: a single performance standard needs be set for an MOS. Meet the standard, male or female, and you're in. Fail to meet the standard, male or female, and you must find a different MOS. While I'm still not thrilled about the idea of women in the infantry, I'd trade an objective standard for having a few women around.
Of course, making it tougher to be in the combat arms (with objective, gender-neutral standards) isn't going to increase the ranks of the combat arms any more than making it tougher to be a teacher is going to bring more teachers into the profession. The infantry in particular need incentives built in. New recruits should be competing for a available infantry slots, and the infantry should have the option of refusing entry to at least a third of the recruits who meet the general standards to be soldiers. There are two routes to increasing incentives, and both should be tried. The first is to offer more pay and better housing for the infantry. There should be an infantry bonus amounting to at least 20% of base pay for anyone in the 11 series. I'd be open to arguments that the light infantry should receive an even greater bonus than the mech guys. I'd also be open to arguments that the infantry should receive more than 20%. Housing for the infantry should be conspicuously superior, such that junior enlisted soldiers in the CS and CSS should ask themselves how badly they want to be in the rear with the gear. The other advantage should be conspicuiously superior privileges and official respect. The infantry go to the head of the line. The infantry get more days off, and so forth. With a greater pool of applicants, the infantry can afford to get rid of the pogues, train harder (you don't like the pace? There's a slot in the quartermaster unit with your name on it!), and hold itself to even higher standards. THEN we could bring in women, because for every chucklehead unable to control his male impulses in the field, there'd be a line of eager replacements.
As for the other combat arms, I'm on the fence about a modest bonus. In the current climate, the tankers and cannon cockers aren't fighting the same war as the riflemen. However, if HIC breaks out someplace, the gun and fighting vehicle crews will fnd their lives in much greater peril. Since you go to war with the Army you've been training for the past five years, I suppose some sort of accomodation for the other combat arms is in order. Again, if one has objective standards and many more applicants than openings, it becomes more feasible to bring in the women and demand celibacy from everyone.
(I'm still in favor of government-run brothels. My wife assures me that the women would need to frequent them, too.)
Webstral
perardua
05-10-2010, 05:19 PM
While I am all for the infantry having more official recognition, I am not sure measures quite as drastic as those you propose would work. The first thing that springs to mind is that in modern operations, everyone is a target. When you have supply convoys getting hit frequently, and when you're sending non-infantry personnel (medics, interpreters, etc) on the same patrols as their infantry counterparts, but without the benefits, then the idea of incentivising people to join the infantry loses some of its legitimacy.
Furthermore, deliberately creating second class citizens within the military just seems like a bad idea. I know the infantry are what wins wars, but so do suppliers, engineers, mechanics, medics and all the other personnel that enable them to do their jobs. You make it sound like people in those trades have less value than infantrymen, and that is simply not true.
As an aside, does the US Army have different fitness standards for combat arms as compared to CSS types? I know the British Army Combat Fitness Test has different weight and distance standards for different arms, and the RAF Regiment has the Regiment Operational Fitness Assessment to help set it apart from the rest of the RAF.
pmulcahy11b
05-10-2010, 08:14 PM
As an aside, does the US Army have different fitness standards for combat arms as compared to CSS types? I know the British Army Combat Fitness Test has different weight and distance standards for different arms, and the RAF Regiment has the Regiment Operational Fitness Assessment to help set it apart from the rest of the RAF.
Technically no, but everyone in the Army (when I was in) knew that in Combat Arms units, you were going to be graded on each pushup and situp repetition was going to be graded more harshly. (The 2-mile run time doesn't allow for harder grading -- the time is the time.) However, standards go down as you get older, and women have lower standards for PT then men.
When I went to the 82nd Airborne, we were expected to score 20% higher than the book standards, plus there was a pullup event added to the PT test.
Eddie
05-10-2010, 09:28 PM
Technically no, but everyone in the Army (when I was in) knew that in Combat Arms units, you were going to be graded on each pushup and situp repetition was going to be graded more harshly. (The 2-mile run time doesn't allow for harder grading -- the time is the time.) However, standards go down as you get older, and women have lower standards for PT then men.
When I went to the 82nd Airborne, we were expected to score 20% higher than the book standards, plus there was a pullup event added to the PT test.
That comes from the 82nd's Ranger Envy. Ranger Standards used to be 80% in each event in the 17-21 year old age range plus 6 pull ups. Then that changed when the age standards got revamped in '99-'00. Now it's your age group.
The Army Standard is 60% per category. Infantry standard is 70%. Nothing really happens to you if you don't make it except maybe a flag for no favorable action and getting put on remedial PT.
About three years ago RTB changed their PT standards and renamed the APFT the Ranger Phsycial Fitness Test. Now the RPFT is 80% for push-ups and sit-ups in the 17-21 year category, a 5 mile run in 40 minutes substituted for the 2-mile, and the pull-ups. The rest of the Army still does the APFT.
Webstral
05-10-2010, 11:06 PM
Furthermore, deliberately creating second class citizens within the military just seems like a bad idea.
A dual-class system already exists in the military—any military. The officers are the first class citizens, and the enlisted troops are the second class citizens. Pay and privileges are allocated accordingly. Soldiers (and seamen, airmen, and Marines) are accustomed to living and operating in a system in which service members are not all peers and in which some receive much better treatment than others for the execution of certain duties. There also exists a multiple-standard system in which SO operates under substantially different rules than the line units. The US Army already recognizes the differences between troops when offering re-enlistment bonuses; Special Forces gets $150,000. The truckers and MI and heavy engineers aren’t getting this money.
Everyone may be a target, but it's still the infantry who are doing more than their share of the dying. The combat support guys may be exposed to combat, but the combat arms guys are the ones who are assigned to prosecute it. Truckers on the highways are exposed to ambushes and IEDs. Riflemen purposefully engaged in urban combat are exposed to an entirely different order of threat.
I take your point about having medics and interpreters on patrols, but I'm not convinced the solution is to avoid giving incentives altogether. A case can be made for recognizing that the rifle platoon medic deserves the same incentives as the riflemen under his care. I'm not going to address incentives for interpreters, very few of whom in Iraq are American servicemen.
As for second class, there's a difference between second class by inherent quality and second class by choice. The infantry ain't rocket science. Those who succeed and those who don't principally are divided by motivation, not by native intelligence. Traditionally, the infantry makes due with the folks who are left over after the more technical services take their pick. I wouldn't say that the US infantry is filled with rocks, but too many are doofuses who should be doing something else. By the same token, MI is full of folks who would be good infantry except for the fact that they can't imagine why they'd put up with that [expletive deleted] for the exact same pay and privileges. Who can blame them?
I know the infantry are what wins wars, but so do suppliers, engineers, mechanics, medics and all the other personnel that enable them to do their jobs. You make it sound like people in those trades have less value than infantrymen, and that is simply not true.
All jobs may contribute to victory, but not all jobs are equal just because they contribute. As an analogy, I'll point to civil service. A municipality (with minimal corruption) does not create jobs that do nothing. Every paid position contributes to keeping the municipality running. Not every position merits equal pay. Try paying the cops the same as you pay a file clerk for a given level of experience, and you will find yourself with a very poor pool of candidates for the police department. All jobs may contribute, but not every job is equally critical. Not all jobs pose equal risk to life and limb.
Webstral
Eddie
05-11-2010, 04:28 AM
Everyone may be a target, but it's still the infantry who are doing more than their share of the dying.
This is the only part I'll nitpick on. In Iraq and until recently, Afghanistan, the majority of engagements have been on non-Combat Arms MOSs because they present the softer target. Running a historical tally, you're correct though.
We've had our differences in the past Webstral, but as an Infantryman...when are you running for Congress? You got my wife's vote when you said more than 20%.
perardua
05-11-2010, 07:15 AM
Good points. I don't really have a problem with retention/recruitment bonuses for specific trades (the RAF Regiment, my own branch of service, has been throwing them out pretty frequently, with the result that it was, last time I checked, I overmanned. Which is nice), but what I disagree with is the concept of infantry (or whatever trade takes your fancy) getting more privileges, better housing, more time off, etc than any other enlisted personnel. For officers, that's the way it's always been, and there is a general acceptance that that's how things work. I just think that a lot of skilled non-combat arms tradesmen will not take kindly to that suddenly becoming applied to their own place in the military, as compared to infantry, and may even start wondering if the civilian world is a better place to find employment.
For myself, and most of my colleagues, we would have welcomed more pay and better housing. However, we didn't need it to make us stay in, or to attract the best recruits. We already felt we were better than those around us who hadn't been through the same training that we had, and who worked 9-5 jobs for the most part. I think that a lot of units create their own sense of elitism, and that it does work as a means of attracting and retaining the right kind of recruits.
Of course, the caveat to all of this is that I have no indepth knowledge of how the US Army works, or what it's culture is like. I'm coming at this from the standpoint of not having seen a lack of quality amongst infantry, certainly not to the extent you suggest. But then, my experience is different to yours.
As an aside, the British Army uses a personal fitness test similar to that of the US Army (press-ups, sit-ups and a 1.5 mile run in PT kit) plus a Combat Fitness Test which is 6-8 miles as a squad with CEMO, the exact time, distance and weights carried varying with arm. It's always been my experience that regardless of what your fitness test standard actually is, only doing the minimum gets you in lots of trouble.
The RAF Regiment uses the biannual RAF Fitness Test, which is press-ups, sit-ups and a bleep test. They also add the annual ROFA, a 2 day event which consists of a CEMO march similar to the Army Infantry CFT, a speed march in CEFO, a dummy drag, a sprint carrying two jerry cans, and a bergen lift onto the back of a vehicle. They've been experimenting with modifying it, and we recently trialled the addition of another bleep test (higher standard required than the normal RAF one and no reductions for age), a swim test, pull-ups, and a fire and movement lane consisting of alternate sprinting and crawling for a set distance. The next year we went back to the old one, though I hear the improved version is still being worked on. Regardless, I always used to like the CEMO march. 8 miles was almost the exact distance from the Squadron buildings to the CS chamber, and thus it was always used as an opportunity to get our annual NBC testing in after the march....
pmulcahy11b
05-11-2010, 07:46 AM
As for second class, there's a difference between second class by inherent quality and second class by choice. The infantry ain't rocket science. Those who succeed and those who don't principally are divided by motivation, not by native intelligence. Traditionally, the infantry makes due with the folks who are left over after the more technical services take their pick. I wouldn't say that the US infantry is filled with rocks, but too many are doofuses who should be doing something else.
Webstral
Web, really, the days when infantrymen were a bunch of soldiers without the talent to do anything else were already gone by the time I enlisted -- as an infantryman in the National Guard -- in 1983. Using tactics takes brains, using modern infantry equipment takes brains, keeping a platoon or even a squad in working order logistically takes brains, knowing the weak points on enemy armor takes brains, etc, etc, etc. Being infantry requires just as much head work as any other MOS -- but not everyone can do it. I don't consider myself a doofus -- I have a BA in History with a respectable 3.07 GPA at graduation and an IQ of 145 plus or minus 5. I didn't know any stupid fellow infantrymen -- foolish maybe, but not flat out stupid. The idea of the "dumb grunt" is a misconception that in reality went away a long time ago.
Adm.Lee
05-11-2010, 12:37 PM
Web, really, the days when infantrymen were a bunch of soldiers without the talent to do anything else were already gone by the time I enlisted -- as an infantryman in the National Guard -- in 1983. ... The idea of the "dumb grunt" is a misconception that in reality went away a long time ago.
I've read of studies dating back to WW2 that said that lower IQ infantrymen tended to become casualties much more quickly than smarter ones, and that smarter infantrymen were much more combat-effective. The army adjusted several policies after that.
Webstral
05-12-2010, 01:23 PM
Paul, I want to give you the proper, well-considered response that you deserve. However, I have class tonight (or at least I'll be in the classroom), so last night and today are shot for anything but schoolwork. Yes, like so many others I find myself finishing my work at the eleventh hour. I don't want you to think I'm ignoring you.
Webstral
P.S. The Eleventh Hour would be a good name for a pub or a tax services business, don't you think? Or perhaps for putting together last-minute weddings with expanded-middle wedding gowns?
Graebarde
05-13-2010, 12:06 AM
Cira 1973, Ft Eustis (Even Uncle Sam Thinks It Sucks) VA.
I was an instructor at the Transportation School. I taught a 24-hour block of instruction to Movement Specialist and the SAME block to Stevedores. I had been at the school for about a year, having been medically reclassified from the Infantry where I had served for the better part of five years, with two tours under my belt. Any ways, this block was a MUST PASS to continue the course, or you were recycled back. I had this kid come in one class and failed the test. This was NOT all that uncommon, perhaps 2-3 per class did. So he's back in about two weeks again. He failed the SECOND time.. same OPEN BOOK test (it was documentation BTW). So the reclassified him to Stevedores. (About the only MOS below them was Laborer IMNSHO) Long story short... he failed test three AND four.. so they are going to reclassify him AGAIN.. to the INFANTRY. I went to the NCOIC of the section, wearing my CIB and ribbons. I told the Master Sergeant to NOT reclassify the kid to the Infantry. He asked me WHY NOT? I flat told him it took BRAINS to stay alive and not get others killed... He just looked at me for a while and said.. "good point".. the kid was released as untrainable. I still feel that way..
Intelligence and common sense go a LONG way in the Infantry, even back in the day. I was in during the draft era and Volar.. In my platoon in AIT we had a PhD, and two with Masters degrees, as well as several Bachelors.. Our platoon was KICK ASS AND TAKE NAMES LATER if I do say so myself. We were tasked by the Battalion Commander as a TEST platoon.. while everyone carried a rifle and butt pack, our platoon carried TOE rucks, radios, M60s, LAWS, Grenades, and 700 rounds of ammo (inert, but weighs the same), as well as two canteens, and three days c-rats, extra socks, bedroll (blanket and shelterhalf in poncho).. we doubletimed everywhere we went. There were no slackers in the platoon.. we were different and our attitude showed it... we trained when everyone else was in the beer garden... They called us names, and we laughed at them.. HARD CORE!!!! We had people from all walks of life.. in all sorts of shape at first, even after they had been in basic (we filled from three BCT stations that I know of), but EVERYONE was in top shape by end of cycle.. We did our six mile road march in 45 minutes over the ridges.. NOBODY in the platoon dropped out while other platoons were falling like flies... and we had 80+ pounds MORE than they did to carry.. If someone was having troubles with a concept.. they were helped by their peers..
Now this is NOT to say all were happy campers, far from it, but we were the only platoon that had NO AWOLs that cycle, everyone was 80% plus on the PT test (which at the time was FIVE events culminating in a mile run... IN COMBAT BOOTS.. PT gear was T-shit, fatigue pants and combat boots, no running shoes and sweats need apply thank you very much.. You train how your going to fight... and I dont see anyone in tennies and shorts (except that kid in 'Stan in his pink boxers and flipflops LOL)
I know, times have changed, but I think we were taught and tested on more stuff in that time than they do now... ie. First Aid was almost to Life Saver standards today and that was EVERYONE. I was involved in a first aid class in the late 70's and appalled they didn't even address a sucking chest wound. Comms were simpler, but more indepth.. we had demolitions, live fire of LAWS, a week on the '60, fired MaDuce and bloopers, as well as the .45 and the 'trusty' M-16 which was just coming on line (took BCT with the M14).. intensive land navigation, yada yada yada.. and it was ALL tested.. you fail you recycle... And testing was in week SIX and you recycled back to week ONE.. something NOBODY wanted... Everyone in my platoon graduated.. Six of the platoon went on to OCS.. and some payed the ultimate price in the shithole called Nam.
Guess I got carried away.. sorry.. but I was an 11B and proud of it. And I was a volunteer RA, not a draftee. (Why would someone do that you ask.. hey, the INFANTRY to me is the ARMY.. the rest just support us.)
Grae
(getting extinguishers ready for the flames :D)
IT takes more than a warm body to make an Infantryman.
pmulcahy11b
05-13-2010, 04:49 AM
Guess I got carried away.. sorry.. but I was an 11B and proud of it. And I was a volunteer RA, not a draftee. (Why would someone do that you ask.. hey, the INFANTRY to me is the ARMY.. the rest just support us.)
Grae
(getting extinguishers ready for the flames :D)
IT takes more than a warm body to make an Infantryman.
Damn straight!
Dog 6
05-13-2010, 12:42 PM
lol crunchy's
pmulcahy11b
05-13-2010, 01:40 PM
lol crunchy's
I find it interesting that you're a DAT and you go by the screen name of "Dog6;" one of the nicknames of a 11B is "line doggie." You may be an infantryman at heart!
Dog 6
05-13-2010, 02:31 PM
Dog 6 was my tanks call sign
cavtroop
05-13-2010, 03:08 PM
I know that when I was in (early 90's), Infantry had the most METL (I think I have that acronym right - Mission Essential Task List) of any MOS in the Army. Cavalry Scouts (19D, that was me) weren't too far behind.
Lots of stuff to know as an infantryman, and even more as technology starts getting pushed down to the individual troop level.
Webstral
05-13-2010, 03:20 PM
Paul, I would never imply, much less say out loud, that you are of low intelligence, low motivation, or low accomplishment. I do respect your GPA and educational accomplishments, but I don’t need to know either fact to know that you are an articulate and thoughtful man whose ideas must be taken seriously.
Web, really, the days when infantrymen were a bunch of soldiers without the talent to do anything else were already gone by the time I enlisted -- as an infantryman in the National Guard -- in 1983. Using tactics takes brains, using modern infantry equipment takes brains, keeping a platoon or even a squad in working order logistically takes brains, knowing the weak points on enemy armor takes brains, etc, etc, etc. Being infantry requires just as much head work as any other MOS -- but not everyone can do it. I don't consider myself a doofus -- I have a BA in History with a respectable 3.07 GPA at graduation and an IQ of 145 plus or minus 5. I didn't know any stupid fellow infantrymen -- foolish maybe, but not flat out stupid. The idea of the "dumb grunt" is a misconception that in reality went away a long time ago.
Believe it or not, Paul, I think we are arguing the same thing. I think, though, I need to do some major clarifying before I earn myself the title of guy who looks down his nose at his own beloved infantry.
As I mean it, the term “doofus” is not interchangeable with “stupid person” or “moron”. By doofus, I mean person of questionable judgment, commitment, or conduct without adequate counterbalancing strengths. A doofus can be stupid, but he can also be very well-educated.
Grae, I couldn’t agree with you more. The infantry are special. We shouldn’t just let in anyone who can pass the PT test and manages to hit 23 (or is it 24?) targets on the qualification range. Getting in the door should be harder, and staying should be harder.
Getting back to doofus—who do I mean? I mean the kid who came to my unit and couldn’t follow any instructions. He was bounced from squad to squad because no one could get him to do what he needed to do without having a hand on the back of his shirt. I got him for a little while. In order to get him to drive the Hum-Vee, I had to verbally walk him through every step he was taking. “Now put it in reverse. Yes, reverse. Yes, now. Right now, private. Put your hand on the lever…good. Now put it in reverse. Good. Now back up. Yes, now…” I’m not kidding. He was a sweet kid, but he had no business being in the infantry. Luckily for us, he was sent to the headquarters company before his first opportunity for a firefight.
By doofus I mean the guy in my squad who left his sensitive items hanging off the end of his bunk but who had a five-pound bag of rice under lock and key in his footlocker. I corrected the individual behavior, but he had many more like it. He just didn’t get it.
By doofus I mean the guy in our platoon who was narcoleptic and couldn’t accept that he had a problem. We couldn’t fix the problem, and we couldn’t get rid of him. Eventually, he fell asleep standing up while on guard duty and was brought up on charges. We got lucky that hajji wasn’t on the move that night.
By doofus I mean both the driver of a Bradley and the TC who allowed the driver to deliberately run over the cars of Iraqi civilians because they were both mad about being in Iraq doing peacekeeping instead of killing people.
By doofus, I mean the guy who has to be roused from his bunk for everything. He drags his fourth point of contact for everything but the run to the snack truck. His team leader needs to police him up like a truculent child. Instead of being a team asset, this guy is a drain on the team because his team leader is hauling him around by the collar. When the team leader tries to get creative about motivating him, he threatens to file an EO complaint.
By doofus, I mean the guys who work to get a perfect 180 on their PT tests—not a point more, thank you. I would find that attitude suspect in any soldier, but in the infantry it should be unacceptable. Raising the bar by ten or twenty points doesn’t change the fact that the soldiers rising to that standard and no more are minimum-hunters. PT is not a matter of skill. It’s a matter of commitment and effort. Something as important as physical fitness is to a rifleman deserves more than the minimum.
I could go on and on about doofuses, but I’m sure everyone knows who I’m talking about now. I’m not talking about you, Paul, or any of the soldiers you hold in high esteem. If you introduced me to a colleague and told me he was a good troop, I’d take you at your word without further question. That much said, you know who I mean. If you haven’t served with some of them, I’d say you’re the luckiest rifleman on the planet. Even the Rangers and Special Forces have served with this guys, which is part of the reason some of the operators seek out the special units. They want something better, and they’re dissatisfied with the standard of the line infantry.
The guys I’m talking about are the bottom twenty percent. Call it the bottom ten percent, if you’ve served in a good unit. I’m talking about having enough guys wanting to get into the infantry so that maintaining headcount isn’t a factor in deciding whether or not to keep a doofus.
Paul, I couldn’t agree with you more that being in the modern infantry takes some intelligence. When I say that being a rifleman isn’t rocket science, I mean that you don’t have to be brilliant to be a serviceable rifleman. I’m very impressed that Grae’s group had lots of well-educated men. This is a favorable reflection on those men, not the standards of the Army. I’m sure there were some GEDs in that group, too—and I’ll bet many of them were just as good as the college boys. A rifleman doesn’t need brilliance, although if he does have an IQ of 145 it’s a promising sign—he needs good judgment. Intelligence and judgment are not the same. There are plenty of people who are great in the lab or executing calculations who don’t have that special sense for the work of the infantry and never will. Some soldiers test for moderate intelligence and yet have that certain special something for warfare. Ideally, the infantry would get plenty of people with a high degree of intelligence and good judgment. If I had to choose between the two qualities, I’d choose good judgment. Good judgment can be learned, to some degree. Some people just will never get it. I’d like to see them sent to another MOS post-haste and have them replaced by soldiers who can be enticed into the special world of the rifles with tangible compensation for putting up with the conditions of service endured by the infantry. (Once they have their boots on the ground, they would hopefully see what so many others have mentioned—that the world of the rifles is special above and beyond pay and privileges.) I want to attract many more candidates and give the infantry the luxury of keeping a higher caliber of soldier.
Does this mean I think the infantry is no good as it is? No. This is not a black-and-white issue where bad ‘ol Webstral thinks everyone ought to rise to his lofty standards or be labeled as s***bags. This is about improving the force we have today. Our enemies include some highly motivated people. I want our successes to be even more overwhelming. I want our guys to triumph in any setting with any level of fire support. I want our line infantry to be so superior to anything that has gone before that they redefine the paradigm of what the infantry can accomplish. Equipment can help, but it’s the people who do the do. I want that bottom twenty percent to be median of the combat support and combat service support people so that every infantry formation can shine.
Other than that, though, I don’t care very much about the infantry or hold them in very high esteem.
Webstral
headquarters
05-14-2010, 02:55 AM
I read Grae s post about the US army in the draft days and found it interesting . We have a draft army ( still) and I have worked with a few "cycles" or platoons if you will.
The funny thing about intelligence is that it seems to be many things .Some guys come in with a Ph.D in classical languages,a penchance for sci fi space battle board games,and a chess kit in their suitcase -others come in in a beer stained Iron Maiden shirt and answer most questions with a "huh?"
Still these two can vary hughely in who adapts better ,learns the new skills faster and handles themselves well.So called intelligence in one field does not translate easily into another .
We say the biggest difference is between practitioners and theoreticians.
As for slamming the arty guys -infantry,navy or whatever that sort of abuse is all in good spirit and for the fun of it .part of it shows that the instructors got through to you when they trained you and tried to slip some pride over your unit into you by dissing the other guys and praising your own.
All in my humble opinion of course - and written as plainly as I could so you infantry types would have a chance to follow ;)
Mohoender
05-17-2010, 08:22 AM
The actual german submarine U-32 has a woman onboard. She is a sonar operator and the only woman among 27 men.
I figured it might interest you to know about her treatment. She is simply considered as every other sailors. She shares her sleeping quarter with one of the men. While leaving harbor she is also the one taking care of dismounting what has to be taken out on the outer hull.
Thought it could interest you.
waiting4something
05-17-2010, 09:00 AM
The actual german submarine U-32 has a woman onboard. She is a sonar operator and the only woman among 27 men.
I figured it might interest you to know about her treatment. She is simply considered as every other sailors. She shares her sleeping quarter with one of the men. While leaving harbor she is also the one taking care of dismounting what has to be taken out on the outer hull.
Thought it could interest you.
Yeah , but is she hot or does she look like the Frankenstein montser? I bet if she had a big old rack, round ass, and sexy face she wouldn't be one of the guys.;)
Mohoender
05-17-2010, 10:50 AM
Yeah , but is she hot or does she look like the Frankenstein montser? I bet if she had a big old rack, round ass, and sexy face she wouldn't be one of the guys.;)
Regular.;) If you have to compare her with the prostitute I can see around my place, she looks much better. Of course, subsailors I must more mentaly advanced than truckers and infantrymen.;):D
drashal
05-17-2010, 12:18 PM
As a former fast attack submariner I can tell to that fitting women on board is going to present some serious logistic issues.
1. the sleeping arrangements are going to make life hell for some women, hot bunking sucks as is for guys, for those who do not uunderstand a Los Angeles fast attack has only 85 bunks on it we have a crew of 110 to 120 depnding on varius things . so about 45 of us are double up on rack space and have to share with the guy on the opisate duty shift that you are on (pray you never get a guy who likes old spice aftershave that stuff smell sticks to every thing in a rack space.
2. then their is the absolute lack of privacy that you have on board (though for women they will hopefully give them one of the outer rack halls and curten it off,
3. the minimal head (bathroom) space, for enlisted we had 5 heads and 5 urnals for our usage which unless they rip the heads apart and design them it will real intresting for them.
4. add the fact that for a 4 month deployment alone each women is going to take up 4 to 5 extra cubic feet of space than a man does (sanitary supplies) now you may not think that is a lot but for 10 women that's a 2 to 3 days worth of rations for the whole crew that cuts back on deployment times.
please don't get me wrong i believe that any women who wants to join the sub community should be able to it just that they should be well aware of the draw backs of it. but also I believe that manitory long term contraceptives should be used (ie the 4+ month shot). getting out of deployment tours by pregnancy should be a disciplinary action. for a man any thing short of full medical will result in a court marshal. so why should some one volunteered for sub duty not be willing to make sure they are deployment ready. as for those who say the military cant force them to take it remember that while you are in the military the military really does own your ass . ask the guys who got court marshaled over tattoos for defacing government property.
Targan
05-17-2010, 06:03 PM
4. add the fact that for a 4 month deployment alone each women is going to take up 4 to 5 extra cubic feet of space than a man does (sanitary supplies) now you may not think that is a lot but for 10 women that's a 2 to 3 days worth of rations for the whole crew that cuts back on deployment times.
please don't get me wrong i believe that any women who wants to join the sub community should be able to it just that they should be well aware of the draw backs of it. but also I believe that manitory long term contraceptives should be used (ie the 4+ month shot).
If contraceptives were mandatory (particularly the injection) then you don't have to worry about sanitary supplies as women using the injected contraceptive (and some oral contraceptives) don't menstruate.
Edit: In response to a very reasonable observation about my above comment I feel I need to make it clear that in no way do I condone mandatory contraception. I wrote this post in response to the section of Drashal's post that I quoted, not because I in any way support forced interference in anybody's reproductive systems.
Mohoender
05-18-2010, 02:57 AM
1. the sleeping arrangements are going to make life hell for some women, hot bunking sucks as is for guys, for those who do not uunderstand a Los Angeles fast attack has only 85 bunks on it we have a crew of 110 to 120 depnding on varius things . so about 45 of us are double up on rack space and have to share with the guy on the opisate duty shift that you are on (pray you never get a guy who likes old spice aftershave that stuff smell sticks to every thing in a rack space.
Why should this be a problem? A woman being a full member of the crew, she must be treated as everyone else.
2. then their is the absolute lack of privacy that you have on board (though for women they will hopefully give them one of the outer rack halls and curten it off,
That would be perfectly inacceptable. If things go that way, I would advise every sailors in the US submarine force to refuse orders.
3. the minimal head (bathroom) space, for enlisted we had 5 heads and 5 urnals for our usage which unless they rip the heads apart and design them it will real intresting for them.
For my part I spend 45 min in my bath every morning while my wife is ready in less than 5 minutes.:D
4. add the fact that for a 4 month deployment alone each women is going to take up 4 to 5 extra cubic feet of space than a man does (sanitary supplies) now you may not think that is a lot but for 10 women that's a 2 to 3 days worth of rations for the whole crew that cuts back on deployment times.
That will take 1 cubic foot (at most). We are talking of submarine sailor, not of the local bimbo.
please don't get me wrong i believe that any women who wants to join the sub community should be able to it just that they should be well aware of the draw backs of it.
So does the men, I never wanted to get on subs exactly for the reasons you give. I managed to avoid tanks not to become the most obvious target on the battlefield.
Mohoender
05-18-2010, 03:08 AM
Out of this entire exchange, the only point I can see against women in subs (or elsewhere) is men and men alone.
Just a point, military personnels are wearing uniforms. Just think of the meaning of this word: everyone the same. Things are as simple as that.
The first problem is that men lack the guts (as always I would say).
The second problem is that it has become a political issue: women must be accepted when they can do the job and accept the living conditions. No special arrangement have to be made for them. If they can't bear the smell they get on land and raise babies.
About the sex issue, it won't be an issue. I don't know much on life in sub but I don't expect that after your turn of duty you think about anything but rest. Moreover, If you have no privacy you have no way to get laid.
The German sub sailors (the woman) was saying something simple and I found it very true: to get into this kind of engagement, you must be somewhat crazy. I agreed with her.
waiting4something
05-18-2010, 04:17 AM
Yes us men are the probelm. If you like TNA(women's that is) you are no different. Sure if you are not attracted to a woman that is one thing, but when we are, we always act different weither it is being nicer or being more antisocial to hide our desire for them. That's just real life. Think of school the military is just like a extension of school in a lot of ways.
I like the idea of women being in there own units, but that is unrealistic too.
Maybe I'm just a sexual pervert, but hey that's just me.:D
pmulcahy11b
05-18-2010, 05:02 AM
If contraceptives were mandatory (particularly the injection) then you don't have to worry about sanitary supplies as women using the injected contraceptive (and some oral contraceptives) don't menstruate.
Reminds me of the soldiers (male and female in each unit) in The Forever War -- one of the first things they did at the reception station was to take a sperm sample and then gives the males a vasectomy, and take eggs from the females and then tie their tubes.
pmulcahy11b
05-18-2010, 05:04 AM
If contraceptives were mandatory (particularly the injection) then you don't have to worry about sanitary supplies as women using the injected contraceptive (and some oral contraceptives) don't menstruate.
That, I think, would be perfect, even in normal life, if both the man and woman were taking contraceptives. And come to think of it, just the other day on the news, I did see a story about a male contraceptive pill being developed...
Mohoender
05-18-2010, 07:02 AM
Yes us men are the probelm. If you like TNA(women's that is) you are no different. Sure if you are not attracted to a woman that is one thing, but when we are, we always act different weither it is being nicer or being more antisocial to hide our desire for them. That's just real life. Think of school the military is just like a extension of school in a lot of ways.
I like the idea of women being in there own units, but that is unrealistic too.
Maybe I'm just a sexual pervert, but hey that's just me.:D
You are not a pervert at all ;). Many men will act like you. However, as much as I love women, I've never found any problem to act as if they were not women. When a job has to be done, it has to be done that's it. In that case they are just another human being. If you really want to protect them/her, there is only one way to act: do your job and let them do theirs. Watch their back and let them watch yours :).
I try to have both of my brains working together (the bottom and the top one, I mean:D). Do the job! When it's done, do as you please.
Eddie
05-18-2010, 07:26 AM
You're also in your '40s, right?
Can you honestly say that you weren't distracted at 18/19/20. That's the average age of these kids. The leaders are more mature, yes, but some of these guys are just out of high school. And if you can honestly say that, I commend you, but you're the exception, not the norm. At least in our culture.
And you're right, Germany has integrated all of their professions, not just subs or military work. Unfortunately, that wasn't a choice they wanted, it was forced on them by their membership in the EU according to a German Army Captain in my class. The majority of German military personnel aren't too pleased with it either.
headquarters
05-18-2010, 07:46 AM
Got it up here too - we are not Union , but we have always had strong women up here that do as they please .All branches are integrated.
I think you get used to whatever your situation is . Working alongside women will be ok as soon as you get some experience with it .
have had women both over and under me :D in the service - cant say that either caused a problem based on their sex alone.( rank people - think rank ).
Now- we werent exactly manouvering a nuclear submarine with warheads and the whole kablammo onboard - more like a SISU xa 185 APC ( has propellers, can ford rivers etc ) but not navy per se ;)
Anyways .We have had women on subs for many years .First female Submarine captain in 1995 .Enlisted and other ranks ,have been many over the years .Typical Norge crew is diesel electric ,app 25 person crew and probably no months on end long cruises .Works in our navy .maybe not in others. Just saying -the examples are there .
Was very bashful at 19 - might have been distracting yeah .
You're also in your '40s, right?
Can you honestly say that you weren't distracted at 18/19/20. That's the average age of these kids. The leaders are more mature, yes, but some of these guys are just out of high school. And if you can honestly say that, I commend you, but you're the exception, not the norm. At least in our culture.
And you're right, Germany has integrated all of their professions, not just subs or military work. Unfortunately, that wasn't a choice they wanted, it was forced on them by their membership in the EU according to a German Army Captain in my class. The majority of German military personnel aren't too pleased with it either.
Mohoender
05-18-2010, 01:51 PM
The majority of German military personnel aren't too pleased with it either.
Military personnel have never been pleased with changes any way. Not so long ago, they were not even willing to accept submarines in our various navies. Took, multiple defeats to accept tanks, not to talk of aircrafts. Military personnel always had more in common with old widows than with anything else.:D
Eddie
05-18-2010, 02:08 PM
Military personnel have never been pleased with changes any way.
That's a very broad statement and largely unfounded. We're always looking for ways to better our organizations and make our jobs safer.
What we dislike and resist is an outside source, the majority of which hasn't been in our organization or a similar one, dictating our policies and procedures to us.
pmulcahy11b
05-18-2010, 03:30 PM
Military personnel have never been pleased with changes any way. Not so long ago, they were not even willing to accept submarines in our various navies. Took, multiple defeats to accept tanks, not to talk of aircrafts. Military personnel always had more in common with old widows than with anything else.:D
What, you're kidding, right? What's the first thing that happens in any unit of any size when a new officer or senior NCO takes over? He changes as much as possible, trying to leave his mark on the unit -- for good or bad. When I was in the Army, we used to say we would always know when a new TRADOC commanding general was appointed -- all the manuals would change. The changes that officers and senior NCOs are so resistant to are the ones that aren't their ideas.
Mohoender
05-18-2010, 04:11 PM
What, you're kidding, right?
Of course I am!!! Damn it, there are still people to take me seriously on these kind of statements. You are getting too serious people sometimes. :wall: :hanged: :behead:
vBulletin® v3.8.6, Copyright ©2000-2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.