Is outgoing Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta’s decision to assign women to frontline combat units a bad decision or the logical extension of equality for women? (Read the full column at EWRosss.com)
Filed under: Military, 1970s, all-volunteer military, Axis of Time trilogy, battlefield, conscription, counterinsurgency, crewmen on submarines, desegregation of the military, Designated Targets, discrimination, DoD, don’t-ask-don’t-tell policy, double standards, draft women, Ed Ross, endurance, equal opportunity, equality for women, ewross, feminists, fighting and winning wars, Final Impact, frontline combat support units, frontline combat units, helicopter and fighter pilots, infantry combat, infantry combat command, Infantry Officer’s Course, infantry units, John Birmingham, military academies, military services, national emergency, peacekeeping, physical standards, quotas, SEAL, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, sexual assaults, special forces, sustained offensive combat operations, the last obstacle, therein lays the rub, U.S. military capability, unit cohesion, United States, Weapons of Choice, women in combat