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Women in US military fight for right to serve in combat

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Sgt. Jenniver Hunt was wounded in Afghanistan when she was accompanying infantry teams raiding buildings. Her job was to search any women encountered. She says not being allowed to serve in the infantry and train with fellow soldiers made it more dangerous for her on the missions. (Photo by Lloyd Fox/Baltimore Sun/MCT)

(MCT) — BALTIMORE — As a woman in the Army, Staff Sgt. Jennifer Hunt is barred from serving in the infantry. But that didn’t stop commanders in Afghanistan from tapping her when they needed a female soldier to accompany men on their door-kicking missions.

Hunt’s job on those house-to-house raids was to search any women and girls they came across. Not having trained with the teams, she says, made the work more dangerous.

“The infantry operates together,” she said. “Then I get kind of dropped in on them, and I don’t know what their operating procedures are. If ‘X’ happens, what is their reaction to it?”

The 28-year-old Gaithersburg, Md., reservist, who earned a Purple Heart in Iraq, is one of four servicewomen suing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to end the long-standing policy that excludes women from serving in direct combat.

The women, each of whom has served in Afghanistan or Iraq, say the combat exclusion policy is unconstitutional and outdated in an age of war without front lines — where anyone might face hostile fire and women are called on to provide close support to fighting troops.

The Clinton-era policy bars women from infantry, artillery, tank and other units that engage in direct combat with the enemy — currently some 238,000 positions, or about one-fifth of the regular, active-duty armed forces. Most of the male-only jobs are in the Army and Marines, the “tip of the spear” of the U.S. military.

Panetta was chief of staff to President Bill Clinton when the policy was developed in 1994.

The service members in the lawsuit, who are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, say the rule denies women the opportunity to train with units that they might end up fighting alongside, makes it more difficult for them to advance in military careers and endangers all troops by preventing commanders from assigning the best personnel to perform missions.

“If someone’s going to cover you in a firefight, you don’t care if that person’s a man or a woman,” said Hunt, a member of the 450th Civil Affairs Battalion, based in Riverdale. “You just care that they can shoot and move.

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