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Women in US military fight for right to serve in combat

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“Taking down this combat exclusion policy is going to allow the military to take the best-qualified people, men or women, who can meet the physical standards.”

The lawsuit, filed last month in California, is the most recent salvo in the long battle to open more jobs in the military to women, who now make up 14 percent of the armed forces.

More than 280,000 women have served in Afghanistan or Iraq since Sept. 11, 2001. More than 150 have been killed, and nearly 1,000 wounded.

The Defense Department, under pressure from Congress, has been looking for ways to expand opportunities for women. In February, the Army opened about 14,500 positions previously off-limits to women, including jobs for intelligence and personnel officers, and artillery and tank mechanics.

The Marine Corps is allowing women to attend its grueling Infantry Officer Course; the first two volunteers last fall failed to complete the 10-week program. The Marines are also assigning women to train in certain combat-related jobs with infantry, artillery, tank and other units for testing purposes.

A Pentagon spokesman declined to comment on the pending litigation but said Panetta is “very committed to examining the expansion of roles for women.”

“His record is very strong on this issue,” spokesman George Little said. He called the 14,500 Army openings “merely the beginning and not the end of a process, and we expect that process to continue.”

But an attorney for the servicewomen said the numbers so far “simply fall short.” Ariela Migdal, a staff attorney with the ACLU’s Women’s Rights Project, says women are already serving in combat but often not getting the same credit as men, or the same opportunities for training and promotion.

According to the plaintiffs, 80 percent of Army generals come from positions closed to women.

“Of course it’s welcome that they’re tweaking the policy around the edges, but the core exclusion is still in place,” Migdal said. “Whole career fields, whole combat arms and whole schools remain closed.”

Hunt’s co-plaintiffs include California Air National Guard Maj. Mary Jennings Hegar, a helicopter pilot who earned a Purple Heart and a Distinguished Flying Cross with Valor in Afghanistan; Marine Capt. Alexandra Zoe Bedell, who has deployed twice to Afghanistan; and Marine 1st Lt. Colleen Farrell, who also has deployed to Afghanistan.

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