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Military to lift ban on women in combat jobs

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Each service may seek to keep some positions closed to women, but the goal will be to keep those exceptions to a minimum, senior Defense officials said.

The services will be allowed to set physical fitness requirements and other standards for combat jobs, but the standards will be gender-neutral, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because Panetta had not yet made the announcement.

“The presumption now is that all jobs will be open, instead of the old rule that presumed females would be kept out of ground combat,” one official said.

Panetta’s decision specifically lifts a 1994 Pentagon rule that bars women from serving in jobs that makes them likely to engage in direct ground fighting.

Congress will have a month to review the decision before it goes into effect, and in theory could block lifting the rule, though that is unlikely, officials said.

The immediate reaction in Congress was mixed. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a Vietnam combat veteran who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, tweeted: “I respect and support” Panetta’s decision “to lift the ban on women serving in combat.”

But Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., a Marine veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, said Panetta needed to explain “how this decision ... increases combat effectiveness rather than being a move done for political purposes — which is what this looks like.”

The Air Force and the Navy are well ahead of the other services in integrating women into their forces, largely because neither service is heavily involved in ground combat. Women pilots have flown in combat since 1993, for instance.

But even the Air Force bars females from serving in certain ground assignments, including combat air controllers, who are assigned to ground units to call in air strikes, or so-called para-rescue specialists, who slip behind enemy lines to help find downed pilots.

“The American public is ready to accept a greater number of female casualties in wartime,” said Lory Manning, a retired U.S. Navy captain. “Everyone expected a hue and cry when women started getting killed in combat, and it hasn’t happened.”

In all, 241,000 women are on active duty in the armed forces, out of 1.6 million Americans in uniform. Over the last decade, 61 female service members were killed in action in Iraq and 23 have died in Afghanistan.

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