The top general in the US Armed Forces warned of a crisis of
confidence in the growing ranks of women soldiers due to a rash of sexual
assault cases that has prompted lawmakers to act.
The warning by Army General Martin Dempsey came hours before
President Barack Obama asked military leaders at a White House meeting to get
the problem of sexual assaults under control.
"We're losing the confidence of the women who serve that we
can solve this problem," Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, said as he returned from NATO meetings in Brussels. "That's a
crisis."
Obama met with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, Dempsey and other
military leaders at the White House to discuss sexual assaults after a series
of scandals discredited efforts to stamp it out.
A steep rise in sexual assault cases comes just as the Pentagon
moves ahead with plans to integrate women into front-line combat roles.
Two cases in as many weeks in which members of the armed forces
tasked with preventing sexual assaults have themselves been charged with sex
crimes, were the last straw for lawmakers.
News of a third similar case broke shortly after the White House
meeting when an Army officer who managed the sexual assault prevention office
at Fort Campbell military base in Kentucky, was removed from his job.
Democratic and Republican lawmakers announced legislation that
would overhaul the military justice system by taking responsibility for
prosecution of most felony-level cases, including sexual assault, away from the
chain of command, making it easier for victims to seek justice.
"This epidemic of sexual abuse cannot stand," said
Republican Senator Susan Collins. A Democratic colleague in the Senate, Kirsten
Gillibrand, said the goal was to change the culture in the military.
Obama said armed forces chiefs were ashamed by complaints of
unwanted sexual contact in the military, which shot up by more than a third
last year.
"They care about this, and they're angry about it, and I
heard directly from all of them that they're ashamed by some of what's
happened," he said at the meeting. "They all understand this is a
priority and we will not stop until we see this scourge from what is the
greatest military in the world eliminated."
Victims of sexual assault should have no fear of coming forward,
and perpetrators should face punishments, Obama said.
The Pentagon has been under increasing pressure to do something
about sexual assault. Its annual report on such attacks in the military
released last week found that unwanted sexual contact complaints involving
military personnel jumped 37 percent, to 26,000 in 2012 from 19,000 the previous
year.
However, only 3,374 came forward and reported a crime in 2012,
due largely to fears of retaliation and a culture activists say can be geared
more toward protecting perpetrators of sex crimes than its victims.
"We are not unpatriotic for bringing this to light,"
said Brian Lewis, who was raped by a superior while in the Navy, but ordered
not to report it. He did so anyway, and was later misdiagnosed as having a
personality disorder and discharged.
Last week, the officer in charge of the Air Force sexual assault
prevention office was charged with groping a woman while drunk in a parking
lot. And on Tuesday, the Army revealed a sergeant in the sexual assault
prevention office at Fort Hood in Texas was also being accused of sex crimes.
In the latest case, the Army said on Thursday Lieutenant Colonel
Darin Haas had been removed from his position as program manager of the Fort
Campbell office of sexual assault prevention over allegations that he violated
a protection order requested by his ex-wife.
"It is clear that something is not working," said US
Representative Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat who once worked as a rape crisis
counselor.
The "Military Justice Improvement Act" announced on
Wednesday would mean that trained military prosecutors, not commanding
officers, would decide whether sexual assault cases should go to trial,
according to a group of at least 16 US senators and members of the House of
Representatives behind the legislation.
It also would mean commanders cannot set aside the conviction of
anyone who has been found guilty of sexual assault or downgrade a conviction to
a lesser offense.
Hagel has ordered the retraining and recertification of US
military personnel whose job it is to work to prevent sexual assault and assist
the victims. The Pentagon has made clear Hagel is open to further actions.
There are nearly 205,000 women in the active duty military,
nearly 15 percent of all. When the reserves and guard are included, there are
about 360,000 women in the military.
The heads of the different branches submitted their plans to
integrate women into front-line combat roles this week. Hagel's staff is
reviewing those recommendations but the secretary himself has yet to see them.
Source: arabia.msn.com
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