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Fairness for female troop fitness?

Tough questions for Army amid revision of its physical test

- By Jennifer Steinhauer CALL TODAY FOR FREE QUOTE

WASHINGTON — For 99% of Americans, this question will never come up in a job interview: Can you hang from a bar and tuck your legs to your chest?

It has, however, become a central issue for the Army, where fitness levels of recruits have come under greater scrutiny over the past two decades, precisely the same time that women have been seeking entry into elite combat units and advancemen­t in leadership roles.

Now, the Army is racing to approve significan­t changes to its legendary physical fitness test — the first revision since 1980 — which will include offering soldiers an alternativ­e to the leg tuck, a flashpoint for women, especially those who have given birth.

At the same time, the new version of the test, which is required twice a year, does away with separate scoring curves based on gender and age. In its earliest rollout among 14,000 soldiers, 65% of a small set of women failed the new test, while 10% of men did.

Army leaders are also contemplat­ing changes to the role of fitness in promotion considerat­ions, which critics argue has overshadow­ed expertise and intellectu­al preparatio­n for jobs in such emerging areas of conflict as cyberwarfa­re.

Across the force, troops and their commanders know that major changes to these requiremen­ts would amount to a significan­t cultural shift for the fitness-obsessed force.

The appropriat­e role of fitness in the modern Army — and the best way to evaluate it — has attracted the scrutiny of Congress, which has ordered the Army to conduct an independen­t review of its newest fitness

test over concerns that it has made it harder for women to succeed.

“The importance of this test goes beyond the gender issue,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., who has focused on the area for years. “It raises the issue of how to attract different kinds of skills and talent to the military. We need to make sure the test does not exclude doctors, cyberwarri­ors and others whose physical fitness is important but maybe not in the same exact way as a man or woman going into combat.”

Not all women in uniform agree that the standards should be lowered.

The Army’s first female infantry officer wrote an opinion article last month advocating maintainin­g the same physical requiremen­ts for men and women in combat forces, stirring up new conversati­ons and urgency around the issue.

Lower female fitness standards “reinforce the belief that women cannot perform the same job as men, therefore making it difficult for women to earn the trust and confidence of their teammates,” wrote Capt. Kristen Griest, who was also one of the first two women to graduate from Army Ranger School.

The Army’s top brass is seeking to find a balance between an antiquated test and the realities of a diverse force that will be needed to prevent a contractio­n in recruiting and retention.

“One thing we have seen over the last 20 years of combat is that we were engaging in training for cross-country, but we were playing rugby,” said Maj. Gen. Lonnie Hibbard, the commanding general for the U.S. Army Center for Initial Military Training. The military was concerned that too many soldiers, not fit for the

fight, were getting injured too often as a result, some separating from the Army early.

In the civilian workplace, jobs can generally be modified along ergonomic principles that do not apply in a military setting. In contrast, war is a gender-neutral task; carrying the dead and injured, tossing grenades, kicking in doors and carrying heavy loads can fall on any soldier, even a cook, but there is no getting away from the fact that there are variations in muscle strength between genders.

Even so, thousands of women have had successful careers in the Army with the old modified fitness test standards.

Since 1980, all activeduty soldiers have been required to take a test that measures their ability to do situps, pushups and a 2-mile run. Now, Army leaders, armed with a sophistica­ted

fitness analysis, hope to create a new test that will better track the fitness demands of combat. The new approaches generally require far more upper-body and core strength than the older version.

The new 120-minute test, known as the Army Combat Fitness Test, features six events that cover speed, endurance and strength. The standards to pass are identical for men and women, and for all ages. A soldier must achieve 360 points out of a maximum 600 to pass, and greater scores have historical­ly greatly increased chances for promotion.

The Army planned to have all soldiers in the active-duty force, National Guard and Reserve begin taking the new test last October. Then Congress mandated that the test not be used for promotions and other official capacities, instead allowing continued testing and data collection. Army leaders say they expect the next version to become official in March 2022.

In the weeks since Griest’s piece, women in the Army have been having intense discussion­s on social media about fitness standards.

“I was willing to give my life for my country, and I deployed, no questions asked,” said Capt. Sara Ingrao, who, with 12 years in the Army, was just selected for promotion to major. “But when it came to changing the structure of how we look at fitness, women were not even part of that conversati­on.”

Ingrao sees many flaws beyond the leg tuck, a task all the more difficult for women who have recently given birth, such as herself. Women are expected to weigh less than men, she noted, but need to gain quite a bit of muscle weight to do the heavy dead lift that the new test requires.

“When I asked the sergeant major of the Army what is the updated postpartum policy for the test, he chuckled,” she said.

That is when she started organizing other women to push back.

“I am a captain and I can get people to listen to me,” said Ingrao, who stressed that, despite her criticism, she expects the military, a beloved family tradition, to be her lifelong career. “I have women who don’t have the same level of influence.”

Griest, the Ranger School graduate who now serves with the Army Talent Management Task Force, views her leadership role differentl­y. She believes that women can be pushed to the highest level of physical standards for combat and believes she should model that for young recruits and help them achieve difficult fitness goals.

“Fitness in the Army is so integral to your job,” said Griest, adding that she wrote her piece because “women in combat arms are pretty underrepre­sented.” She wanted to give them a voice.

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 ?? SPC. NIKAYLA SHODEEN/U.S. ARMY 2015 ?? Capt. Kristen Griest, center, trains at Fort Benning, Ga. Griest, one of the first female grads from Army Ranger School, believes the same physical requiremen­ts for men and women in combat should be maintained.
SPC. NIKAYLA SHODEEN/U.S. ARMY 2015 Capt. Kristen Griest, center, trains at Fort Benning, Ga. Griest, one of the first female grads from Army Ranger School, believes the same physical requiremen­ts for men and women in combat should be maintained.

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