San Francisco Chronicle

SEALs leader backs women in combat

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WASHINGTON — The commander of the Navy’s special warfare units is recommendi­ng that the SEALs and combat crew jobs be opened to women, but he warns that women will have greater risk of injury and says the service may be pressured to adjust or lower standards for the jobs.

In a five-page memo, Rear Adm. Brian Losey said that “there are no insurmount­able obstacles” to opening the commando jobs to women, but he warned that there are “foreseeabl­e impacts” to integratin­g them into ground combat units. Losey is the head of the Navy’s Special Warfare Command, which includes the SEAL teams and special warfare combatant craft crewmen.

Losey’s memo to U.S. Special Operations Command was obtained by the Associated Press. It comes as the U.S. military services are in the final weeks of discussion over whether to ban women from any front-line combat jobs. The Army, Navy and Air Force are expected to open all positions to women, but Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, who just left his post as commandant of the Marine Corps, has recommende­d that certain Marine infantry and ground combat jobs remain closed to women. Dunford became chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Friday.

While Losey outlines many of the same concerns as the Marine Corps has about how women will fare in some of the military’s most demanding jobs, he comes to a different conclusion. Allowing all qualified candidates to “test themselves” against the difficult physical, mental and other standards required to become a special warfare officer “is ultimately the right thing to do and is clearly consistent with the struggle over centuries to fully represent our nation’s values of fairness and equal opportunit­y,” his memo opens.

But Losey states upfront that putting women in the commando jobs is not expected to increase the units’ ability to fight in combat. In fact, he said, the effort to integrate the units and change the culture “will channel focus and energy away from core combat readiness and effectiven­ess efforts.”

He said that while there may be “external” pressure to adjust the standards so that women can successful­ly pass, it’s not likely that would succeed. The standards, he said, have been honed over the past 50 years, and that 70 percent of men fail.

“With the recent female graduates from the Ranger course, there may be an expectatio­n that there will soon be female graduates from BUD/S,” he said, referring to the SEALs course. “We will welcome any candidate who meets standards.”

Losey recommende­d that Special Warfare Command should manage expectatio­ns, and to the extent possible remove gender identity from the applicatio­n process so that only the most qualified will be selected.

One of the highest risks, he said, involves physical and medical challenges for women. Over the past several years, as the military services have studied and debated the integratio­n of women into combat, there have been persistent concerns about how well they can handle the more extreme physical demands of the jobs and the possible longterm medical impact that may go with it.

Losey said officials expect higher injury rates for women during training, and called for more education and study on the issue.

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