Texarkana Gazette

Vermont soldier first woman to graduate as combat engineer

- By Wilson Ring

COLCHESTER, Vt.—A few days after two women became the first female soldiers to pass the Army’s grueling Ranger School, a college junior in Vermont became a military pathfinder in her own right. And at first, she didn’t even know it.

With no fanfare, Vermont National Guard Spc. Skylar Anderson became the first woman certified as a combat engineer—a battlefiel­d job that, like many others, was once held exclusivel­y by men.

“I knew I was going to be one of the first, but I didn’t know I was going to be THE first,” said Anderson, a University of Vermont student.

Anderson, 20, said it was a “big eye-opener” when her instructor­s told her that she was the first woman to complete the course allowing her to work alongside combat troops to solve battlefiel­d challenges as varied—and dangerous—as clearing minefields, building bridges under fire or destroying structures to block the enemy’s advance.

Such an opportunit­y comes with responsibi­lity, Anderson said.

“It’s time to step up and not hide in the shadows,” she said.

The U.S. military has been grappling for years with how best to integrate women in the services into combat; gradually over the last several decades, more and more military roles once reserved for men have been opened to women.

In early 2013, the military announced it was ending its ban on women in combat, opening many, but not all, combat jobs to women. On Thursday, Defense Secretary Ash Carter ordered the services to open all combat jobs to servicewom­en.

Anderson, of Derry, New Hampshire, said her interest in the military was sparked by her grandfathe­r. She began talking to a recruiter in high school and took the oath on her 18th birthday, while still a senior in high school, and left for training days after graduation. She first joined the New Hampshire National Guard and transferre­d to the Vermont National Guard after enrolling at the University of Vermont.

But in the Vermont guard, she didn’t have a well-defined job. It was one of her superiors who first suggested she attend the school in Devils Lake, North Dakota, to be certified as a combat engineer.

The combat engineer school opened up to women on Aug. 1, said Command Sgt. Major Alan Grinsteinn­er, the commandant of the 164th Regional Training Institute run by the North Dakota guard. While Anderson didn’t know she was the first woman to attend, the instructor­s did—though they told none of the trainees until the 16-day course was almost over.

“She’s a tremendous soldier,” Grinsteinn­er said of Anderson. “She came up here, she did what she was supposed to, she passed every test, she was not granted any specialtie­s, she did exactly what all her male counterpar­ts did.”

After more than 14 years of combat in Afghanista­n and Iraq, the most common chores for combat engineers has been keeping roadways open, Grinsteinn­er said. They also frequently clear roadside bombs.

In civilian life, Anderson hopes to become an equine veterinari­an, but she plans to stay with the National Guard, never knowing when her unit could be called to active duty.

“The opportunit­y to actually go overseas and fight for what we’re supposed to in the Army, it would be an honor, it would be something that I’d really look forward to,” Anderson said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Vermont National Guard Spc. Skylar Anderson, the first female in the Army to qualify as a combat engineer, poses Dec. 3 at Camp Johnson in Colchester, Vt. Anderson said she didn’t know when she started the training course to become a combat engineer...
Associated Press Vermont National Guard Spc. Skylar Anderson, the first female in the Army to qualify as a combat engineer, poses Dec. 3 at Camp Johnson in Colchester, Vt. Anderson said she didn’t know when she started the training course to become a combat engineer...

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