Chicago Sun-Times

Survey: Most women don’t want combat jobs

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FORT EUSTIS, Va. — Only a small fraction of Army women say they’d like to move into one of the newly opening combat jobs, but those few who do say they want a job that takes them right into the heart of battle, according to preliminar­y results from a survey of the service’s nearly 170,000 women. That survey and others across the Army, publicly disclosed for the first time to The Associated Press, also revealed that soldiers of both genders are nervous about women entering combat jobs but say they are determined to do it fairly. Men are worried about losing their jobs to women; women are worried they will be seen as getting jobs because of their gender and not their qualificat­ions. Both are emphatic that the Army must not lower standards to accommodat­e women. Less than 8 percent of Army women who responded to the survey said they wanted a combat job. Of those, an overwhelmi­ng number said they’d like to be a Night Stalker — a member of the elite special operations helicopter crews who perhaps are best known for flying the Navy SEALS into Osama bin Laden’s compound in 2011. Last year, top Pentagon officials signed an order saying women must have the same opportunit­ies as men in combat jobs, and the services have been devising updated physical standards, training, education and other programs for thousands of jobs they must open Jan. 1, 2016. The services must open as many jobs to women as possible; if they decide to keep some closed, they must explain why.

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 ?? | MARK HUMPHREY/AP ?? Female soldiers train on a range in 2012 in Fort Campbell, Ky.
| MARK HUMPHREY/AP Female soldiers train on a range in 2012 in Fort Campbell, Ky.

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