Dayton Daily News

Committee recommends full gender integratio­n for all Marine recruits

Also recommende­d were new policies for pregnant troops.

- By Corey Dickstein Stars and Stripes

The Marine Corps should train male and female recruits in gender-integrated platoons at both of its recruit depots and the Pentagon should adopt new polices to protect the careers of pregnant troops, a Pentagon panel focused on issues affecting women recommende­d in a report released Friday.

The Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services, or DACOWITS, recommende­d Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin order the Marines to train male and female recruits in platoons together and institute gender-integrated drill instructor teams. Committee members wrote they believe better integratin­g recruit training efforts would improve male Marines’ acceptance of women in their ranks and better prepare them to serve together in integrated units in the fleet.

“DACOWITS commends the Marine Corps for the steps it has taken since 2020 to increase gender integratio­n at recruit training,” the panel wrote in its newly published 2023 annual report. “However, the committee feels more integratio­n is necessary to better prepare male and female recruits as they become Marines, to operate within an integrated operationa­l force and to better align the Marine Corps with its service counterpar­ts.”

The Marine Corps-focused recommenda­tions were among more than two dozen proposals that the committee sent Austin in the report, which ranged from efforts to better recruit women to expanding their opportunit­ies once in uniform. The committee has existed since 1951, and its recommenda­tions have long driven change in the military, including its suggestion­s that resulted in the Pentagon’s 2015 decision to open all military jobs and units — including front-line combat posts — to female troops.

The Marine Corps has long been the slowest U.S. military branch to adopt women-focused changes. It was the lone service to recommend against opening close-combat jobs to women, and it is now the only branch that does not train male and female recruits together in platoon-size units.

For decades, the Marine Corps trained women only at its East Coast recruit training depot at Parris Island, S.C., where it segregated them in a separate training battalion where they interacted little, if at all, with their male counterpar­ts during the 13-week course. Last year, the Corps deactivate­d the all-female training battalion at Parris Island and opened all its training battalions to women at Parris Island and Recruit Depot San Diego, Calif.

The Marine Corps has integrated women and men into companies at both recruit depots, but it has pushed back on desegregat­ing at lower levels. Its recruit battalions are each currently made of four all-male companies and two all-female companies.

A Marine official said maintainin­g gender-segregated platoons allows the service to optimize its training to include the time when recruits are in their sleeping quarters. But DACOWITS argued in the new report that the Army, Navy, Air Force and Space Force have all found success in training male and female recruits together in platoon-level units, while separating them for sleep and hygienic routines.

The Army has found integratin­g recruit platoons prepares soldiers to better work together with the opposite gender when they reach their first unit and “eliminates any perception that recruits went through different training experience­s,” according to the report. The committee said the Navy reported similar findings.

The panel argued the Marine Corps’ current model “does not meet a true definition of [gender] integratio­n nor the intent” of a 2020 congressio­nal mandate that the Marines “not segregate training by gender” at MCRD Parris Island within five years and MCRD San Diego within eight years.

The Marine Corps has long had the smallest percentage of female troops. In 2023, the Marines were about 9% women, while the total military was roughly 19% women, according to the report. The Air Force had the highest percentage of women in its ranks, with about 23%.

The committee said it observed during visits to both Marine recruit depots last year that male and female Marine recruits rarely interacted. A female recruit told the panel that they are instructed not to speak with members of the male platoons in their company.

“They threaten to drop us [from recruiting training] if we speak to the males in the same company,” the DACOWITS report quoted a female recruit. “The guys are forbidden to speak at us.”

The committee argued the lack of gender integratio­n at recruit training could foster biases among male Marines. It also said the committee believed the Corps should adopt the gender-integrated drill instructor teams to help male Marines better accept instructio­n from women.

“Male Marine Corps recruits showed statistica­lly significan­t higher levels of sexist attitudes, both benevolent and hostile, compared with their male peers in other services and female recruit counterpar­ts,” the report reads. “These attitudes are not transforme­d during their time at MCRDs and therefore will persist in follow-on integrated training and operationa­l environmen­ts.”

The panel’s report also included nearly a dozen recommenda­tions focused on pregnant service members.

Among its recommenda­tions, the committee suggested the Pentagon needs a more robust directory of women’s health care services on Military OneSource, its website and call center that provides details on benefits available to troops. That directory should include “topics such as reproducti­ve health, pregnancy, mental health, and contracept­ive care.” The panel argued such informatio­n can be difficult to track down for service members and would be best presented in a single location.

It also suggests the Pentagon adopt clearer policies for parental leave, including minimum lengths for maternity convalesce­nt leave, better defined circumstan­ces for commanders to deny parental leave, and raise the rank to at least O-6 for the commander permitted to deny parental leave.

The panel wrote current policy grants “too much leeway, and service women could be denied this essential form of leave.”

It suggested Austin direct a review of maternity uniforms across the service to ensure they “present a profession­al, modern appearance while providing functional­ity, comfort and ease of movement for the wearers.”

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 ?? ?? A U.S. Marine Corps tactical advisor trains a group of recruits at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina. A Pentagon panel has recommende­d recruits be trained in gender-integrated platoons,
A U.S. Marine Corps tactical advisor trains a group of recruits at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina. A Pentagon panel has recommende­d recruits be trained in gender-integrated platoons,
 ?? ?? Three U.S. Marine Corps male recruits negotiate an obstacle during a portion of training known as the Crucible at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina. More than 9 of 10 Marines are men.
Three U.S. Marine Corps male recruits negotiate an obstacle during a portion of training known as the Crucible at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina. More than 9 of 10 Marines are men.
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 ?? ?? A Marine Corps instructor (right) watches over a recruit during swim training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot pool in Parris Island, South Carolina.
A Marine Corps instructor (right) watches over a recruit during swim training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot pool in Parris Island, South Carolina.

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