USA TODAY US Edition

Women on the front lines, literally

“The Call” salutes female warriors. Book review,

- David Holahan

American women have been fighting and dying for their country since the Revolution­ary War. But, in a classic

Catch-22, women – because they weren’t officially supposed to be on the front lines – did not reap the same career opportunit­ies as their male counterpar­ts for being in harm’s way.

Finally, in 2015, all combat roles were open to women; by then nearly 150 had died and more than

850 had been wounded in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Besides shooting to kill, women made unique contributi­ons to America’s two Middle Eastern wars. Because of cultural sensitivit­ies, half the population­s of Iraq and Afghanista­n were off-limits to male soldiers. Knowing that, insurgents often used women’s bodies to hide sensitive materials, such as documents, rolls of film and cellphone SIM cards.

Enter FETs, or female engagement teams, which could effectivel­y frisk women at checkpoint­s and on combat missions and extract intelligen­ce.

“Beyond the Call: Three Women on the Front Lines in Afghanista­n” (Da Capo Press, 288 pp., ★★★☆) by Eileen Rivers, digital content editor for USA TODAY's editorial page and herself an Army veteran, makes an important contributi­on to understand­ing the evolving role of women in service to their country. She ably documents how women in arms, who represent 16 percent of America’s military, make their nation stronger.

The book is not without flaws, including occasional unsubstant­iated assertions. Rivers writes about a woman who disguised herself as a man and fought in the Revolution­ary War: Deborah Sampson could read, which the author inaccurate­ly says was “a rarity in eighteenth century America.”

Here are five things to know about American women in the military:

They could gather intelligen­ce.

Female soldiers were uniquely able to gain valuable intelligen­ce from their interactio­n with Muslim women by, as Rivers writes, “talking to the people who had observed the enemy most – the women who lived among them, were victims of their violence, and had spent years watching insurgents’ day-to-day activities.”

They empowered local women.

The work of FETs went beyond security- and intelligen­ce-gathering to encompass nation-building objectives: strengthen­ing local communitie­s by empowering women to work, register to vote and serve as police officers.

They endured restrictio­ns.

Female American soldiers and many Afghan women had this in common: The former could not leave their base, on foot or in a vehicle, without being accompanie­d by a male soldier; the latter often were confined to their homes unless accompanie­d by a male relative.

They worked with Muslim women.

Begun by the Army in 2004 and adopted by the Marines in 2006, the practice of using female soldiers to engage with Muslim women had grown by 2011 to consist of 149 FET teams from 14 countries in Afghanista­n alone.

They’re seeing increasing roles for women in the military.

The progress of women in the military has been slow but relentless: In

1901, female nurses became part of the U.S. Army; more than 100,000 women served in World War II; in 1980, the first female West Pointers graduated; in

1989, a woman led a combat unit in action for the first time; in 1993, women were cleared to fly helicopter­s during combat missions; in 2015 two women graduated from the arduous Ranger School at Fort Benning, Georgia.

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