| Maura J. Casey / The New
    York Times Published: November 15, 2006 She enlisted in the U.S. Women's
    Army Corps at 21, determined to get as near to the front as possible. She got no closer to
    combat than  My mother's service gave her a
    lifelong belief in women's abilities. She horrified my friends during the Vietnam War when
    she argued that women should have been included in the draft, since they had an equal
    obligation to serve. The courage and competence of women currently serving in  Yet, despite what women in
    uniform have accomplished, there are critics who want to curtail their military roles.
    Despite Pentagon policy that keeps women from entering combat units like infantry, armor
    or field artillery, some conservatives profess horror that women are members of any combat
    support units in harm's way. Because of this, Representative
    Duncan Hunter, Republican of California, who is the outgoing chairman of the House Armed
    Services Committee, tried to amend the 2006 defense authorization bill to restrict the
    role of women in the army. It would have barred women from nearly 22,000 jobs. The measure
    was withdrawn once it became clear it wouldn't pass. But reality has overrun critics'
    arguments. Between  In truth, that debate has never
    ended, no matter how well women have served, and has largely been a ludicrous waste of
    time and millions of dollars. In the last 30 years, two federal commissions examined the
    impact of women in the military. The army alone has conducted at
    least a dozen major studies on how women should be utilized. The studies found that,
    properly armed and trained, women enhance unit readiness and cohesion, said Brigadier
    General Pat Foote, who is retired. "Women have been pulled through more knotholes
    with people questioning their abilities," she said. "Women can do anything they
    are trained for." The questions prove equally
    exasperating to women like Colonel Patricia Jernigan, retired, who is a board member for
    the U.S. Army Women's Foundation. "An airplane doesn't care who is flying it,"
    she said. "A rifle doesn't care who is firing it. Judge women on performance." Given the ease of modern
    communication, from cellphones to e-mail, if women were not measuring up in  My mother never fought. But
    every day for the 30-plus years she lived after the war, she was proud she had enlisted.
    And despite the passage of time, there remains a fundamental bond between the experience
    of army women today and that of my mother, so very long ago: All she wanted was to be a
    good soldier. Maura J. Casey is a member of the New York Times editorial board. |