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Saturday, March 24, 2007

sara corbett

NEW UPDATE: MARCH 26, 2007 AT 6:37 AM

i just came across this War story told by former sailor disputed in the navy news.

i felt it was important i linked to this story as well

Deployment to Iraq not in personnel record; paper issues correction
By Robert Hodierne - Staff writerPosted : Sunday Mar 25, 2007 12:34:28 EDT

The March 18 Sunday New York Times Magazine cover story was a gripping account of the emotional problems some female veterans suffer as results of their war experiences, sexual assaults or both.
One of the women featured in the story was a former builder constructionman Amorita Randall, 27, who served six years as a Seabee. Randall told the Times that while in the Navy, she was raped twice — in 2002 while she was stationed in Mississippi, and again in Guam in 2004. She also told the Times that she served in Iraq in 2004, which the Times reported as fact but which it now appears was not the case............



wrote an amazing and thorough piece, The Women’s War, in the ny times magazine

ms corbett tells a story we may not be quite familiar with. a story from the WOMEN who have been sent to iraq and afghanistan. the story of unwanted and unwelcome sex (did you know nearly 1/3 of all women vets who sought treatment from va hospitals have said they were raped or someone had attempted to rape them???) and ptsd at far greater rates than their male counterparts. a story of being ignored or pushed aside if the women attempt to get justice.

it's a long read, but worth it.

....................No matter how you look at it, Iraq is a chaotic war in which an unprecedented number of women have been exposed to high levels of stress. So far, more than 160,000 female soldiers have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, as compared with the 7,500 who served in Vietnam and the 41,000 who were dispatched to the gulf war in the early '90s. Today one of every 10 U.S. soldiers in Iraq is female.
Despite the fact that women are generally limited to combat-support roles in the war, they are arguably witnessing a historic amount of violence. With its baffling sand swirl of roadside bombs and blind ambushes, its civilians who look like insurgents and insurgents who look like civilians, the Iraq war has virtually eliminated the distinction between combat units and support units in the military. ''Frankly one of the most dangerous things you can do in Iraq is drive a truck, and that's considered a combat-support role,'' says Matthew Friedman, executive director of the National Center for PTSD, a research-and-education program financed by the Department of Veterans Affairs. ''You've got women that are in harm's way right up there with the men.''...........


............Two years after deployment to the gulf war, where combat exposure was relatively low, Army data showed that 16 percent of a sample of female soldiers studied met diagnostic criteria for PTSD, as opposed to 8 percent of their male counterparts. The data reflect a larger finding, supported by other research, that women are more likely to be given diagnoses of PTSD, in some cases at twice the rate of men............

..............Rape, in particular, is thought to be the most likely to lead to PTSD in women (and in men, in the rarer times it occurs). Participation in combat, though, he says, is not far behind.
Much of what we know about trauma comes primarily from research on two distinct populations - civilian women who have been raped and male combat veterans. But taking into account the large number of women serving in dangerous conditions in Iraq and reports suggesting that women in the military bear a higher risk than civilian women of having been sexually assaulted either before or during their service, it's conceivable that this war may well generate an unfortunate new group to study - women who have experienced sexual assault and combat, many of them before they turn 25..............

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a sad legacy. The legacy of Bush, raping a nation, raping a military, and raping our souls. Unfortunately, this isn't so much a metaphor as a reality.

Unknown said...

and i can't add a thing to what you've said rick