American Civil Liberties Union Women's Rights Project senior staff attorney Ariela Migdal, right, gestures while speaking beside ACLU attorney Elizabeth Gill, left, during a media conference Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012, in San Francisco. Plaintiffs also present for the conference, background L-R, U.S. Army reserve Staff Sgt. Jennifer Hunt, U.S. Marine Corps reserve Capt. Zoe Bedell, and U.S. Marine Corps First Lt. Colleen Farrell. Several active women military personnel have filed a federal lawsuit t
SAN FRANCISCO -- Four female service members filed a lawsuit Tuesday challenging the
Pentagon's ban on women serving in combat, hoping the move will add
pressure to drop the policy just as officials are gauging the effect
that lifting the prohibition will have on morale.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court in San Francisco, is the second
one this year over the 1994 rule that bars women from being assigned to
ground combat units, which are smaller and considered more dangerous
since they are often in battle for longer periods.
The legal effort comes less than a year after the ban on gays serving
openly was lifted and as officials are surveying Marines about whether
women would be a distraction in ground combat units.
"I'm trying to get rid of the ban with a sharp poke," said U.S. Army
Staff Sgt. Jennifer Hunt, who was among the plaintiffs in the latest
lawsuit and was injured in 2007 when her Humvee ran over an improvised
explosive device in Iraq.
Hunt and the other three women said the policy unfairly blocks them
from promotions and other advancements open to men in combat. Three of
the women are in the reserves. A fourth, Marine Corp Lt. Colleen
Farrell, leaves active duty this week.
Women comprise 14 percent of the 1.4 million active military
personnel. The lawsuit alleges that women are barred from 238,000
positions across the Armed Forces.
At a Washington, D.C., news conference, Pentagon press secretary
George Little said the Defense Department was making strides in allowing
more women into combat. He said Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has
opened about 14,500 combat positions to women.
"And he has directed the services to explore the possibility of
opening additional roles for women in the military," Little said. "His
record is very strong on this issue."
American Civil Liberties Union Ariela Migdal, who represents the four
women, said Panetta's actions weren't enough. She called for an end to
the combat ban. "These tweaks and minor changes on the margins do a
disservice to all the women who serve," she said.
"It falls short," she said. "It is not enough."
Marine Corps Capt. Zoe Bedell said she left active duty, in large
part, because of the combat exclusion policy. Bedell said she was
frustrated that her advancement in the Marines was blocked by her
inability to serve directly in combat units.
"The military is the last place where you are allowed to be discriminated against because of you gender," she said.
Bedell said the blurred front lines of modern warfare, with suicide
bombs and sniper attacks, have put more and more women in combat
situations.
More than 144 female troops have been killed and more than 860 have
been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan since the wars began, according to
Pentagon statistics.
Military leaders say they want to make sure lifting gender-based
barriers would not disrupt the cohesion of the smaller combat ground
units and military operations.
The Marine Corps' top leader, Gen. James Amos, ordered a survey of
53,000 troops to get their views, including whether they believe women
in those units would distract male Marines from doing their jobs. The
results have not been released yet.
The lawsuit alleges the ban violates constitutional female service
members' equal rights. "As a direct result of this policy," the lawsuit
states, "women as a class and solely because of their gender are
barred from entire career fields.
The lawsuit also alleges that women are already serving unofficially in combat units.
Air National Guard Major Mary Jennings Hegar sustained shrapnel
wounds in 2009 when she exchanged fire on the ground in Afghanistan
after her Medevac helicopter was shot down. Both she and Hunt received
Purple Heart medals for their injuries.
The lawsuit was assigned to U.S. District Judge Edward Chen, an appointee of President Barack Obama.
Associated Press