Andrew deGrandpre posted:The Marine Corps will allow enlisted women to participate in basic infantry training beginning this fall as part of ongoing research to determine what additional ground combat jobs may open to female personnel.
New female enlisted Marines will volunteer for spots in the service’s Infantry Training Battalion, mirroring a related effort allowing new female lieutenants to enroll in the Corps’ Infantry Officer Course, according to an official planning document obtained by Marine Corps Times. Titled “Assignment of Women in Combat Units,” the document is dated Aug. 16.
“Female Marines will have the opportunity to go through the same infantry training course as their male counterparts,” the document states. However, as with the research involving female officers, “female enlisted Marines who successfully complete infantry training as part of this research process will not be assigned infantry as a military occupational specialty and will not be assigned to infantry units.”
It’s unclear whether any enlisted women have volunteered yet. Marine Corps officials were not immediately available to discuss the plan.
Infantry Training Battalion is part of the Marine Corps’ School of Infantry, the first stop for all new Marines once they’ve graduated from boot camp. The service operates two such schools, one at Camp Geiger along the North Carolina coast and one at Camp Pendleton in southern California.
Enlisted infantry school lasts eight weeks and includes a mix of physical training, classroom work and overnight field exercises that involve live-fire events, according to the Marine Corps’ website. Future grunts learn a host of skills while there, including weapons handling and marksmanship, patrolling and land navigation, and how to spot and react to improvised explosives. They live in tents through some of the program and at times sleep outside in fighting positions.
The inclusion of women in infantry training is part of the Marine Corps’ extensive research process stemming from the Defense Department’s historic decision earlier this year to repeal its Direct Combat Exclusion Rule, enacted in 1994. The move opened about 237,000 jobs to women across all of the services, including nearly 54,000 jobs in the Marine Corps. While some troops see it as a step toward equal rights, others contend it will weaken the military’s combat units.
The Corps’ research is expected to last years, and Marine officials have said no women will join infantry units before 2015. Even then, the services will be allowed to ask for exceptions that, if granted by the Pentagon, could keep some jobs closed to women.
Yet again, the U.S. Armed Forces is fixing the world's problems. Wrap it up, Troop haters.
*edit for capitalizing Troop
Edited by dipshit420 ()
Superabound posted:if women were in charge there would be no more war
Superabound posted:if women were in charge there would be no more war
mainly due to incompetence
ilmdge posted:
the next Republican presidential campaign should be just that video aired ten times a day until 2016
aww, thats adorable
AmericanNazbro posted:it's just going to lead to more pretense for invasion when one of them gets caught and becomes a pow and converted to islam or whatever
i wonder what jessica lynch (or for that matter lyndie england) are up 2 these days
tpaine posted:my first idea for a reply to this thread was "as a rape enthusiast, i applaud this news" but thought it too gauche.
you'd be surprised how much i restrain myself here, clarence.
tpaine posted:why do gays and women want in on such an awful institution? i feel like a straight man should say "well they want to kill people as much as i do, and i applaud their vigor. maybe i shouldn't look down on them so much if they are just as thoroughly worthless as i am"
you dont write a very convincing straight man. you're out of your element, clarence.
codywilson posted:look at that bowlegged sailor. i made him stand like that you know.
notice how small the sailor is compared to the rest of them. its so they can pack more seamen into those long hard tubes