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White House announces support for women in military draft

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Defense Secretary Ash Carter testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Obama administration is announcing its support for requiring women to register for the military draft. The administration has been deliberating for roughly a year about whether to back such a change to the Selective Service.

WASHINGTON >> The Obama administration declared its support Thursday for requiring women to register for the military draft, a symbolic but significant shift that reflects the U.S. military’s evolution from a male-dominated force to one seeking to incorporate women at all levels.

President Barack Obama has been considering whether to adopt the position since last December, when Defense Secretary Ash Carter ordered the military to open all jobs to women, including the most arduous combat posts. Ned Price, a spokesman for the White House’s National Security Council, said Obama believes women have “proven their mettle,” including in Afghanistan and Iraq.

“As old barriers for military service are being removed, the administration supports — as a logical next step — women registering for the Selective Service,” Price said, using the formal name for the military draft.

The White House emphasized that the administration remains committed to an all-volunteer military — meaning women, like men, wouldn’t be forced to serve unless there were a national emergency like a major world war. Changing the policy would require an act of Congress, and there are no signs that lawmakers plan to move swiftly to alter the law.

Obama, who will leave office in less than two months, has less leverage over Congress and the broader Washington agenda than he did earlier in his presidency. Like his embrace of gay marriage in 2012, Obama’s announcement appeared aimed more at influencing the public debate about women in the military in the coming years than at forcing an immediate policy change.

The Defense Department echoed Obama’s position, first reported by USA Today. Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said that Carter believes the inclusion of women throughout the military’s echelons has strengthened the military’s might.

“He thinks it makes sense for women to register for Selective Service, just as men must,” Cook said.

Late last year, the Pentagon ordered all military jobs opened to women, including about 220,000 jobs previously restricted to men, including in special operations forces. Carter and other military leaders insisted that the military wouldn’t lower the physical standards for those jobs to enable more women to qualify.

Integrating women has not been fast or easy. Earlier this year the top Army and Marine Corps generals told senators it would take up to three years to fully integrate women into all combat jobs. The military services have started recruiting women for those jobs and making necessary changes to bathrooms and other facilities. But some of the services, such as the Marine Corps, have predicted or experienced challenges identifying large numbers of candidates who want to serve in combat and meet the physical requirements.

Under current law, women can volunteer to serve in the military, but aren’t required to register for the draft. All adult men must register within 30 days of their 18th birthday, and risk losing eligibility for student aid, job training and government jobs if they fail to comply.

Signing up for the draft entails registering with the U.S. Selective Service, an independent agency aimed at ensuring a fair distribution of military duties if the president and Congress had to enact a draft. The U.S. hasn’t had a military draft since 1973, during the Vietnam War era.

The new posture from the Obama administration came at an unusual time, just two days after House and Senate negotiators agreed to strip a provision from the annual defense policy bill that would have required young women to register.

The measure had roiled social conservatives, who decried it as another step toward the blurring of gender lines akin to allowing transgender people to use public lavatories and locker rooms. Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, spoke for a number of Republicans when he described the provision as “coercing America’s daughters” into draft registration.

But proponents of including women in the draft pool viewed the requirement as a sensible step toward gender equality. They pointed to the Pentagon’s decision last year to open all front-line combat jobs to women as removing any justification for gender restrictions on registration.

11 responses to “White House announces support for women in military draft”

  1. pridon says:

    Good, if they don’t sign up, they can’t get Federal Education loans. Frankly, I’m opposed to this whole deal about women in any slot in the military. They get pregnant, they get to skip deployment or the mission. Commanders have to spend more time on sexual assault worries. I imagine ISIS supports this policy 100%. They would love to capture some combat woman.

    • CEI says:

      Your post gets an enthusiastic Amen. Anyone who has spent time in any of the services knows what you say to be true. It ruins unit cohesion and is a giant distraction from the mission.

    • DeltaDag says:

      Hmmm, if you put together the best qualities of Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, Dianne Feinstein and Michelle Obama, just what kind of super-soldier would you get?

  2. blackmurano says:

    Since our Muslim liberal left wing President Barack Hussein Obama eight years tenure, he not only been transforming the military for the homosexuals, transgenders and now females. Retired commanders were totally against it. But I understand we have a lame duck leader and what was proposed today is only symbolic.

    President-elect Donald Trump has nominated an ex-marine general to be his Secretary of Defense. You can be sure he will shake things around from what the liberals have done.

  3. saywhatyouthink says:

    Stupid idea but I’m not surprised since it came from Obama. He should just fade away into obscurity already. Like GW Bush, he is easily one of the worst presidents the US has ever had, he can’t leave soon enough.

  4. justmyview371 says:

    I think we need some catch up affirmative action — draft only women.

  5. YOTARE says:

    HAH! Watch how fast all these feminist activists yammering for “equality” change their tunes, now that their rear ends can get dragged off to war just like the men they hate so much. “Oh, like, we meant that, like, equality in, like, everything else…and stuff. Like, no war for oil, man!”

    Hahaha!! GOOD! You wanted equality, NOW YOU GOT IT!!

  6. latenightroach says:

    If they really want gender equality in the military then women should have the same PT testing standards as males. Right now a male would fail while a female would pass with an “Excellent” score according to the current physical fitness standards. And yes, the drama factor already exists. Sad but true.

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