By Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 26, 2012 – Policy
changes announced in February opening more than 14,000 new assignments to women
in uniform will take effect May 14, Defense Department officials said today.
Officials issued a Pentagon press
release confirming that two changes to the 1994 Direct Ground Combat Definition
and Assignment Rule can now move forward since the Congressionally-mandated
notification period has expired. The changes were first announced Feb. 9 in a
report to Congress.
The biggest barrier DOD is lifting is a
1994 policy prohibiting women from jobs -- such as tank mechanic and field
artillery radar operator -- that take place near ground combat units. With that
restriction removed, 13,000 new assignments will be available for women. Nearly
10,000 of those new opportunities are in fields never before open to women.
The second change is an “exception to
policy” that will allow the Army, Navy and Marines to open select positions at
the battalion level in jobs women already occupy.
The previous policy, also set in 1994,
barred women in jobs such as intelligence, communications and logistics from
assignment at units smaller than a brigade. Nearly 1,200 assignments will open
to female soldiers, sailors and Marines under the exceptions.
Navy Capt. John Kirby, Pentagon
spokesman, told reporters today it is now up to the military services to make
necessary changes in the ranks.
The change “doesn’t mean that
immediately, today, there will be 14,000 women in these jobs,” he noted. “But
these billets will now be eligible to be filled by women.”
The services will train and assign women
to jobs they haven’t previously filled through their normal personnel
management processes as the positions become vacant, Kirby said. Many of those
positions may continue to be filled by men, he added.
“The point is that 14,000 positions …
are now eligible to be filled by female service members,” he said.
Today’s release quotes Jo Ann Rooney,
acting undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, as saying Defense
Secretary Leon E. Panetta has stated the changes are “the beginning, not the
end, of a process.”
Kirby said service leaders will update
Panetta in November on their progress in implementing the new policies, and any
new policies they want to suggest to increase opportunities for women.
“The secretary was very clear … that he
wants to remove as many barriers as possible to service in the military for
female service members,” Kirby said. “He’s very committed to that, and wants to
continue to look at other ways we can lower those barriers.”
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