By Terri Moon Cronk
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, July 9, 2014 – Having female officers serve on
submarines increases the pool of capable people who can do the job, and
“diversity is at the heart of our strength,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said
today.
The secretary made his comments during a visit to Naval
Submarine Base Kings Bay in southeastern Georgia, where he met with female
submariners. The base is home to some of the Navy’s Ohio-class ballistic and
guided-missile submarines.
In a DoD News television interview this morning, one of the
officers said mixing the genders aboard subs has had little impact.
“The transition has been very smooth,” Navy Lt. Marquette
Leveque said.
As one of the first female sub officers, Leveque said, she
was assigned to the USS Wyoming in November 2011 with two other women she’d
previously met during deployment. They were able to “hit the ground running on
day one,’” she said.
“It took [male sailors] a few weeks to get used to female
voices on submarines,” Leveque said, “but I think that was one of the biggest
differences.”
The Defense Department advised Congress in 2010 it planned
to do away with the ban on women on submarines.
“I qualified the same as my male counterparts and do the
same job,” Leveque said. “As long as I do that, it’s been equal all the way
around.”
Noting plans to also have enlisted women serve aboard
submarines, the lieutenant said she foresees another easy transition in adding
women to the ranks of jobs that were once forbidden to them.
“As long as they’re willing and able to do the job of their
male counterparts, they’ll be fine,” she said. “In the Navy, all sailors are
treated equally, regardless of any diversity, including gender.”
No comments:
Post a Comment