By Lisa Ferdinando DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, January 5, 2016 — The Defense Department has
received plans from each of the services for implementing plans to integrate
women into all positions in the military, Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook
said today.
The office of the acting undersecretary of defense for
personnel and readiness received the plans, Cook said at a news conference.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced in December his
decision to open all positions in the military to women, with no exceptions.
Army Gen. Joseph L. Votel, the commander of U.S. Special Operations Command,
requested and was granted a short extension in providing his plan, Cook said.
That extension was to give Socom time to collaborate
thoroughly with the services, because many of the actions critical to
successfully integrating women into special operations specialties and units
fall under service authority, Cook said.
Group Will Oversee Implementation
Cook noted that Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work and the
vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force Gen. Paul J. Selva, are
chairing a group on implementing the decision.
The group will work with the services to oversee the
short-term implementation of the decision, Cook explained, to ensure there are
no unintended consequences on the joint force. The group will periodically
update Carter and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Corps Gen.
Joseph F. Dunford Jr., on the progress, he said.
The first meeting of the implementation group will take
place this week, the press secretary said.
"The services and Special Operations Command will begin
to execute the implementation of their approved plans as soon as practicable,
but no later than April 1," he added.
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