SEXUAL ASSAULT PERVASIVE
IN MILITARY, EXPERTS SAY
SAFETY
By Marie
Tessier - WEnews correspondent
(WOMENSENEWS)
--Victim advocates and military
health care leaders say that
sexual assault remains a pervasive
problem for women serving
in all branches of the military,
including those deployed overseas.
Their concern
about the assaults on female
members of the military is
especially high now, with
the nation at war and the
recent removal of four high-ranking
officials from their posts
at the U.S. Air Force Academy
following an investigation
of sexual assaults there.
"It's not
just the academies. It's not
just the Air Force. It's all
the services and it's a pervasive
part of the culture,"
says Christine Hansen, executive
director of The Miles Foundation,
Inc., a victim service and
advocacy agency for victims
of sexual and domestic violence
in the military. "Many
women tell me that sexual
assault is considered a rite
of passage in the service,
and they're treated like the
black sheep of the family
when they ask for accountability."
Military sexual
trauma has been identified
by Pentagon health care experts
as a major deployment and
readiness issue. Rape victims
often experience post-traumatic
stress symptoms such as anxiety,
depression and intrusive thoughts,
and are more likely to develop
post-traumatic stress in other
situations, according to military
research. Sexual trauma is
the subject of an increasing
number of studies about workplace
safety in the armed forces,
according to Pentagon's Web
site and health care experts.
Officials last
week said they were not able
to discover how the issue
is being handled in the Iraqi
war theater and in and around
Afghanistan. Similarly, they
could not answer the question
of how many assaults have
been reported to criminal
investigators in recent years.
Air Force legal
affairs spokeswoman Valerie
Burkes did say, "we do
not have a problem with sexual
offenses in the Air Force."
A new assessment
of risk factors for sexual
assault in the military says
that 28 percent of female
veterans reported sexual assault
during their careers, with
consistent rates found across
eras, according to a report
in the American Journal of
Industrial Medicine. The study
found that "officer leadership"
played an important role in
the military environment and
safety of women and that an
environment with unwanted
sexual behaviors increased
the odds of rape--factors
also cited by Pentagon study
panels in recent years.
Military sexual
trauma even has its own acronym--MST--in
the Pentagon's health office
and in Veterans Affairs offices.
Veterans Affairs hospitals
have been required for two
years to have counseling services
available for sexual trauma.
Services are provided for
women and men.
Military public
affairs officials were unable
last week to provide any numbers
of reported rapes in their
ranks, though they say they
are researching the question
at Women's eNews' request.
They also could not answer
how many women have been assaulted
while deployed in the Middle
East or Central Asia.
Twenty-four
cases of sexual assault were
reported during the first
Persian Gulf War deployments
in 1990 and 1991, according
to the Department of Defense.
Though reports
to criminal investigation
authorities are difficult
to find, a common estimate
among advocates and health
care experts is about one
quarter of women in the military
say they have been sexually
assaulted during their careers.
In 1996, the
Defense Department surveyed
women in the military about
their experiences in the previous
12 months, and found that
9 percent of women in the
Marines, 8 percent of women
in the Army, 6 percent of
women in the Navy and 4 percent
of women in the Air Force
had experienced a rape or
an attempted rape that year.
About 200,000 women serve
in the military, so these
numbers represent more than
10,000 sexual assaults or
attempted assaults each year.
More than 67,000
women veterans, or as much
as 29 percent of those served
at Veterans Affairs clinics
in recent years, say they
experienced sexual assault
in the military, says Sherri
Bauch, a deputy field director
for the Women Veterans Health
Program. And even those numbers
fall far short of a complete
count, service providers say.
The figures do not cover women
veterans who do not use the
clinics and would not reflect
women who left the service
before their enlistment was
complete.
"Sexual
trauma is something that has
happened at all times in history,"
said Faith Hoffman, the director
of the women's center at the
veterans hospital in Buffalo.
She treats women for sexual
trauma and post-traumatic
stress. "It's not a new
problem, but it is something
we can treat, whether the
trauma happened yesterday
or it happened during the
Vietnam War or before. People
do not have to live with this
secret."
Lack of Confidentiality,
Rigid Hierarchy Make Reporting
Rapes Difficult
Health care
providers and advocates say
that many barriers remain
to women reporting sexual
assault in the military. Hoffman
says that women tell her that
they will not even answer
"yes" to a screening
question if it means their
record will reflect that they
were raped.
The biggest
ongoing problem for sexual
assault in the military is
the lack of confidentiality,
advocates say. Any report
to a nurse, doctor, counselor
or police officer within the
military is something that
can be or must be reported
to a commander. That can lead
to trouble for a victim. Even
attempts to hold an offender
accountable can be detrimental
if a victim is vulnerable
to a disciplinary infraction
such as those for alcohol,
drugs, fraternization or adultery.
Such a problem arose with
one cadet at the Air Force
Academy who was disciplined
for having sex after she reported
an assault.
"It's difficult
for any victim of sexual assault
to come forward, even in the
best circumstances,"
Hansen says. "Women in
the military do not feel safe
to say this happened to them,
especially if it means the
information is going to their
commander."
The entire military
criminal justice system is
worlds apart from the civilian
world, too, advocates and
health officials say. The
most important difference
is that decisions about investigation
and prosecution are made within
the chain of command, not
by an adversarial outside
agency like a prosecutor's
office. This leaves commanders
with an inherent conflict
of interest: On the one hand
they are responsible for seeking
justice for crimes; on the
other, they are bound as leaders
to protect the soldiers and
sailors they value and to
maintain good morale in their
units. This can be difficult
when an allegation involves
an otherwise valuable or likeable
serviceman.
"These
are highly educated military
strategists making decisions,
not people trained in rape
crisis intervention,"
Hansen says. "There's
an inherent conflict of interest
that may seriously deter them
from holding offenders accountable."
The issue of
consent to a sexual encounter
is also more complicated in
military situations than in
civilian life because of the
hierarchy of military command,
says Gene Fidell, president
of the National Institute
of Military Justice, a private
group. People in the service
are intensely trained to follow
orders, so it is problematic
for a servicewoman to say
"no" to a superior,
he says.
"It's a
rigid hierarchy," he
explains. "You're talking
about people who are used
to doing what they're told."
Even as problems
remain, leaders of women's
programs within the Veterans
Affairs system say they are
working hard to advocate for
more widespread sexual trauma
treatment programs.
"We are
seeing a lot of new cases
coming in from women's experience
being triggered by the stories
at the Air Force Academy and
of the war," says Hoffman
of the Buffalo VA center.
"With military sexual
trauma counseling we have
the ability and the resources
now to help women heal."
Marie Tessier
is a freelance journalist
who writes frequently about
violence against women.
For more
information:
The Miles Foundation--
- Services and advocacy for
victims of sexual - and domestic
violence in the military:
- http://members.aol.com/_ht_a/milesfdn/myhomepage/
Center for Women
Veterans-- - Department of
Veterans Affairs: - http://www.va.gov/womenvet
Military and
Veterans Health Coordinating
Board-- - Deployment Readiness-a
review of sexual trauma -
Reviewed References: - http://www.mvhcb.gov/mvhcb_13h/Deployment_Readiness/Reviewed_Refs.htm