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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Thu Feb 27, 2014, 09:05 AM Feb 2014

Army study gives women taste of combat tasks

http://hamptonroads.com/2014/02/army-study-gives-women-taste-combat-tasks



U.S. Army Corp. Jacqueline Beachum lifts a 65-pound dummy T.O.W. missile into the launcher of a Bradley Fighting Vehicle during a physical demands study, Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2014, in Ft. Stewart, Ga.

Army study gives women taste of combat tasks
By Lolita C. Baldor and Ross Bynum
The Associated Press
© February 26, 2014

FORT STEWART, Ga.

Standing just over 5 feet, Army Spc. Karen Arvizu is barely a foot taller than the anti-tank missile she carries in both arms and loads into an armored vehicle. She stands on her tip-toes to wrestle open the 300-pound top hatch.

"I have to step on the seat to get the missile into the launcher," said Arvizu, a 24-year-old soldier from Los Angeles. "It's half my body weight."

Arvizu typically drives Humvees or transport trucks at Fort Stewart in Georgia, but for the past three weeks, she and 59 other women soldiers have been getting a taste of what it takes to serve in combat. By spending their days lifting 65-pound missiles and .50-caliber machine guns, all while wearing 70 pounds of body armor, they're helping make history as part of an Army study that will determine how all soldiers — including women, for the first time — will be deemed fit to join the front lines.

The Pentagon ordered last year that women must have the same opportunities to serve in combat jobs as men, with thousands of positions slated to open to both genders in 2016. And while an Army survey shows only a small fraction of women say they want to move into combat jobs, it also revealed soldiers from both genders are nervous about the change.
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