By David French
Friday, September 11, 2015
Imagine, if you will, reading a story that begins, “The
NFL announced the results of a year-long study in mixed-gender football teams
today, concluding that women not only suffered more injuries than men, but also
performed worse in every football-related physical task.”
You would likely have two immediate reactions. First,
you’d wonder why the NFL actually had to commission a study to discover a
reality obvious to every sentient, rational person in the universe — women
aren’t as physically strong as men. Then, you’d demand to know what kind of
barbarian actually approved a testing process in which real women were injured
at wildly disproportionate rates to prove what we all already knew.
The Marine Corps is playing out just such a scenario
today. In response to relentless political pressure from social-justice
warriors who mistake military service for one long exercise in diversity
training, the Marines conducted a nine-month study comparing the performance of
all-male infantry units with mixed units in simulated combat environments. The
results?
Women in a new Marine Corps unit created to assess how female service members perform in combat were injured twice as often as men, less accurate with infantry weapons, and not as good at removing wounded troops from the battlefield.
In fact, this summary doesn’t do justice to the dramatic
disparity the study documented. The women weren’t slightly less capable than
the men; they were profoundly less capable. All-male units performed better in
93 of 134 categories evaluated, and there were “notable” differences in
accuracy in “every individual weapons system.” Physically, the top 25th
percentile of women overlapped with the bottom 25th percentile of men, and they
possessed less anaerobic power, anaerobic capacity, and aerobic capacity than
their male colleagues. Women undergoing entry-level infantry training were
injured at “more than six times the rate of their male counterparts.”
What does all this mean? It’s quite simple: If you
integrate infantry units by gender, more Americans will die, and our enemy will
have a better chance to prevail on the battlefield. If you’re less accurate
with your weapons, the enemy has a better chance of survival. If you can’t
evacuate your wounded as effectively, your wounded are more likely to die. Even
in non-combat environments, the training hurts women at a remarkable rate, and
units that suffer high training attrition lose combat effectiveness.
It turns out there is a reason — aside from sexism — that
American women have not engaged in direct ground combat. Social-justice
warriors point to the Soviet army in World War II and to the IDF as
counter-examples, but those exceptions prove the rule. As detailed in a
comprehensive 1994 paper for the School of Advanced Military Studies at Fort
Leavenworth, women were pressed into service in the Red Army following the
catastrophic loss of life early in Operation Barbarossa. The vast majority of
them served in non-combat roles. And while there were individual heroines —
most notably sniper Lyudmila Pavlichenko — other women proved unable to perform
many of the most basic physical tasks and often had to “throw away equipment,
leave equipment behind, or get some of the men in their units to help carry
it.”
Similarly, while women fought alongside men in pre-IDF
Jewish militias such as the Haganah, the instant the IDF began to transition
from fighting a “war of survival” to optimizing for combat against modern,
well-equipped armies, it transitioned to all-male units. Prior to the
transition, “mixed direct combat units had consistently higher casualty rates.”
And Haganah commanders had “stopped allowing women to serve in assault forces
because ‘physically[they] could not run as well — and if they couldn’t run fast
enough, they would endanger the whole unit, so they were put in other units.”
Russia and Israel show us that desperate times call for
desperate measures, and desperation is not the proper basis for formulating
optimal military policy. If the choice were between women in combat and
national extinction, any country would accept the former without fail. But that’s
not the choice we face.
As our nation grows increasingly divorced from actual
military experience, it forgets how intensely physical infantry service is.
When I went out on foot patrols in Iraq, I routinely carried 75 extra pounds of
gear — including body armor, a rifle, a sidearm, a knife, a basic combat load
of ammunition, and a camelback for water. And that was a light load. As a JAG
officer, I didn’t even have to tote grenades, communications gear, or any
weapon heavier than an M4. When I finished a patrol, I was able to roll back
into base, take off my gear, and rest my aching muscles. The guys on the line,
by contrast, stayed outside the wire day after day, week after week, and they
found themselves carrying full-size, wounded men in the middle of firefights.
I’m not sure any of those wounded would want to bleed out for social justice.
But as we all know, political correctness is immune to
facts. Here’s Navy Secretary Ray Mabus: “That’s still my call, and I’ve been
very public. . . . I do not see a reason for an exemption.” And here’s Army
Reserve colonel Ellen Haring, a “vocal advocate” for women in infantry units:
“They’re always coming up with these averages. . . . The average woman can’t do
what the average man does. I don’t think that’s a surprise to any of us. But
they weren’t told to do this based on averages. It has to be based on
individual capabilities.”
But how do we discover the truly exceptional women who
can, for example, not just make it through various training courses but also
physically hang with a ground combat unit through the long term? It takes a
process of extraordinarily high attrition that hurts unit effectiveness and
physically injures large numbers of young women. And for what? For a unit that
doesn’t perform as well as an all-male unit?
Our enemies don’t care one bit for political correctness.
They won’t treat mixed-gender units with kid gloves. They’ll exploit those
units’ perceived weakness mercilessly, concentrating their fire on the slow and
vulnerable. There is no nothing more brutal or ruthless than ground combat. And
there is no enemy more vicious than ISIS, al Qaeda, and the Taliban. Will we
have to endure the broken bodies of men and women who could have been saved, of
breaches in lines that never should have opened, before we acknowledge reality?
Men are stronger than women, and in ground combat, that strength is the
difference between life and death, victory and defeat.
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