
Gender inequality is a hot topic in reference to the military as October comes to an end. According to an article by the Army Times by Lance M. Bacon on October 22, 2011, "Congress in the 2011 National Defense Authorization Act required the defense and service secretaries to review policies “to determine whether changes are needed to ensure that female members have an equitable opportunity to compete and excel in the Armed Forces.” That report was due to Congress on April 15, but the Pentagon was granted an extension through October." Proponents of women being allowed in combat argue that women are already dying in combat, should be recognized for their service, and are highly qualified, therefore, should be used as an asset to the United States Military in all roles disregarding their female gender.
Baldwin recently returned from an eight-month tour with Operational Detachment-A teams 1324 and 1315 in Tahlequah, in northern Afghanistan’s Kunduz province. She served as part of a cultural support team that builds relationships with and serves the female population that will not respond to men.
Any time you are placed at the tip of the spear, you’d better be sharp. It was a lesson that Baldwin, a computer graphics artist, learned the hard way.
Her inclusion on the team started with a five-day assessment, which Baldwin called “the most intense five days of my life.” They were pushed to their physical limits. They wore rucks for 10 straight hours while conducting land navigation. Psychological evaluations were thrown in. They were deprived of sleep while their capability, capacity and endurance were tested.
“If someone had told me everything I had to do beforehand, I would’ve been like ‘There’s no way,’ ” Baldwin said. “Afterward, was like, ‘Yeah I can do that stuff, and I am just as tough as those guys.’ ”
Baldwin had nothing but comp
liments for her teammates, who she said fully accepted her as a member of the unit.
“I had my apprehensions about going in there,” she said. “But once we got in, we told them where we were coming from and they told us where they were coming from. We went out on a few patrols right away and showed them that we were physically able to do this and there were no issues.”
Hopefully stories like Christine Baldwin's and influence like Ray Odierno's will lead us to more egalitarian gender norms, even outside the military.
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