In a landmark move for the Australian military, women will be allowed to risk their lives alongside male soldiers and serve on the frontline. In a move described as "a significant and major cultural change" the Australian army will remove all gender barriers over the next five years and women will be able to take up roles that previously were considered too dangerous.
Most countries allow women to serve in the army, but only a small number permit them to fight on the frontline, amongst them Canada, New Zealand, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy and Germany.
Women who met the same stringent physical and psychological criteria required of men would be able to work in the most dangerous of roles after the Australian cabinet approved the measure, said the defence minister, Stephen Smith.
"This is simply about putting into the frontline those people who are best-placed to do the job, irrespective of your sex," he said. "In the future your role in the Defence Force will be determined on your ability, not on the basis of your sex," said Smith.
"The changes will be introduced over a five-year period and a through implementation programme would ensure there was "no diminution of standards", he added.
"This is a significant and major cultural change," he said. "That is why we'd rather err on the side of caution in expressing a five-year [implementation] period."
It mean an end to the Defence Force's exemption from Australia's Sex Discrimination Act, with women able to take up jobs such as mine disposal divers, air force defence guards and infantry and artillery frontline positions, which make up 17% of roles in the Australian army.
The test for anyone seeking a role in the Defence Force would be whether any individual had "the right physical, psychological and mental attributes to be able to do that job", he added.
Currently, 93% of Australian Defence Force positions are open to women, but 7% excluded women "simply on the basis of sex", said Smith.
The move could see the rise of women commandos and special forces as no roles will be excluded. "If a woman is capable of doing the entrance programme for the SAS or for commandos then they will be in it," said Smith.
Australian forces, including women, will still be on hand in multinational operations, he confirmed. Australia has 1,550 troops in Afghanistan as part of the US-led mission there. "We will present our soldiers as potential embeds or potential third-party or third-country deployees on the basis of their capacity and their ability, not on the basis of their sex," he said. Smith was not able to say whether Australian forces fighting in the Uruzgan province in Afghanistan would include women before the army withdraws in 2014, but he said he knew of an Australian army platoon in which the best shot was a woman.
"Currently she would be prohibited and prevented from being a sniper in Afghanistan," Smith said. "Why would we take away the chance of the best shot in a platoon playing that role?"
Defence personnel minister Warren Snowdon said senior Defence Force members in Canada and New Zealand had told him there were no problems with women serving across the board. "There are obviously cultural issues which had to be worked through and that's what we're doing," he told reporters. "But once they were bedded down there have been no significant impediments at all."
The Australian Defence Association, an influential security thinktank, previously warned that female soldiers could face heavy casualties. Biomechanical differences between the sexes differences in muscle distribution, centres of gravity and rate of recovery from physical exertion could make even physically strong women more vulnerable in combat, according to Neil James, the association's executive director.
"You've got to worry about the risk of disproportionate female casualties compared to men and the minister's announcement really doesn't indicate that he's across all that detail," James said.
The first currently male-only jobs will be available to women from March, no quotas will be introduced to encourage more women into the roles. Only 8,000 of Australia's almost 60,000 troops are female and this latest move will be seen as a further attempt to encourage more women to join the army.
by Alexandra Topping taken from http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/27/australian-military-women-frontline-roles
Most countries allow women to serve in the army, but only a small number permit them to fight on the frontline, amongst them Canada, New Zealand, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy and Germany.
Women who met the same stringent physical and psychological criteria required of men would be able to work in the most dangerous of roles after the Australian cabinet approved the measure, said the defence minister, Stephen Smith.
"This is simply about putting into the frontline those people who are best-placed to do the job, irrespective of your sex," he said. "In the future your role in the Defence Force will be determined on your ability, not on the basis of your sex," said Smith.
"The changes will be introduced over a five-year period and a through implementation programme would ensure there was "no diminution of standards", he added.
"This is a significant and major cultural change," he said. "That is why we'd rather err on the side of caution in expressing a five-year [implementation] period."
It mean an end to the Defence Force's exemption from Australia's Sex Discrimination Act, with women able to take up jobs such as mine disposal divers, air force defence guards and infantry and artillery frontline positions, which make up 17% of roles in the Australian army.
The test for anyone seeking a role in the Defence Force would be whether any individual had "the right physical, psychological and mental attributes to be able to do that job", he added.
Currently, 93% of Australian Defence Force positions are open to women, but 7% excluded women "simply on the basis of sex", said Smith.
The move could see the rise of women commandos and special forces as no roles will be excluded. "If a woman is capable of doing the entrance programme for the SAS or for commandos then they will be in it," said Smith.
Australian forces, including women, will still be on hand in multinational operations, he confirmed. Australia has 1,550 troops in Afghanistan as part of the US-led mission there. "We will present our soldiers as potential embeds or potential third-party or third-country deployees on the basis of their capacity and their ability, not on the basis of their sex," he said. Smith was not able to say whether Australian forces fighting in the Uruzgan province in Afghanistan would include women before the army withdraws in 2014, but he said he knew of an Australian army platoon in which the best shot was a woman.
"Currently she would be prohibited and prevented from being a sniper in Afghanistan," Smith said. "Why would we take away the chance of the best shot in a platoon playing that role?"
Defence personnel minister Warren Snowdon said senior Defence Force members in Canada and New Zealand had told him there were no problems with women serving across the board. "There are obviously cultural issues which had to be worked through and that's what we're doing," he told reporters. "But once they were bedded down there have been no significant impediments at all."
The Australian Defence Association, an influential security thinktank, previously warned that female soldiers could face heavy casualties. Biomechanical differences between the sexes differences in muscle distribution, centres of gravity and rate of recovery from physical exertion could make even physically strong women more vulnerable in combat, according to Neil James, the association's executive director.
"You've got to worry about the risk of disproportionate female casualties compared to men and the minister's announcement really doesn't indicate that he's across all that detail," James said.
The first currently male-only jobs will be available to women from March, no quotas will be introduced to encourage more women into the roles. Only 8,000 of Australia's almost 60,000 troops are female and this latest move will be seen as a further attempt to encourage more women to join the army.
by Alexandra Topping taken from http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/27/australian-military-women-frontline-roles
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