|
Who
We Are
Articles
Upcoming
Events
Past
Events
Downloads
Links
No
Child Left Behind
Political
Cartoons
Contact
Us
|
America’s Secret War
JOE PIASECKI, Los Angeles City Beat story
November 30 2006
At a forum
held earlier this month at Pasadena City College, women vets of the
U.S. military went public with their own personal stories to raise
awareness of the least-acknowledged casualties of the wars in the
Middle East: rapes of U.S. servicewomen by their fellow soldiers.
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs records obtained by CityBeat show
that more than 20 percent of female veterans who used VA health care
services nationwide between October 2001 and September 2005 –
that’s nearly 44,000 women – reported being victims of
sexual assault or harassment, sometimes by fellow servicemembers.
Los Angeles-born Maricela Guzman was attacked and raped while on night
watch duty during her Navy boot camp training, she explained before
some 150 students at PCC.
“It was so dark I couldn’t recognize the person who
attacked me,” she recalled of her assailant, still unknown after
nearly a decade. Guzman, who nonetheless went on to have a decorated
five-year career while stationed in Naples, Italy, did not immediately
report the crime. When she initially tried to speak with her
supervisor, Guzman was punished for not following military procedure,
and when finally given the chance to speak was so distraught that she
didn’t.
April Fitzsimmons served as an intelligence analyst in the Air Force
from 1985 to 1989. Going to sleep in the barracks one night after
having a few drinks, she was attacked and fondled by a large man who
had been hiding in her room. Fortunately for her, she turned on the
light, screamed at him to leave, and he ran. But a short time later,
another woman on base was raped by the same man, whom Fitzsimmons later
identified for military police.
“I realized by my silence, my inactivity, passivity, fear, and
unwillingness to come forward, that someone else had taken the
hit,” said Fitzsimmons, currently a student at Antioch University
and the author of a play about her experiences. For years, she said,
“I never talked about it. I never told my parents – kept it
a little secret like my bulimia [caused by that trauma] all that
year.”
The same VA records show that only about one percent of men reported
sexual harassment or assault to the VA between 2001 and 2005, but that
figure accounts for more than 47,000 vets. Hardly any of these cases
are discussed publicly or in the media, but in 2004 The Boston Globe
reported that a Pentagon study found that 9 percent of more than 2,000
military sexual assault victims in 2002 and 2003, including some
serving in Iraq, were men.
Unlike Fitzsimmons, Army Specialist Suzanne Swift did tell someone
right away, but it didn’t help. In February 2004, the
then-19-year-old Oregon native was sent to Iraq where she was harassed
and then assaulted by a commander and could find no one willing to
intercede, according to her mother, Sara Rich.
After going AWOL in January rather than be sent back to Iraq to serve
under her alleged attacker, Swift was arrested at her home and taken to
Fort Lewis in Washington, where she awaits court-martial on January 7
for missing a troop movement. In the meantime, Swift is suffering from
anxiety and depression and is allowed to go home once every two weeks
to visit with her psychologist.
“I want my daughter to get an honorable discharge because she is
a victim here. The military has said she is not a victim, or only a
victim a little bit – not enough for her to go AWOL. I want
Congress to be asking for her honorable discharge and people that have
been getting victimized to get the benefits they deserve,” said
Rich, who spoke at PCC on behalf of her daughter.
Currently, there are more than 200,000 women on active military duty,
and more than 140,000 female reservists and National Guard members.
Simply by serving in the military, these women have increased their
risk of suffering at least some sort of sexual trauma, says Callie
Wight, a therapist who serves as the Women Veterans coordinator for the
U.S. Veterans Administration Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System. She
spoke at PCC and to this newspaper in an unofficial capacity,
specifying that her comments should not be attributed to the VA.
Wight did say, however, that at the San Fernando Valley’s VA
Ambulatory Care Center she leads sexual trauma therapy sessions for
more than four dozen female veterans and currently has at least 10
patients who served recently in Iraq or Afghanistan. Several were
assaulted by a commander, some were raped by fellow servicemembers
after drinking, and one was repeatedly beaten and sexually abused by
her husband while they served together in Afghanistan.
VA statistics from October through December 2005, the most recent
available, report that 1,360 males and 1,618 females who sought
government health care said they were sexually assaulted or harassed.
While these numbers could refer to incidents not perpetrated by members
of the military, Wight and others fear the problem may be quietly
growing.
“It’s not as easy for the Department of Defense to deal
with sexual trauma issues while they wage a war for which they
don’t have enough troops to begin with,” she said.
“I’m not seeing that many [victims] returning from Iraq and
Afghanistan, but I think they just haven’t been discharged
yet.”
Since late 2003, nonprofit victim advocates the Miles Foundation
documented more than 500 cases of sexual assault on women serving in
Middle Eastern countries, according to a story posted by Alternet.org.
Colleen Mussolino, national commander of the advocacy group Women
Veterans of America, says she has been contacted over the years by more
than 1,000 female veterans and some current servicemembers about sexual
assault in the military. From those conversations and her own
experience, Mussolino, who served as an Army cook in the 1960s, has
learned that perpetrators often go unpunished in an effort to play down
the prevalence of assault and harassment.
“I was gang-raped by four guys, and I was left beaten and badly
scarred in many areas, including the mind. The criminal investigation
division of the military picked me up and took me to headquarters and
treated me as a prisoner of war for six weeks. I was interrogated from
7 a.m. to four in the afternoon for six solid weeks and threatened with
a dishonorable discharge if I pressed charges. I finally signed the
papers [to not press charges],” Mussolino said.
Currently, claims of sexual assault are dealt with by a soldier’s
direct supervisor, but Women Veterans of America are pushing for the
creation of a special judicial process within the military to
investigate all allegations of sexual assault.
Rich, meanwhile, is focused mainly on getting people to visit her web
site, SuzanneSwift.org, and to write to newspaper editors and their
representatives in Congress about her daughter’s case.
She’s also urging young women to think twice before joining the
military.
“The Army has some great things to offer people, but I really
encourage people to wait until they’re 21,” she says,
believing that level of maturity is needed to better prepare for the
lifestyle and potential dangers that come with serving in the military.
“I’m not anti-military, but I think we’re abusing our
military.”
Fitzsimmons and Guzman are also working to raise awareness and
encourage others to speak out, but still find it hard themselves to
deal with the trauma. At the PCC event, a student asked Guzman if it
was difficult for her to talk to her parents about being raped.
“I never told them,” she said. “I’m going to tell my siblings pretty soon.”
This archive consists of a topically organized selection of
articles culled by members of the Counter-Recruitment List Serve from printed
publications and web sites. The archive is not complete. We have chosen
material relevant to the work of Eugene,
Oregon’s Committee for Countering
Military Recruitment that we think may be of use to others individuals and
groups with similar goals.
Because our web site is public, personal comments about the
articles and (frequent) corrections of reporters’ errors are also not included.
If an article interests you, we encourage you to return to the
Counter-Recruitment List Serve and put the article’s headline into the search
line, which should bring up (often wise and useful) commentary and corrections.
If you do not belong to the List Serve, it can be found at counter-recruitment@yahoogroups.com
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the articles
on this site are posted without profit to those who have expressed prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposed.
|