Ladies’ Might: Why Women Can Now Serve on Submarines

Most little girls grow up hearing some version of the phrase “You can be anything you want to be.” That’s mostly true, as long as the little girl in question doesn’t want to grow up to be the CEO of a major company, the president of the United States, or the director of an Oscar-winning film, in which cases the odds are pretty slim.   

The military is another area in which certain career paths are simply off-limits to women. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, women comprise about 15 percent of the military, yet it wasn’t until 1993 that they were allowed to fly fighter jets or serve on naval surface ships. Even today, women are not permitted to become Navy SEALs or perform frontline duties in combat zones, despite the fact that a large number of them are willing and eager to serve their country. Women are also currently barred from serving on submarines, although the Navy is looking to make that particular restriction a thing of the past.

No Longer a Boys’ Club
In February 2010, the Navy made a move to end the ban on women and integrate submarine service. With the support of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen and Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus, Defense Secretary Robert Gates sent a letter to Congress detailing the plan to welcome female submariners. The letter said that the time had come to “broaden opportunities for women” and that the military would use a “phased approach” to integration. 

The ban on women submariners had nothing to do with ability; it was a matter of logistics. Official Navy policy states that women do not serve onboard “because of the very limited habitability and privacy onboard a submarine.” The quarters are extremely cramped, and privacy is limited, to say the least. It would take extraordinary resources to retrofit the existing seventy-one subs in the Navy’s fleet to provide separate sleeping quarters and bathroom facilities to women. Not only would it be cost prohibitive, but there simply isn’t space on the vessels, which often force hundreds of sailors to share just a handful of bathrooms, and sometimes even share bunks by sleeping in shifts. However, newer submarines tend to be larger, with multiple bathrooms and sleeping areas, some of which could be designated as women-only more easily. 

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07.25.2011
Sonny
THE THING: The boys got something "else" to play with. THE GOOD THING: The boys are gonna share it, Alot! CHOO CHOO! THE BAD THING: The whole crew will be on Maury.
12.31.2010
Ed Bara
They have kitchens in submarines now? hahah jk
10.25.2010
Peter
ok "Brian", 2 hour watches? Do you have fish? I've been on a fast attack for 5 stinkin years and never, never have we stood 2 hour watches. your probably on a boomer or trident. try 6 hrs of watch. at least twice a day. thats just watch. the long hard work as an aganger alone will scare anyone. we are nothiing like surface f@gs. what bs you spouting out?
06.12.2010
Brian
I like how the author, and commenters like "Christopher Gibbons" point out that submariners undergo intense physical and psychological preparation before they begin training. The sad truth is, as a submariner myself I can attest that this is a misconception. We undergo regular schooling (classroom environment), typical damage control and firefighting trainers, stand lousy 2 hour long watches, and nothing else... just like the surface fleet. In fact they do everything they can to keep the trainees away from the submarines and submarine environment until they go to serve on one. So this notion that submariners undergo extensive psychological evaluations and therefore are less likely to sexually assault women is a farce. The opposite is true. You get a hundred men underwater in their own world, starve them of sex, then expect to throw women in the mix and things are all rosy? Whoever thinks that's not a disaster waiting needs sent to urinalysis, stat.
Well the way I see it there are two things to consider. One: the sailors that serve on submarines undergo extensive psychological evaluations and therefore I believe that sexual assault on submarines will be very unlikely. Two: It is important to note that many of the statistics regarding violence against women are actually a sign of gender equality. What most people don't grasp is that gender equality cuts both ways. Gender equality means that everyone is treated the same. That means, no special arrangements, no concessions to modesty. But women in the military don't want that. Women don't want equality they want to be treated better than the men.The only way I will believe otherwise is if women in the military start shaving their heads. Guys beat the crap out of each other all the time. True equality would mean not treating violence against women any different.
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