Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ Files New Legal Challenge Against Defense Department for Failing to Integrate Women Into Combat Positions
Segregated Basic Training and āLeaders Firstā Policy in Armed Forces Discriminate Against Women
SAN FRANCISCO ā The Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ Womenās Rights Project, the Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ of Northern California, and the law firm of Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP filed an amended complaint today in a lawsuit against the Department of Defense seeking equal access for female soldiers to ground combat positions.
The amended complaint, filed on behalf of the Service Womenās Action Network (SWAN), challenges the āLeaders Firstā policy of the Army and Marines Corps that requires enlisted women to wait to enter combat battalions until two or more āwomen leadersā are assigned to those units. It also asserts that the Marine Corpsā policy of segregating male and female recruits for basic training unconstitutionally impedes womenās integration into combat roles.
āThe Department of Defense appeared to be moving in the right direction when it cleared the way two years ago for women to start fully participating in combat units,ā said Gillian Thomas, senior staff attorney with the Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ Womenās Rights Project. āBut the Army and Marine Corps then adopted policies that brand female soldiers as unequal, and put responsibility for integrating women into formerly male-only units solely on other women.ā
More than five years ago, in November 2012, SWAN and four individual servicewomen filed a lawsuit challenging the DODās ban on women in combat positions with the help of the Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ, the Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ of Northern California, and Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP. In January 2013, shortly before the DOD was scheduled to answer the complaint, the DOD officially rescinded a 1994 directive that barred women from being assigned to most ground combat units, totaling roughly 240,000 positions.
In December 2015, DOD announced that all military jobs, units, and schools would officially be open to women āwithout exceptionā ā yet the Marine Corps maintained its policy of sex-segregated boot camp, and both the Army and the Marines imposed the āLeaders Firstā policy, both of which treat women joining combat units differently than men solely on the basis of gender.
The amended complaint, filed today with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, alleges that the current policies and practices of denying women opportunities to serve in combat battalions in the absence of existing āwomen leadersā and requiring women Marines to attend sex-segregated boot camp are unconstitutional.
āThe DOD claims that āLeaders Firstā helps women, but in fact the policy is preventing women from entering combat arms and hindering the progress of integration,ā said Lydia Watts, CEO of the Service Womenās Action Network. āThat policy, along with training female recruits separately from men at Marine boot camp, is the same old sex segregation by a different name.ā
The complaint outlines specific ways in which the āLeaders Firstā policy unconstitutionally harms womenās opportunities, including that it:
- Deprives junior enlisted servicewomen access to the full range of combat positions available to their male colleagues, because they are assigned to only those brigades in which women āleadersā are installed;
- Deprives women āleadersā access to the full range of combat positions because they are assigned based on the needs of the āLeaders Firstā policy;
- Communicates to male servicemembers and leaders in combat units that they have little or no responsibility for the development and advancement of servicewomen;
- Places unusual and unnecessary burdens on junior enlisted women, who are often required to ignore chain of command norms in order to seek counsel from their designated female āleadersā;
- Places unusual and unnecessary burdens on women āleaders,ā who are required to divert attention from their own professional development in their new roles in combat units to mentor and supervise junior enlisted women; and
- Causes resentment among male soldiers in combat units.
The complaint further contends that the Marinesā policy of training male and female recruits separately at boot camp is unconstitutional, as well, because it:
- Is premised on stereotypes about womenās aptitude for military service;
- Deprives women of equal opportunity for training and mentorship, thus impairing their ability to successfully meet gender-neutral physical standards for their contracted combat MOSs and thereby to continue their training in those specialties; and
- Instructs male recruits and leaders to regard female servicemembers as in need of protection, incapable of competing on equal footing with men, and otherwise as second-class members of the Marine Corps.
For much of U.S. history, womenās participation in the Armed Forces has been severely limited by law. Over time, Congress has removed statutory restrictions on womenās participation in the Armed Forces, and since the early 1990s there has been no prohibition on women serving in the military ā including combat positions. Women now make up an increasingly significant percentage of the Armed Forces, with more than 280,000 having served in Iraq and Afghanistan alone.
āClaiming to advance women by treating them differently from male servicemembers is just wrongheaded,ā said Christine P. Sun, Legal Director of the Ķųŗģ±¬ĮĻ of Northern California. āTrue integration demands that senior male officers mentor and train junior enlisted women as vigorously as they do their male subordinates.ā
The full amended complaint can be found here:
/legal-document/swan-v-mattis-second-amended-complaint
More information on this case, including biographies of the plaintiffs affiliated with the original complaint, can be found at