Defense Secretary Leon Panetta vowed to
reduce sexual assaults within the military with a series of new initiatives.
Some say, though, that the initiatives were already mandated by Congress.
By
Anna Mulrine, Staff writer / January 19, 2012
There
has been a startling and consistent increase in violent sex crimes within the US Army since 2006, according to a new
Pentagon report released Thursday.
It
comes one day after Defense Secretary Leon Panetta vowed to reduce the number of
sexual assaults within the military, calling the numbers “unacceptable.” He
announced that the Pentagon was preparing a series of new initiatives in an
effort to try to curb the assaults.
While
the measures that Mr. Panetta announced this week were widely welcomed, some
democratic lawmakers pointed out that many of the newly-announced initiatives
were already slated to go into effect with a law passed by Congress late last
year. Others warned that the announced steps did not go far enough to combat
the fast-growing problem.
The rate of violent sexual crime has
increased 64 percent since 2006 according to the US Army report, which noted
that “rape, sexual assault, and forcible sodomy were the most frequent violent
sex crimes committed in 2011.”
While women comprise 14 percent of the
Army ranks, they account for 95 percent of all sex crime victims.
The
study warns that reports of crimes such as forcible sodomy may increase among
males in the coming year with the repeal of the law that barred openly gay
troops from serving in the military. “Now victims may be more likely to report
sexual offenses in the absence of the former Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy,”
since troops no longer have to fear being removed from the military if it is
discovered that they are gay.
At
the time of the study’s publication, “There were no discernible trends
regarding same gender sex crimes.”
Even in the face of increasing rates
of rape and aggravated assault in the military, Mr. Panetta emphasized that “we
assume this is a very underreported crime,” and that incidents of sexual
assault are roughly six times as high as reports of the crime. Last year there
were 3,191 reports of sexual assault throughout the US military, but Panetta said that,
realistically, the estimate for assaults “actually is closer to 19,000.”
A
recent military investigation found that many victims of sexual assault say
they do not report the crimes because they do not believe the perpetrators will
be prosecuted. For this reason, Panetta announced a plan to better train
military lawyers in prosecuting sex crimes.
The
Pentagon’s new initiatives also call for more standardized training for the
military’s sexual assault response coordinators (known as SARCs). Panetta
emphasized that the military will now keep records of sexual assault on file
longer to aid in prosecution, and will also transfer troops who have been
sexually assaulted to new units.
While
these steps are all positive, they were also mandated by law in the Defense
Authorization Bill passed last month, noted Rep. Niki
Tsongas (D) of Massachusetts,
in a statement on the heels of the Panetta press conference.
Rep.
Jackie Speier
(D) of California
for her part praised a provision that will now allow military spouses to have
the same access to confidentiality and treatment within the military system,
but warned that the announced policies “are not bold enough.”
Unit
commanders “continue to have complete and total discretion over incidents of
assault in their unit,” Representative Speier said in a statement. “A commander
can choose to investigate a case or sweep it under the rug.”
Speier
has proposed a bill that would establish an independent body to investigate and
prosecute military sexual assault cases. “By doing so, it removes the inherent
conflict of interest that exists in a command and control environment,” she
said.
General
Peter
Chiarelli, the Vice Chief of Staff of the Army, who shepherded the Army’s
study released Thursday, said that one reason sex crimes figures may have
increased “so dramatically” in the past five years is that troops feel more
comfortable coming forward to report the crime.
The Army study indicates that the vast
majority (97 percent) of perpetrators “at least casually” know their attacker.
Both the victims and perpetrators of sex crimes tend to be among the youngest
soldiers.
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