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			<title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
			<link>http://www.reason.com/staff</link>
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			<managingEditor>info@reason.com (Reason Online)</managingEditor>
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<title>Defense: Recovering From a Tailspin</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29409.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;
Secretary of the Navy John Dalton was right--although for the wrong
reasons--when he alleged in October that Admiral Frank Kelso was culpable for a
&quot;failure of leadership&quot; in the Tailhook mess. Defense Secretary Les Aspin was
right--also for the wrong reasons--to reject Dalton's recommendation that the
chief of naval operations be fired for his shortcomings. Kelso's main failure
was not in allowing Tailhook to happen, as Dalton charged, but in allowing
it--and the entire future of the Navy--to be spun out of his control.&lt;p&gt;
 The scandal surrounding Navy pilots' Tailhook Association convention in 1991,
particularly the sexual abuse charges made by Lt. Paula Coughlin, is typically
reported as a clear-cut example of what's wrong with the military regarding the
expanding role of women: The old-boy network just doesn't get it and sanctions
misogyny as a semi-official policy.&lt;p&gt;
But when the events are examined from a perspective less distorted by feminist
aims and ideology, that black-and-white view fades to battleship gray. The
picture that emerges is one of people whose commitment to military preparedness
is dubious but whose fixation on sexual politics is unquestionable. Criticism
of &quot;male culture&quot; and calls for male sensitivity training mask more complex
issues about integrating women fully into the military and instituting
universal standards of performance and behavior. &lt;p&gt;
Tailhook wasn't the first time a complicated military issue was reduced to a
simple morality play of bad men oppressing virtuous women. On May 28, 1990, the
National Organization for Women picketed in Annapolis to register its
unhappiness over reports that upperclassmen at the Naval Academy had chained a
female first-year student named Gwen Dreyer to a urinal. But the protesters
were countered by a group of female midshipmen, one of whom said that the
incident was &quot;not a matter of gender, it's a part of life here.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
This woman told the Baltimore Sun, in reports published the next day, that she
had participated in the hazing of females and that before the 1989 Army-Navy
football game, she had &quot;helped to strip, tar and feather a West Point cadet.&quot;
She also said that female midshipmen were involved in handcuffing Dreyer to the
urinal. Another female middie told the picketers, &quot;There is no way you have of
knowing the truth....you don't know what the norm is....you are doing a lot of
damage.&quot; A third academy woman, possibly referring to the Annapolis newspaper's
banner headline (&quot;Tormented female mid resigns&quot;) and subhead (&quot;Woman handcuffed
to toilet, taunted&quot;), told the demonstrators that misunderstandings fueled by
&quot;yellow journalism&quot; were &quot;hurting a lot of good people here.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
All of this context notwithstanding, the NOW members continued to demand that
the men--but not the women--involved in Dreyer's handcuffing &quot;be forced to go
through sensitivity training and their graduation should be deferred until they
understand what they have done.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
On May 30, 1990, the Washington Post also reported the Dreyer incident with
perspective: &quot;In interviews, several midshipmen said that although what
happened to Dreyer was unusual because the men who handcuffed her were of a
higher rank, it was not extremely different from common occurrences. For
example, they said that upperclassmen are often tied to chairs and put outside
or have their heads put in toilets as retaliation by plebes they command. They
also doubt Dreyer was targeted because she is a woman, but instead think the
episode, while wrong, grew out of Dreyer's involvement in a spirited snowball
fight.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
But less than two months later, the Dreyer story was spinning like a gyroscope
pointing to some feminists' idea of true north. By July 19, 1990, the Post had
honed the story to its male-shaming essence: &quot;Dreyer was chained to a urinal in
a men's room before a jeering crowd of her male classmates.&quot; Columnist Mary
McGrory took that sentiment to sarcastic new lows when she made gratuitous
reference to an Iraqi missile that killed American Navy men in the Persian
Gulf. &quot;The trouble at Annapolis,&quot; she wrote, &quot;goes deep: insecure men, feeling
threatened by bright women excused from combat; a service-wide identity crisis
caused by the fact that its ships have become little more than targets for
Exocet missiles.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
 Reeling from the bad press and political pressure, the academy cooperated with
the formation of a congressional Committee on Women's Issues. Committee member
Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) soon declared, &quot;What we need to work on at the
United States Naval Academy is an attitude change.&quot; Another committee member,
Rep. Helen Bentley (R-Md.), announced, &quot;We cannot guarantee there will not be
incidents in the future, but what we must guarantee is that there will be zero
tolerance for such incidents.&quot; The committee made far-reaching demands, one of
which smacked of Orwellian thought crime: &quot;the immediate dismissal of senior
officers who question the role of women in the military.&quot; The superintendent of
the academy pledged speedy adoption of the committee's &quot;recommendations.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Tailhook followed a similar pattern, both in how it was reported and in how the
Navy responded. As the Defense Department inspector general's Tailhook report
makes clear, the convention was a spirited bacchanalia in which both women and
men willingly participated.&lt;p&gt;
&quot;Our investigation revealed that many women freely and knowingly participated
in gauntlet activities,&quot; the report stated. &quot;A significant number of witnesses
reported that women went through the gauntlet and seemed to enjoy the attention
and interaction with the aviators. Those witnesses, both men and women,
generally stated they could tell the women were enjoying themselves because,
despite being grabbed and pushed along through the crowd, they were smiling and
giggling. Some of the women were observed going repeatedly through the
gauntlet. Many women who went through the gauntlet told us they did so
willingly and were not offended by the men touching them. A civilian woman
employed by the Navy told us of a conversation she had with another young woman
whom she met while on a commercial flight into Las Vegas to attend Tailhook 91.
The young woman described the gauntlet and said that, at about 3:00 a.m.,
things get `real rough' and wild on the third floor. According to the Navy
employee, the young woman implied that she enjoyed this type of activity and
that was the reason she was going to Tailhook 91.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
By the I.G.'s own admission, at least five of the 83 female &quot;victims&quot; insisted
they were nothing of the sort: &quot;The victim told us that she did not consider
herself a victim of any criminal activity.... The victim told us that, in her
opinion, she was not a `victim' of an assault....The victim felt that she
handled the incident and objected to being labeled as a `victim'....The victim
felt she resolved the situation and does not consider herself to be the victim
of an assault....The victim stated that she did not get upset at the incident
and did not feel that she was assaulted.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
One of these &quot;victims&quot; of &quot;sexual abuse&quot; wrote in a widely distributed letter
to the editor (which no editor published), &quot;This Tailhook investigation has
been blown severely out of proportion....I thought nothing of the incident and
never considered it an assault of any kind.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
Certainly some unsuspecting women were caught in activities they understandably
found offensive. But after Coughlin captured the media with her unquestioned
claim that she was among the unsuspecting and offended ones, activists began to
spin Tailhook like a top. They insisted that the drunken aviators in Las Vegas
represented a widespread culture of oppression and hostility toward military
women. Such claims ignored female officers' willing participation in such
Tailhook traditions as &quot;belly shots&quot; (drinking liquor out of a person's navel)
and &quot;leg shaving&quot; (in which a male officer shaves a woman's legs).&lt;p&gt;
The Navy defended itself by hoisting a white flag. &quot;I need to emphasize a very,
very important message--we get it,&quot; Acting Navy Secretary Sean C. O'Keefe told
a September 1992 news conference. &quot;We know that the larger issue is a cultural
problem which has allowed demeaning behavior and attitudes toward women to
exist within the Navy Department.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
A few weeks later O'Keefe announced an 80-step plan to &quot;enhance profession-al
opportunities for women&quot; in the Navy and to &quot;deal with the culture, environment
and attitudes that contribute to sexual harassment and gender bias.&quot; His
response ignored the General Accounting Office's finding that the most commonly
reported &quot;sexual harassment&quot; of women at the service academies consists of
remarks from other cadets that standards have been lowered to admit women. Such
&quot;sexual harassment&quot; is devoid of sexual content and suggests that the best way
to ensure that women achieve equality in the military is to reduce rather than
increase special treatment for them.&lt;p&gt;
Admiral Kelso, with his crippled ship commandeered by activists, succumbed to
the Stockholm syndrome. To ensure his own survival, he began to identify with
his captors. He ordered, among other steps, a one-day stand-down for all hands
to be trained about sexual harassment. A female commander in the Navy Reserve
says the training included three videotapes that &quot;cast the typical male service
member as a brutish predator who at all times would stare at, look at, and
suggest sex to any female in his vicinity. The man looked like a prowling
tomcat. No woman ever did anything wrong.&quot; The men forced to attend this
supposed sensitivity session, she says, were resentful and offended. &quot;They just
went blank. There's no avenue for the men to counter this.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Integrating women into the military will require both sexes to examine their
attitudes and behaviors toward each other. The leadership challenge facing the
Pentagon is to take control of sexual harassment and oth-er &quot;women's issues&quot;
from those energized by opportunism and ideology more than by a commitment to
the military. This should be especial- ly clear to Aspin, who acknowledged in
June that the quality of recruits has declined since 1991 and that questions
surrounding women in combat and sexual harassment might be a cause. 	&lt;p&gt;
The military must find the courage to say, &quot;Yes, Tailhook was a mess. It
demonstrates that sex is a powerful force and that both men and women are
sexual beings. Questions of gender fairness are complex; men and women both
think they deserve special treatment. We will deal with these issues. But we
will not be bullied. We will not be pushed. Nor will we allow our sailors and
soldiers to be shamed.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
If Kelso can line up the support of his superiors to take such a stand and
pursue such a policy, he can get the Navy underway proudly again on a course
that is fair and respectful of all personnel--women and men alike--at a prudent
speed into turbulent and uncharted waters. That would be a triumph of
leadership that Aspin and Dalton should both approve.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29409@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Jan 1994 00:00:00 EST</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Jack Kammer)</author>
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