Author Topic: Americas female soldiers also bravely fighting, and dying in line of duty.  (Read 366 times)

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Offline powderman

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America's female soldiers: Bravely serving and dying in the line of duty
By Cristina Corbin

Published May 27, 2013
FoxNews.com

This undated photo, provided by a family member, shows 24-year-old Spc. Brittany B. Gordon, who was killed by a suicide bomber in Afghanistan's Kandahar province in Oct. 2012.

 Brittany Gordon was a 24-year-old Army intelligence analyst when an Afghan suicide bomber detonated an explosive vest under his military uniform in Kandahar province, killing her instantly and adding her name to the growing ranks of female American service members killed in the line of duty.

Gordon, of St. Petersburg, Fla., died Oct. 13, 2012, along with five others, when a delegation including U.S. coalition members was delivering furniture to an intelligence office in a remote area of Kandahar. She was on her first deployment to Afghanistan and had volunteered for the mission that ended in her death.

“Brittany had a contagious passion for helping and protecting those less fortunate than she,” her mother, Brenda Thompson Gordon, told FoxNews.com. “Not only was her contribution to protect the freedom that we enjoy, but it was to empower women to lead and have confidence in themselves.   

“She was very special. I am so proud of her,” Gordon said. “She led by example with a cheerful confidence. There are givers and there are takers and she was definitely a giver. She volunteered for this.

“She was my only child,” she added, fighting back tears. “The hardest part is when you put everything into one child and it’s all gone.”

Gordon was one of 44 U.S. servicewomen killed in Afghanistan since the conflict began there in 2001. Another 335 female soldiers have been wounded.


"Not only was her contribution to protect the freedom that we enjoy, but it was to empower women to lead and have confidence in themselves."
- Brenda Thompson Gordon, mother of Spc. Brittany Gordon


The number of female casualties has risen as more women, like Gordon, join the U.S. military in combat roles alongside their male counterparts.

According to the U.S. government, 110 female U.S. soldiers died in Iraq and another 636 were wounded. Fifteen were killed in the Persian Gulf War, which began in 1990. 

Eight women were killed in the Vietnam War, two in the Korean War, 543 in World War II and 359 in World War I – although all those women served in non-combat roles, mostly as nurses assisting soldiers in battlefields. 

Women were first allowed to serve in non-combat positions in 1901. It was almost a century later, in the early 1990s, that they were allowed to enter combat units.

But they were restricted from the front lines after the Pentagon ruled they could not serve in artillery, armor, infantry and other similar roles.

That ban, however, was overturned in January 2013, when the Defense Department announced women were now permitted to serve in front-line combat positions.

While it took centuries for the U.S. government to formally approve women in combat roles, females have served unofficially on the battlefield since the American Revolution.

Margaret Corbin assisted her husband, artilleryman John Corbin, and 600 American troops in defending Fort Washington in Northern Manhattan from a fleet of British soldiers on Nov. 16, 1776.

When her husband was fatally wounded, Corbin took over and fired his cannon from the top of a ridge, today known as Fort Tryon. Corbin, who was severely wounded in the battle, later became the first woman in American history to receive a pension from Congress for her service in the military.



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/05/27/america-female-soldiers-bravely-serving-and-dying-in-line-duty/#ixzz2UUwoxJOj
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

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Offline Conan The Librarian

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Dying for nothing in a pointless occupation that serves no objective. Cannon fodder.

Offline powderman

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Dying for nothing in a pointless occupation that serves no objective. Cannon fodder.

 
I don't like the wars either, but they still died in the GWOI, or global war on islam,  that threatens the entire world. I don't consider ANY American soldiers death as dying for nothing. POWDERMAN.  >:( >:(
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

Only half the people leave an abortion clinic alive.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAiOEV0v2RM
What part of ILLEGAL is so hard to understand???
I learned everything about islam I need to know on 9-11-01.
http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDqmy1cSqgo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_u9kieqGppE&feature=related
http://www.illinois.gov/gov/contactthegovernor.cfm

Offline nw_hunter

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Dying for nothing in a pointless occupation that serves no objective. Cannon fodder.

 
I don't like the wars either, but they still died in the GWOI, or global war on islam,  that threatens the entire world. I don't consider ANY American soldiers death as dying for nothing. POWDERMAN.  >:( >:(


I agree with your last statement PM.
I don't agree with our country allowing our young women to fight in front line operations, on foreign soil.They should never be put intentionally in harms way. Doing so only proves how far our leaders have fallen in their ability to govern.In a war for our home front defense, women taking up weapons of war would be like self defense. Natural for a she bear to protect her own with a vengeance. ;)
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Offline Conan The Librarian

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The afghanistan mess has been a waste of 6700 lives and many more wounded. Nothing has been accomplished. Not even the top leaders seemed to know why US was there.

Offline cooter74

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Women wanted equality, they have it, let them and the queers go fight the wars! They fought like hell for the right, I have no problem with them dieing there it's what they wanted!

Offline BBF

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Dying for nothing in a pointless occupation that serves no objective. Cannon fodder.

 
Harsh but very true. Sad !!
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Offline RevJim

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 It galls me to no end to have women in a combat zone. A civilized nation should be above that. Just my .02   If they paid our military a decent wage, say, entry level at $35K/yr, and go up from there, it would be worthwhile for more men and women to enter/make it a career. There would  be plenty of males to do the fighting. The other 90% it takes to support them have plenty of slots for women to fill, even now. Politicians have no scruples about starving our military( a big portion are on Food Stamps!) or putting them in harms way it seems.

Offline Conan The Librarian

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RevJim:
 
That's a bit of a different tangent, but worth following. Women in combat have been studied pretty thoroughly. First of all, the Israeli women are not combat troops, despite a lot  of perceptions.
 
What happens reliably when women are in combat is that the men try to protect them, thus endangering themselves.
 
When they are traveling, as with the Navy, pregnancy rates are 10 to 20%. Girls who were never terribly popular are suddenly getting a lot of attention.
 
As to ethics, I'd first look at the effect on the mission, then on the other soldiers, then on society.

Offline RevJim

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 I remember a few really beautiful enlisted WACs, over in Germany. They would not give us enlisted men the courtesy of a "hello". They were regulars at the Officer's Club as "guests", lol.
I never understood using women as truck drivers in combat zones either, especially fuel trucks. Even the old Red Ball Express drivers had to fight like crazy from time to time. And I agree, to my mind, I don't see how one could not try and protect any female when the doo-doo hits...B.O.A. (Bad Outcome Assured) :'(