June 17,2008:
U.S. Navy F-18 pilot, Commander
Sara Joyner, completed her tour as the first female commander of a navy combat
squadron (VFA 105). This included a seven month cruise to the Persian Gulf
aboard the USS Harry S. Truman, where her dozen F-18Cs flew about 412 hours
each. The squadron has 245 officers and sailors, including pilots and
maintenance personnel. The squadron commander flies combat missions, in
addition to running the squadron. Joyner has been in the navy since 1985, when
she entered the Naval Academy. She was a flight instructor in 1993, when the
Department of Defense changed its policy and allowed women to fly combat
missions. Joyner has 3,000 hours in the F-18, and 600 carrier landings. Once
women were allowed to fly combat aircraft, it was only a matter of time before
some of them rose to command positions. Her husband is also a naval aviator,
and she has a four year old daughter. Her next assignment is a staff job in the
Pentagon.
Noting the
success of female military pilots in the United States, other countries are
moving in that direction as well. The reason is simple, many of the women who
go through flight training turn out to have better flying skills than the
average male pilot. But the traditional fear of women getting killed in combat
still plays a role. For example, India is at war with Islamic terrorists in
Kashmir. While female police and government workers are at risk of injury from
terrorist attack, that is not considered the same as the risk to female pilots
flying in the area. So, bowing to real, or imagined, public opinion, the Indian
Air Force quietly transferred female pilots from units that fly into Kashmir or
near the Pakistani border.
The Indian
armed forces conducted studies of women in combat, and concluded that there was
no practical reason for keeping women from these duties. There are currently
1800 female officers in the Indian armed forces. Most are in the army, but 39
percent are in the air force, and 45 of them are pilots.
India, and
even Pakistan (which just graduated its first female pilots) are having a hard
time keeping male pilots in uniform. Too many of the men depart for more
lucrative, and less stressful, careers as commercial pilots. Women may not be
the solution. Currently, only about half of women officers stay in past their
initial five year contract. Indian women, even military pilots, are under
tremendous social and family pressure to marry. Those that do may still be
pilots, but married women are under a lot of pressure to have children. The
Indian Air Force provides its female officers with ten months leave for this,
six months during pregnancy, and four months after delivery. The air force does
this because pilots are very expensive to train. Fuel costs the same
everywhere, as do spare parts. So what India may save in lower salaries, is not
enough. A good pilots costs over half a million dollars for training expenses,
and takes over five years. So the Indians are betting a lot of money, and time,
on their female pilots. Many women are willing to take up the challenge. But
they have already heard from their peers in Western air force, that motherhood
and piloting can be a very exhausting combination.
Worldwide,
women are increasingly part of the military. In many nations, over ten percent
of military personnel are female. A century ago, it was under one percent (and
most of those were nurses and other medical personnel.) More women are in
uniform now because there aren't enough qualified men, especially for many of
the technical jobs armed forces now have to deal with.
Islamic
nations have higher illiteracy rates overall, and very high rates for women.
These nations have a severe shortage of technically trained people. Those women
that do get an education in Islamic cultures tend to be very bright and able.
So there's a need, and a solution close at hand. But because of those religious
restrictions, and the generally very macho attitudes in Islamic nations, there
will never be as many women in uniform as are needed. This means that Islamic
armed forces will continue to come up short when it comes to maintaining and
using military technology. The future of military operations is more
technology, so you can see where this is leading. No wonder Islamic radicals
want to go back to the past. Unfortunately, the non-Moslem world is not
inclined to join them. Taking a knife to a gun fight doesn't work.