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Skeptic
12th October 2004, 19:11
Local News Saturday, October 09, 2004


Sexual assaults haunt victims after military discharge

By ROXANA HEGEMAN\Associated Press Writer
ANDALE, Kan. (AP) - At 22, Natalie Longee is already a veteran in the war on terror. She has guarded prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and escorted truck convoys in Iraq. She has heard the bombs, survived ambushes and seen the cost of war first hand. And she is traumatized.

But it's not the war that has her most rattled. It is the fear than she will be raped again.

Six months since her military discharge, Longee joins the ranks of veterans seeking help from the trauma of sexual assaults perpetrated by fellow soldiers.

"I am not just scared of bombs," Longee said. "I'm scared people are going to come in. I am scared of rape happening again."

The Department of Veterans Affairs now routinely asks all veterans that come to it for services whether they suffered sexual trauma in the military. What the VA found was that that between 20 and 25 percent of women veterans told them they were sexually assaulted, said Carol O'Brien, director of the Center for Sexual Trauma Services at the Bay Pines VA Medical Center in St. Petersburg, Fla. Between 1 and 2 percent of men also said they experienced a sexual assault.

Those VA numbers are far higher than official military estimates, victim advocates contend, because many victims are afraid to report it to superior officers.

Sexual assault in the military differs from rape in civilian life because the military experience is all-encompassing, O'Brien said. Victims often have to go to work the next day with their attacker and have less control over their lives than do civilians.

"People in the military see the military environment as family, their protector, and they expect that to be a very safe environment. ... When sexual assault happens in the military, it is something that flies in the face of everything they expected," O'Brien said.

The Bay Pines VA hospital, which offers a treatment program for sexual post traumatic stress disorder, has a months-long waiting list. Half of its military sexual trauma patients are men, she said.

Two VA hospitals now offer such residential treatment programs for military sexual trauma, including the VA facility in Menlo Park, Calif. But all veterans hospitals across the nation have at least one military sexual trauma coordinator, said Connie Larosa, deputy field director for the VA's central region.

Lt. Col. Joe Richard, a spokesman for the Pentagon, said the military is making an effort to improve reporting and prevention of sexual crimes. Heading that effort is Air Force Brig. Gen. K.C. McClain, who was appointed last month to a newly created position as policy chief for matters related to sexual assault prevention and response.

"Those service members are given every opportunity to stay in the military and address and treat the serious problem and seek the legal remedies that are required," Richard said. "Nobody is going to be allowed to get away with sexual assault in the U.S. military."

The military investigated 1,012 alleged cases of sexual assault last year, compared to 901 the previous year, according to a Pentagon report.

Among one of the most publicized at the time was the rape of Sgt. Andra Wood at a desert post in Kuwait in November. Wood - a member of the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division in Fort Lewis - was hit in the back of the head near the showers at Camp Udairi shortly after she got off guard duty in the middle of the night.

When she regained consciousness, she was tied, gagged and unclothed. Wood said in a March interview with the television show "Dateline NBC" that the Army initially denied her counseling and asked her to take a polygraph. She said Army officials told her the best therapy was to go back with her unit, which was getting ready to go into Iraq.

Her mother, Barbara Wharton, told The Associated Press in a phone interview from her Pennsylvania home that the NBC interview subsequently made things "very much worse" for her daughter in the Army.

"After the interview we learned they were going to court martial her and one of the charges was adultery," Wharton said. "That is when I flew to Fort Lewis because I just had enough of the Army."

Jeff Young, spokesman for Fort Lewis, did not specifically address Wood's case when contacted for comment but instead issued a general statement saying the Army takes allegations of sexual assault very seriously.

"Soldiers have access to and are provided medical treatment, psychological counseling and spiritual support," he said. "Any allegation of sexual harassment by a soldier is investigated thoroughly."

Wood, 23, did not respond to an AP request for an interview. Her mother said her daughter gets upset whenever the subject of her sexual attack comes up.

Subsequent to her discharge in April, Wood has been getting counseling through the VA, Wharton said.

That same sense of career loss also haunts Longee as she struggles to cope with her military discharge and her subsequent medical treatment for her sexual trauma and post traumatic stress disorder.

Now back at her Kansas home, Longee gingerly held a small glass pendant that came from a chandelier in Saddam Hussein's mansion as she talked about her deployment. And this, she said, is a fragment from the marble floor of the palace of his son, Odai, after it was bombed.

Her story also initially received widespread media attention after she went public with it following the alleged rape on Jan. 6, 2003, at the Fort Hood barracks.

Longee accused a fellow soldier whom she had befriended during their deployment in Cuba of sexually attacking her. She had let him stay in her barracks room to finish playing a video game, while she fell sleep. She accused him of raping her, he claimed the sex was consensual.

"We all trusted each other because we were deployed," Longee said. "That is why I can't understand why that happened."

After a military hearing earlier this year, the Army dismissed the two charges of rape and one of attempted forcible sodomy against her accused attacker. It concluded there was insufficient evidence of the use of force or lack of consent.

"It's not just the rape - it's what happened afterward. ... I don't think I will ever be able to get over it," Longee said.

Longee was deployed to Iraq shortly after the incident - something she said she initially welcomed because it got her away from daily contact with her alleged attacker at Fort Hood.

But while in Iraq, Longee said she was taunted by her superiors and fellow soldiers for reporting the sexual assault. She said she had to discuss intimate details of the rape with military investigators over a satellite phone within earshot of others.

Her team leader in Iraq was the former roommate of her accused attacker in Fort Hood. A mock rape was staged in front of her, she said.

But at the hearing for her alleged attacker, much of the testimony focused on her own mother's criminal past as well her mother's contacts with the media and her efforts to raise money to hire an attorney, according to redacted transcripts obtained by the AP and interviews with the family.

The investigating officer wrote in his report following the hearing that Longee was not a credible witness. He cited inconsistencies in her testimony and her failure to cry for help during the alleged attack.

Dan Hassett, media relations officer at Fort Hood, said the Army has no comment on Longee's allegations or her case.

Following a long hospitalization after her discharge, Longee is now back in Andale and getting outpatient treatment at the VA hospital in Wichita. She still wants the military to prosecute her alleged attacker.

"I need to have some type of justice, so I can rest," Longee said.



http://www.mydjconnection.com/articles/200...ouri/state4.txt (http://www.mydjconnection.com/articles/2004/10/09/missouri/state4.txt)

PRC-UTE
13th October 2004, 02:40
that's a revolting story. you can see what the military mindset does and the types attracted to military service.

Anti-Capitalist1
13th October 2004, 03:40
I've heard that before. Although, I don't find it all that suprising. I mean, the army is a volunteer army.
That means, only people who want to overthorw democratically elected governments in so called "third world" countries, murder and maim in the name of the advancement of big business, and be the hand with which America polices the world join. Enough said.

The Garbage Disposal Unit
13th October 2004, 04:09
That's unfair - while it would be great to create boogymen out of the American armed forces, it would be inaccurate (I know, we'd all love an excuse to do to them what they do to other people, but . . .*). In the United States, there is what is typically called the "poverty draft". The poor, the ill-educated, those who have few other opportunities, are encouraged to join the army - it is often their only shot at a "future". The army often makes fucked-up kill-bots out of these people, but they are still human beings, and I think we need to find ways to help these people.

Who knows, they might be inspired to gun down their officers.


__________
*I don't mean that. It was a jab.

Skeptic
13th October 2004, 05:48
Originally posted by Virgin Molotov [email protected] 13 2004, 03:09 AM
That's unfair - while it would be great to create boogymen out of the American armed forces, it would be inaccurate (I know, we'd all love an excuse to do to them what they do to other people, but . . .*). In the United States, there is what is typically called the "poverty draft". The poor, the ill-educated, those who have few other opportunities, are encouraged to join the army - it is often their only shot at a "future". The army often makes fucked-up kill-bots out of these people, but they are still human beings, and I think we need to find ways to help these people.

Who knows, they might be inspired to gun down their officers.


__________
*I don't mean that. It was a jab.
That was a thoughtful post Virgin Molotov C, but to build on what you were saying, hatred for women is one of the cornerstones of what the U.S. military has always been about, it's really a reflection of the United Snakes fucked, patriarchal culture. If you see films like 'Full Metal Jacket' the whole indoctrination of bootcamp revolves around contempt for the feminine and male bonding at the expense of the idea of being feminine. "Mary Jane Rotten Crotch" chants, etc. What the U.S. military has always done to people, from cutting off female exterior genitalia of Native American women and tying it to the Cavalry's saddles, during Custer's campaigns, to locking up 70,000 men, women and children in Tiger Cages (welded in Texas no less) until people's legs shriveled up and they had to scurry about begging for scraps and mercy while goon, U.S. soldiers poured lye over their heads. To Iraq and Afghanistan where tens of thousand of Middle Eastern woman have been gang raped by U.S. soldiers. This is the way America fights. It's done it in all its wars.

But this does not have to be the way militaries are trained for war. If you look at the People's Liberation Army in China during its revolution, many units were made up of men and women fighting together and respect for women (Mao's Women Hold Up Half The Sky) was basic to what they were about. And rape was rare and one of the most severely punished crimes in that society. Or you look at the Vietnamese Liberation Army, it was Communist men and women fight together. Whereas the whole U.S. set up in Asia was about the forced prostitution and exploitation of women from Viet Nam to Japan to the Philippines.

If you look at the Shining Path in Peru, (The Maoist forces) Many of the front line women commanders are women. The same thing in Nepal. Men and women fight together.

Virgin Molotov Cocktail, if you want to read more about Communist forces fighting with men and women together check out these articles from the Revolutionary Worker newspaper:

1. RW ONLINE:Nepal: Women Hold Up Half the Sky!
Nepal: Women Hold Up Half the Sky! At the roof of ... of the most oppressed women on the planet are fighting for radical ... http://rwor.org "The women in this village are blind--we do
http://rwor.org/a/v22/1090-99/1094/nepal_women.htm

2. RW ONLINE:Dispatches: Report from the People's War in Nepal
the People's War in Nepal Part 14: Women Warriers By Li Onesto Revolutionary Worker ... was launched in Nepal, led by the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), aimed at sweeping away
http://rwor.org/a/v21/1030-039/1032/nepal14.htm

3. Taking It Higher: Women's Liberation in Nepal --RW/OR ONLINE
Women's Liberation in Nepal Struggle and Transformation in Eight ... I travelled throughout Nepal to cover the People's War ... Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), Rachana was one of
http://rwor.org/a/1231/nepalwomen.htm