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Chiefs issue strategic direction to combat sexual assault

Posted 5/8/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service


5/8/2012 - WASHINGTON (AFPS) -- Despite years of concerted effort, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the commandant of the Coast Guard are dissatisfied with progress made in reducing sexual assault in the military, and have released strategic direction to increase the emphasis on combatting the crime.

The chiefs released a "32-star" letter to commanders and leaders, titled "Strategic Direction to the Joint Force on Sexual Assault Prevention and Response." In the past two years, service members have reported 6,350 cases of sexual assault.

In what is mandatory reading for all commanders and leaders, the letter says the mission is to reduce and ultimately eliminate incidences of sexual assault, and establish an environment of mutual respect and trust, and a work place where the act is not tolerated.

Sexual assault is a crime that erodes the bonds of trust essential for military units to succeed and puts all members of the military team at risk. The chiefs stressed that prevention and response must be emphasized in all aspects of planning, training and mission execution -- requiring actual leadership, not just a "checking-the-box" mentality.

The chiefs have been working diligently for months on the strategic direction, officials said.

"Sexual assaults endanger our own, violate our professional culture and core values, erode readiness and team cohesion and violate the sacred trust and faith of those who serve and whom we serve," the document's introduction says.

"As military professionals we must fully understand the destructive nature of these acts, lead our focused efforts to prevent them, and promote positive command climates and environments that reinforce mutual respect, trust and confidence," the letter reads.

Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Navy Adm. James A. Winnefeld, the vice chairman; Gen. Ray Odierno, Army chief of staff; Adm. Jonathan W. Greenert, chief of naval operations; Gen. Norton A. Schwartz, Air Force chief of staff; Gen. James F. Amos, commandant of the Marine Corps, Air Force Gen. Craig R. McKinley, chief of the National Guard Bureau and Adm. Robert Papp Jr., commandant of the Coast Guard, signed the letter.

Officials said they wrote the guidance to synchronize efforts to combat sexual assault.

"Commanders and leaders must personally read, understand and implement this strategy, the chiefs wrote. "We are fully committed to supporting your efforts to put this strategic direction into action and operationalize [sexual assault prevention and response] within your commands across the joint force."

Evidence clearly shows gaps remain between the precepts of the Defense Department Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Program and full implementation at all levels of command. The strategic direction calls on commanders to close these gaps, "by exercising the full measure of their authorities, options and resources."

The direction looks to "imbue a culture and cultivate a climate and environment that is resilient to the risks and vulnerabilities associated with sexual assault," the document says.

Service members need to understand that sexual assault is a crime under the Uniformed Code of Military Justice. Four distinct offenses -- rape, sexual assault, aggravated sexual contact and abusive sexual contact -- are contained in Article 120. These and two other offenses -- forcible sodomy and attempts to commit these offenses - are sexual assault crimes within DOD's Sexual Assault Prevention and Response program.

Commanders need to work with military lawyers to understand the legal ramifications of these crimes, the chiefs wrote, and need to communicate them to members of their units.

The letter emphasizes that prevention always is better than prosecution. "Commanders must train service members to ensure they understand, for example, that consumption of alcohol can impair the judgment of both parties and the consequences of an alcohol-related sex crime can have a significant and long-lasting impact on the victim, offender, unit cohesion and ultimately the readiness of the joint force," the chiefs wrote.

The chiefs look to instill this call to action at all levels of professional military education, from recruits entering the service to general and flag officers, officials said.

The chiefs set out five lines of effort: prevention, investigation, accountability, advocacy and assessment. The lines of effort will be governed by overarching tenets - leadership, communication, culture, integration and resourcing - that will guide how the lines of effort will be implemented.

Sexual assault in the military is a problem that all service members must face, the chiefs said. The top uniformed leaders have set goals for themselves, too, and spelled out their tasks in the strategic direction.

The chiefs will engage commanders, leaders and service communities worldwide to promote the health and discipline of the force. They will work with the combatant commanders to identify additional requirements that may be needed and examine how to improve sexual assault prevention in forward-deployed locations.

Also, the chiefs will work closely with the Office of the Secretary of Defense to resource the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Program and will establish a quarterly executive council "dedicated to a candid and enduring dialogue designed to assess the effectiveness of operationalizing [Sexual Assault Prevention and Response] into commands across the joint force."

The complete report is available at http://www.jcs.mil



tabComments
9/14/2012 1:52:41 PM ET
Written policies even well written ones do not change deep rooted mentalities. Vidoes on the subject matter only isolate the victims in the audience. Sexual assualt is predicated on selfish gain control and power. The abuser chooses not to acknowledge his or her behavior and the victim lives a lifetime of shame. How can the AF say zero tolerance when you have AF members making vulgar jokes about the briefings/videos on the subject matter? Basically work atmospheres and mentalities will not change until individuals recognize human ethics decency and respect and honor what all of us have raised our right hand to uphold. JA SARC OSI should brief punishments conduct and outline the facts of what a victim and abuser will go through once a claim has been made i.e. medical counseling court interviews victim recount incident nightmares and Leavenworth.
Korrin Wagar, Utah
 
7/1/2012 5:50:56 AM ET
Everything needs to be taken out of the Commanders hands. We should deal with these things the way the civilians do. Have Security ForcesInvestigators that are specialized in Rape and Child Abuse. These are the only cases that they work. Then based on their discretion charges are brought from the SJA. Everything should be removed from the Squadrons hands. Then send them to Leavenworth. And the same thing should go for those false accusers out there. Punishment for false accusations should be in direct correlation of the crime they accused someone of committing.
DL, Kuwait
 
6/29/2012 3:25:45 AM ET
Sorry but 20 CBT's are not going to change... return to the mandatory brief and bring an spokesperson preferably a peer that WITHOUT A DOUBT was indeed raped and justice was served on both sides male female. at the same time bring someone who falsly accused a person and had to pay the consequences for false accusations.at the end of the day men are mostly the predators but women now have a tool that if abused will ruin the purpose and credebility unless they are punished.
renee, USAFE
 
5/9/2012 1:42:00 PM ET
As an instructor we deal with these cases quite often. Unfortunately 9 out of 10 of the cases that I have personal knowledge of have been a reprisal or flat out lie by the female accuser. Until the Military decides to show to everyone that fake accusations will not be tollerated these incidents will continue to rise. It is terrible to say that a group of male co workers will instantly take another males side when sexual assualt is brought up but it is the truth because so many of us have seen accusation turn out to be blatent lies. This is an injustice to the accused and to those who truly have been assualted and deserve justice.
DW, Sheppard AFB
 
5/9/2012 12:28:53 PM ET
The services have to be very careful here. On one side you have females that will use being female to either get ahead or to try and ruin the career of a male service member. When I was an instructor at Keesler, it happened to several male NCO instructors several times. Once a female student starts to struggle in a course and starts to gasp for straws, some are tempted to go the Sgt Smith grabbed my butt or Sgt Smith said I have nice boobs route. And of course Sgt Smith is screwed with the higher ups until Sgt Smith could clear himself.Rape, on the other hand, should not be tolerated and should be severely punished. If it is shown without a doubt that a female was raped, conduct the investiagtion then take care of it the old fashioned Stonewall Jackson or George Washington way. Take the offeneder, line them up against the wall and shoot them. THAT will get far more attention from the service members than letters from the chiefs.
Jay SMSgt ret, DC
 
5/9/2012 9:18:59 AM ET
I feel for the chiefs.....they have to say something....but this is an instance where there's really no way to completely prevent these things from occuring.....everyone knows it is wrong....but criminal minds are not apt to following the rules of a civilized society
JG, SD
 
5/8/2012 8:08:50 PM ET
This letter from the Chief is all well and good Untill the good ole boy club is out of the military Nothing will change... When you have ranking individuals stating they Do Not see a need for SARC...The whole atmosphere has to change Not an option.. until it does and the letters are all good but letters DO NOT change anythingAs long as rapists get away with it It will continue. When an individual comes forward and states they have been raped...this is not something anyone does for attention because all too often the victom is the one that goes through the pure hell of if it goes to court they wre run through the ring Made to feel they have done something wrong when sometimes it is the wrong place at the wrong time... Even on a military base... Everyone believes military installations are safe and tha tcrime doe not happen on it. NOT.... what happens off base happens on base. Bottom lineI do wonder if those same people in position of authority had a member of thi
S. Thomas, NM
 
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