"[A] Marine infantry unit must be fully capable of regularly moving dismounted for extended distances with heavy loads. This has been the coin of the realm for Marine infantry throughput history, and the requirement for more distributed operations with less reliance on external logistics support reflected in Expeditionary Force 21 now places even greater demands on the individual infantry Marine."
The following links were sent to me by a retired officer with this comment:
Ok, so the USMC has stood firm against the idea of integrating females into ground combat organizations, although I expect that SecNav will force the integration.
“To move forward in expanding opportunities for our female service members without considering the timeless, brutal, physical and absolutely unforgiving nature of close combat is a prescription for failure. Our future enemies will be the ultimate arbiter of such decisions – when lives of our Marines are in the balance. . . Those who choose to turn a blind eye to those immutable realities do so at the expense of our Corps’ warfighting capability and, in turn, the security of the nation.”
U. S. Marine Corps Research Findings: Where is the Case for Co-Ed Ground Combat?
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"You can ignore reality, but you cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality." -Ayn Rand
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