From Military.com:
“53 Women Officially Become
Marines at Formerly All-Male Boot Camp”
(Recruits with Lima Company, 3rd
Recruit Training Battalion, participate in the Bayonet Assault course at Marine
Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, March 24, 2021.)
Dozens of new female Marines
completed the grueling final exercise required of recruits in boot camp this
week, setting them up to become the first women in the service’s history to
graduate from the historically all-male Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego. Fifty-three
women in the first-ever coed company to train at the Marine Corps’ West Coast
training base completed the Crucible Thursday morning. The demanding three-day
event is the culminating exercise at boot camp, and the recruits were presented
with the coveted eagle, globe and anchor pins afterward and called Marines for
the first time. The female platoon, which was part of Lima Company, 3rd Recruit
Training Battalion, won the final drill competition, said Capt. Martin Harris,
a spokesman at the recruit depot. During the competition, drill instructors are
given a list of tasks at random that their recruits must perform on the parade
deck. Each platoon is evaluated individually by drill masters. Winning the
competition, Harris said, requires good teamwork, efficiency and discipline. The
female platoon also had the highest Physical and Combat Fitness Test scores in
their company, Harris said. Recruits take several fitness tests throughout the
13-week boot camp curriculum. The female platoon, he said, “won all the
physical events,” he said. Their scores on the rifle range were also higher
than the average female platoon at the Marines' East Coast recruit training
base in Parris Island, South Carolina, he said. Previously, all female enlisted
Marines have been trained at Parris Island.
Marine officials have said coed
companies perform on par with or better than all-male or all-female training
companies. "If anything, it went a
little better because there's a little bit more competition with [each platoon]
going, 'No, we need to beat them,' or 'We can't let them beat us,'"
now-retired Maj. Gen. William Mullen told Military.com the year the coed
training began. "So there was a little bit of that effect. But other than
that, there was no real difference." Military.com first reported in
December that women would be, for the first time, completing their entry-level
training in San Diego. In February, 59
female recruits arrived on the West Coast to begin boot camp. Some had medical
issues that prevented them from starting or completing the training, Harris
said. No other female platoons are currently training at Marine Corps Recruit
Depot San Diego. The Marine Corps is now assessing the first iteration of coed
training on the West Coast before determining next steps, he said. Drill
instructors at Parris Island are currently training the 15th coed company
there. For the first time last month, men at that training base graduated from
the historically all-female 4th Recruit Training Battalion as part of that
effort. The Marine Corps must meet a mandate signed into law in 2019 to make
boot camp training coed within five years on the East Coast, and within eight
on the West. Marine leaders are also studying whether to close one or both of
its entry-level training sites and train all new enlistees in the same
location.
^ This shows women can do
whatever men can do (and vice versa) if given the chance. ^
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