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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 12:44 pm
Full title: In Debate Over Military Sexual Assault, Men Are Overlooked Victimshttp://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/24/us/in ... d=all&_r=0$1: Sexual assault has emerged as one of the defining issues for the military this year. Reports of assaults are up, as are questions about whether commanders have taken the problem seriously. Bills to toughen penalties and prosecution have been introduced in Congress.
But in a debate that has focused largely on women, this fact is often overlooked: the majority of service members who are sexually assaulted each year are men.
In its latest report on sexual assault, the Pentagon estimated that 26,000 service members experienced unwanted sexual contact in 2012, up from 19,000 in 2010. Of those cases, the Pentagon says, 53 percent involved attacks on men, mostly by other men.
“It’s easy for some people to single out women and say: ‘There’s a small percentage of the force having this problem,’ ” said First Lt. Adam Cohen, who said he was raped by a superior officer. “No one wants to admit this problem affects everyone. Both genders, of all ranks. It’s a cultural problem.”
Though women, who represent about 15 percent of the force, are significantly more likely to be sexually assaulted in the military than men, experts say assaults against men have been vastly underreported. For that reason, the majority of formal complaints of military sexual assault have been filed by women, even though the majority of victims are thought to be men.
“Men don’t acknowledge being victims of sexual assault,” said Dr. Carol O’Brien, the chief of post-traumatic stress disorder programs at the Bay Pines Veterans Affairs Health Care System in Florida, which has a residential treatment program for sexually abused veterans. “Men tend to feel a great deal of shame, embarrassment and fear that others will respond negatively.”
But in recent months, intense efforts on Capitol Hill to curb military sexual assault, and the release of a new documentary about male sexual assault victims in the military, “Justice Denied,” have brought new attention to male victims. Advocates say their plight shows that sexual assault has risen not because there are more women in the ranks but because sexual violence is often tolerated.
“I think telling the story about male victims is the key to changing the culture of the military,” said Anuradha K. Bhagwati, executive director of the Service Women’s Action Network, an advocacy group that has sharply criticized the Pentagon’s handling of sexual assault. “I think it places the onus on the institution when people realize it’s also men who are victims.”
The Department of Defense says it is developing plans to encourage more men to report the crime. “A focus of our prevention efforts over the next several months is specifically geared towards male survivors and will include why male survivors report at much lower rates than female survivors, and determining the unique support and assistance male survivors need,” Cynthia O. Smith, a department spokeswoman, said in a statement.
In interviews, nearly a dozen current and former service members who said they were sexually assaulted in the military described fearing that they would be punished, ignored or ridiculed if they reported the attacks. Most said that before 2011, when the ban on openly gay service members was repealed, they believed they would have been discharged if they admitted having sexual contact — even unwanted contact — with other men.
“Back in 1969, you didn’t dare say a word,” said Gregory Helle, an author who says he was raped in his barracks by another soldier in Vietnam. “They wouldn’t have believed me. Homophobia was big back then.”
Thomas F. Drapac says he was raped on three occasions by higher-ranking enlisted sailors in Norfolk in 1966. He said he had been drinking each time and feared that if he told prosecutors they would assume it was consensual sex. Parts of his story are corroborated in Department of Veterans Affairs records.
“If you made a complaint, then you are gay and you’re out and that’s it,” he said.
Mr. Drapac, 66, said that over the coming decades he kept the rapes to himself, combating recurring nightmares and doubts about his sexuality with alcohol and drugs. But he began seeing a Department of Veterans Affairs therapist several years ago, and decided to tell his story recently after seeing accounts of female sexual assault victims.
“The best thing going on right now is that the women’s issue is coming to the fore and you see some mention about male rapes,” he said.
Many sexual assaults on men in the military seem to be a form of violent hazing or bullying, said Roger Canaff, a former New York State prosecutor who helped train prosecutors on the subject of military sexual assault for the Pentagon. “The acts seemed less sexually motivated than humiliation or torture-motivated,” he said.
But such attacks can be deeply traumatizing, causing men to question their sexuality or view themselves as weak. Some said their own families seemed ashamed of them.
“Being a male victim is horrible,” said Theodore James Skovranek II, who said he was sexually hazed in the Army in 2003. Some people told him the attack, in which another soldier shoved his genitals in his face after they had been drinking with friends, was not a big deal. But it made him question his manhood.
“I walked around for a long time thinking: I don’t feel like a man,” said Mr. Skovranek, who left the Army in 2005. “But I don’t feel like a woman either. So there’s just this void.”
Rick Lawson said that while he was in the Army National Guard in Washington in 2003 and 2004, he was repeatedly sexually bullied by a group of soldiers, including a sergeant who rubbed his groin into Mr. Lawson’s buttocks and jumped into his bunk and pretended to cuddle with him. Later, during preparations for deployment to Iraq, one sergeant handcuffed him and put him in a headlock while another pretended to sodomize him, Mr. Lawson said.
Several months after his unit arrived in Iraq in 2004, Mr. Lawson decided to report the bullying. His assailants were punished with reduced rank, Army records show, but he had to finish his deployment while living near them on the same base.
After he returned to Washington, he received a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder and was discharged from the Army in 2006. He struggled with depression and lost a job, then decided to start an advocacy group for veterans.
“A lot of people say this problem exists because we are allowing women into the military or because of the repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell,’ ” he said, referring to the ban on openly gay service members. “But that is absurd. The people who perpetrated these crimes on me identify as heterosexual males.”
Although the vast majority of military sexual assaults are by men, a small number of men have reported being raped by women.
Richard H. Ruffert, 50, said his boss in an Army reserve unit in Texas forced him to have sex with her by threatening to give him poor reviews. He said the sex continued for about two months in the late 1990s, until he attempted suicide. He then told a commander and, after a lengthy investigation, his boss was transferred. But he believes that she was never punished.
He retired from the military in 2004 and spent several years struggling with nightmares, drug addiction and homelessness, which he blames on the sexual assault. Therapy and working with veterans have helped him, he said.
But he does not feel comfortable dating women anymore. “This has completely changed my life,” said Mr. Ruffert, who appears in the film “Justice Denied.”
Many experts believe that the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” will cause many more men to report sexual assault. That was the case with Lieutenant Cohen, who says he was raped in 2007 by an Army officer he had met in graduate school. At the time, Lieutenant Cohen was preparing to join the Air Force.
After initially remaining silent about the episode, he filed a complaint with Air Force investigators in late 2011, after the ban was rescinded. But the investigation took a surprising turn: after Lieutenant Cohen returned from a five-month tour in Afghanistan, he learned that he had become the subject of the investigation and was no longer viewed as a victim.
The lieutenant, 29, now faces a court-martial trial on multiple charges, including conduct unbecoming an officer. Lieutenant Cohen’s special victims counsel, Maj. John Bellflower, said the Air Force investigators apparently used information provided voluntarily by the lieutenant in bringing the charges against him, a possible violation of his rights.
The military recently told Lieutenant Cohen that it was reopening the sexual assault case. In the meantime, he faces a trial in July that he views as punishment for filing a criminal complaint against a superior officer. The Air Force denies that.
“I think the attention to this issue is absolutely needed,” Lieutenant Cohen said. “But it’s a little bit late. We still have attacks, and we still have retaliation.”
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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 12:45 pm
tl;dr version of this is that homosexuals are the majority of rapists and sex offenders in the US military. 
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Posts: 35270
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 12:53 pm
The problem isn't homosexuality, the problem is an environment where you have a lot of young men and very few women. One of the few places you could compare it to would be prison.
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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 12:55 pm
raydan raydan: The problem isn't homosexuality, the problem is an environment where you have a lot of young men and very few women. One of the few places you could compare it to would be prison. That's akin to saying that alocoholics don't factor into statistics on alcoholism.
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Posts: 35270
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:04 pm
Look up "Situational sexual behavior" Bart.
Situational sexual behavior is sexual behavior of a kind that is different from that which the person normally exhibits, due to a social environment that in some way permits, encourages, or compels those acts. This can also include situations where a person's usual sexual behavior may not be possible, so rather than not engaging in sexual activity at all they may engage in different sexual behaviors.
One example of situational sexual behavior includes when people might not have sex with prostitutes in their home countries, but may do so when they visit other countries, where such activities are legal or ignored by authorities. Another example is when individuals or members of a community might engage in homosexual behaviors but identify as heterosexual otherwise, such as some people in prison, the military, single sex boarding schools, or other sex-segregated communities.
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:09 pm
BartSimpson BartSimpson: tl;dr version of this is that homosexuals are the majority of rapists and sex offenders in the US military.  So the majority of rapists in prison are homosexual too despite going straight to women when they are freed?
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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:29 pm
jeff744 jeff744: So the majority of rapists in prison are homosexual too despite going straight to women when they are freed? The rapists yes, the victims, no. http://tva.sagepub.com/content/3/3/226.abstractThat's a lot of reading to do but the net of it is that the inmates who dominate others of the same sex entered prison exhibiting indicators of same-sex orientation. That they were heterosexual outside of prison was determined with most of these individuals simply to indicate that they were aligning their observed behaviors with the prevailing views of their social group, not that they were heterosexual. That's nothing new under the sun.  There have been several civil rights lawsuits by inmates demanding that homosexual prisoners be segregated from the general population to protect the general population from sexual assault. In every one of these cases to date not one court has issued such an order. Instead they issue protective orders for the victims - which means the victims of sexual violence in prison are placed in segregated housing (also known as solitary confinement) and are then punished for having reported their assaults. It's also been presented in several court cases, some of which have prevailed, that prison authorities tacitly permit same sex sexual assaults as some sort of sadistic punishment for inmates. I agree with the civil rights advocates who assert that prisons should be segregated by sexual orientation for the safety of all involved. Likewise, the military needs to change its approach to dealing with victims of sexual violence and it should be protecting them instead of punishing them for reporting violence that's typically visited upon them by higher ranking individuals.
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Brenda
CKA Uber
Posts: 50938
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:43 pm
And people are still bitching that women in the military are the problem and that it should be an 'all male' thing.
Maybe men should just grow up and keep their dick in their own pants.
UGH.
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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:47 pm
Brenda Brenda: And people are still bitching that women in the military are the problem and that it should be an 'all male' thing.
Maybe men should just grow up and keep their dick in their own pants.
UGH. Maybe we should just have the men leave the military to the women. 
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Posts: 35270
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:48 pm
Brenda Brenda: And people are still bitching that women in the military are the problem and that it should be an 'all male' thing.
Maybe men should just grow up and keep their dick in their own pants.
UGH. The military will start being "normal" (note the quotation marks) when the demographics of that institution starts to look like what we find in the general population. Of course, the brass will have adoption of no-nonsense way of dealing with assaults... one strike and you're out... by that time.
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Posts: 53184
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:55 pm
raydan raydan: Brenda Brenda: And people are still bitching that women in the military are the problem and that it should be an 'all male' thing.
Maybe men should just grow up and keep their dick in their own pants.
UGH. The military will start being "normal" (note the quotation marks) when the demographics of that institution starts to look like what we find in the general population. That assumes though that the general population all have the same motivation to join the military. But they don't, and never will.
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 1:59 pm
It's bad when even the military can no longer expect some of these assholes to have any self-discipline. 
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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 2:00 pm
DrCaleb DrCaleb: That assumes though that the general population all have the same motivation to join the military. But they don't, and never will. Exactly. The only way we'll see a demographically representative military is if we implement mandatory military service like Israel has.
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Posts: 35270
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 2:04 pm
One last thing Bart... if you won't even entertain the idea that a lot of the men-on-men assaults are not done by homosexuals, there's no use in trying to argue with you. 
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Posts: 65472
Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2013 2:05 pm
Thanos Thanos: It's bad when even the military can no longer expect some of these assholes to have any self-discipline.  Violence in the military has always been a problem. But it's been a growing problem since the upper ranks decided to put an end to the blanket parties that usually managed the worst of the problems. The Navy guys usually did better at handling miscreants because if a thug beat up or assaulted someone then you could count on the victims buddies to find the offender and throw him overboard after a thorough beating.
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