Women's Rights

Lioness Documentary Honors Women in Combat

Published September 22, 2009 @ 11:34AM PT

Lioness is a fascinating new documentary by Meg McLagan and Daria Sommers and it gives us an inside look at the first women to engage in ground combat in U.S. history.

In 2003, the Army created the Lioness program, which sends female support soldiers out on missions with all-male combat units in Iraq and Afghanistan. Spc. Shannon Morgan, Spc. Rebecca Nava, Cpt. Anastasia Breslow, Sgt. Ranie Ruthig and Mjr. Kate Guttormsen, all of the First Engineer Battalion, were some of the first members of Team Lioness.

We first meet the soldiers after they returned home from Iraq and were still trying to adjust to life after war. Nearly all of the women appeared to be suffering symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Spc. Morgan had severe depression and anxiety. Spc. Nava experienced flashbacks. Sgt. Ruthig admitted she had violent mood swings and that her relationship with her young daughter had suffered as a result. Both Cpt. Breslow and Mjr. Guttormsen seemed incredibly sad and wounded by their experiences in Iraq.

It's easy to understand why. Each of the soldiers went to Iraq expecting to serve in primarily support positions. Spc. Morgan and Sgt. Ruthig were mechanics. Spc. Nava was a supply clerk. Cpt. Breslow worked in signal (communications). Mjr. Guttormsen was a company commander, the only woman to hold that position in her battalion. But when they got to Iraq in 2003, they were asked to join the newly-created Lioness program,

Initially, the Lioness missions were relatively simple. Spc. Nava describes her work on the missions as helping "calm the women and children. We gave the kids candy, toys and school supplies. So in the beginning, the Army didn't look so bad to them."

As the war intensified, so did the missions. They began going with their male colleagues on house-to-house raids in the middle of the night, searching for weapons or suspected insurgents. They guarded the interpreter and searched the women and children for contraband. "It was strange invading these homes late night. It was hard to imagine these families plotting against us," Cpt. Breslow wrote in her journal. Sgt. Ruthig concurred saying, "I felt like the Gestapo".

In early 2004, the Lioness teams partnered with the Marines in Ramadi. They went out with the Marines to search homes. They separated the women and children from the men and sometimes had to forcibly search the women. As the insurgency gained strength in Ramadi, violence ensued. The Marines and the Lioness women faced intense firefight, which the female soldiers didn't have the proper training or support for. Spc. Morgan, temporarily working with a firing team, was left behind in the middle of an ambush and had to figure out how and where to take cover. During another firefight, Cpt. Breslow realized she didn't know how to fire the missile on the humvee if she had to. "I felt we needed to know more," she said.

Because women are technically banned from engaged in combat, the Lioness women didn't have even the basic combat training so it was even more dangerous for them than it was for men. It didn't matter. As Spc. Morgan said, "We didn't stop. We covered over five or seven miles of nothing but insurgents (a day). They were throwing grenades at us and rockets, mortars."

No matter what, these soldiers kept going. When they came home, their heroics went largely unnoticed because they were women. "America needs to know that their daughters are doing the exact same thing that the males are doing now," said Spc. Morgan.

Lioness is a powerful reminder that women's roles in the military are rapidly changing. Female soldiers do see combat in Iraq and Afghanistan on a regular basis. As a result, women returning from war do suffer from PTSD and related conditions. Most importantly, regardless of how you feel about their mission overseas, these women have endured and sacrificed more than most of us can imagine. Female soldiers and veterans deserve our respect and support just as much as their male counterparts.

Lioness is currently available for purchase at the film's website, which also has a plethora of information about women in combat and women veterans. The film will be available on DVD via Amazon and other retailers on October 27.


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Comments (6)

  1. Oceania OZ

    Sounds like these women have been betrayed in terms of what was going to be expected of them.  It's all too common a story, let me direct you to End Human Trafficking.

    Posted by Oceania OZ on 09/22/2009 @ 03:33PM PT

  2. Thomas McHugh

    Seems to me that all of these causes are at least somewhat interconnected by foolish attitudes and beliefs on the part of the oppressors...

    Posted by Thomas McHugh on 09/23/2009 @ 07:08PM PT

  3. Reply to thread
  4. Thomas McHugh

    I sympathise with these women...

    How the military can possibly expect for our lady soldiers to be able to fight effectivly without even basic combat training just illustrates all too clearly the oxy moronic belief by the military that they can have their cake and eat it too.

    Women soldiers need just as much if not more combat training than their male counterparts.

    Posted by Thomas McHugh on 09/23/2009 @ 07:06PM PT

  5. Kate MacQueen

    I am so angry at this article.  I am a female Soldier.  Either the writer was trying to portray us as weak, or the Soldiers giving the comments were.  EVERY Soldier, regardless of gender, receives full combat training.  It's called Basic Combat Training, it's 9 weeks long, and everyone has to do it.  We also have to qualify with our weapons every 6 months, just like the boys.  Before a deployment, EVERY Soldier, regardless of gender, has to participate in individual readiness training, which is stuff like how to be on a fireteam, how to breach doorways and clear rooms, how to navigate a minefield, now to harden a vehicle, and how to operate the weapons systems on vehicles. EVERY Soldier deployed to a combat zone, regardless of gender, expects to be in a firefight.  There is no "back in the rear" in this conflict; I was in a medical unit and got rockets and RPGs fired at me every day in the clinic.  I didn't even have to go out in a fireteam.  Had I done so, however, I would have received a full briefing before hand, as well as the maneuvers covered in basic training.  I was NEVER without the survival tools necessary to come home safe and sound, or to do my job.  These women, who whine about their lack of training or hero's honors, cheapen MY experience and MY fight.  I worked just as hard as the boys, fought just as hard, and excelled in my warrior training just as hard.  I also came back with just as much PTSD as the boys.  EVERY Soldier, regardless of gender, experiences some symptoms of PTSD- the ones that don't are ones I don't want to deploy with, ever.  These 5 women are not unique in their suffering.  The women in Operation Lioness apparently need a special title and attention to fulfill their mission, rather than relying on the training the Army provided and the NCO support channel and officer chain of command.  Were I invited to participate, I would not.  Maybe one day we'll have TRUE equality, not reverse gender bias, and articles about the heroism of women will be unnecessary.  Then, perhaps, I will be able to feel like my fellow women have truly received their due honors.  I am not MORE honorable because I am a woman Soldier, I am more honorable because I am a Soldier.  Also for the record, women are NOT banned from engaging in combat.  The Geneva Convention prohibits us from holding positions in combat arms units (infantry, artillery, armor, engineering), but our positions in combat support units are just as critical- field medics, ammunition, military police, civil affairs, and translation- and all of them, especially in this conflict, mean possible enemy contact.  Killing just can't be our primary mission, like it is for the boys, and there are good reasons.

    Posted by Kate MacQueen on 10/21/2009 @ 08:03AM PT

  6. Danine Spencer

    Kate,

    First, thank you for your service.

    Second, I did not mean to offend you or any other service member, male or female, with this review of Lioness.

    Please keep in mind that these were some of the very first women to see combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. They were among the first to see ground combat in our nation's history. This was late 2003, early 2004. These soldiers said in the film that they were not given enough training for combat because the military didn't expect them to see combat.  For example, when Cpt. Breslow was in the firefight I cited, she looked on the truck and realized she didn't know how to fire the missile, the biggest weapon her unit had. She hadn't been trained in that.

    Military experts in the film said they hadn't been trained well enough for combat.  I think they used the lessons of the first Lioness teams to make sure all soldiers are better prepared. At the end of the film, Mjr. Guttormsen was training female soldiers for combat in Iraq. It sounds like they have expanded combat training for both men and women.

    Ultimately, the purpose of this film is to educate Americans that women do see combat in the Iraq and Afghan wars and do suffer from PTSD.  This was a hard film to review, as the movie is sad, quite frankly. I didn't mean to portray them as victims. They did their best under very hard circumstances. They weren't prepared to see combat, but did it anyways.

    I am very, very sorry that I offended you. My intention was not to portray female soldiers as weak but to show they persevered under difficult circumstances.

    The film comes out on DVD next week. You can rent it from Netflix starting Oct. 27. I hope you watch it and make your own conclusions.

    Best,

    Danine Spencer

    Posted by Danine Spencer on 10/21/2009 @ 09:09AM PT

  7. Kate MacQueen

    I will be renting it, because I do like to see things for myself.  I'm sorry I came off as choleric, but being a female Soldier means you always have to prove something.

    And, for the record, I deployed January 2004.  So I was there the same time.  Perhaps the 25th ID was just better than everyone else.  :)  We DO strike like Tropic Lightning...

    Posted by Kate MacQueen on 10/24/2009 @ 07:44PM PT

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Author
Danine Spencer

Danine Spencer is a freelance writer, with an emphasis on politics and women's rights. She has a B.S. in Computer Information Science from Minnesota State University, Mankato, and was an IT guru in a former life.

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