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Ashley's War Summary

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My oral history project is based off of the book "Ashley's War" by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon. This book brought to my attention that women in the military, though underappreciated, have played a colossal role in the removal of the ban on women in combat positions.
In 2010, Major Patrick McCarthy convinced the U.S. Army Special Operations Command to create Cultural Support Teams—also known as CSTs—a program to put women on the battlefield alongside Army Rangers, Green Berets, Navy SEALs, and other Special Operations teams on missions in Afghanistan (though officially banned from combat at the time) and for the first time women throughout the Army, the National Guard, and the Reserves heard the call to join male soldiers on Special Operation missions. …show more content…

They boarded the helicopter in the night’s starry blackness every evening like any other member of the team. And on the objective, they would take fire, find people and things and gather information aimed at accomplishing the night’s mission. From training in 2010 to the lifted ban on women in 2013, this first CST unit served, completing one year of missions, but it had quite clearly changed the women’s lives forever. It had ushered them into a special operations community in which they would serve on a mission they felt mattered, alongside the best of the best, at the heart of America’s effort in Afghanistan, helping to lift the ban on women in combat. Then it had sent them back to their regular Army roles once their time was up, outraging the CST. As quoted from the both, Kate Raimann states: "Sir, with all due respect, you don't understand," Kate had dared to blurt out. Given the ban on women in direct action roles, "This is it for us. There is no place else for us to go. We have done nothing better and will do nothing better. And now we are being sent back to our units. Nothing else will compare to

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