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Woman becomes US Marine's first female infantry officer

The lieutenant will now be expected to lead a platoon of around 40 Marines

Umberto Bacchi
New York
Tuesday 26 September 2017 15:05 BST
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A picture of the marine was shared by Marine Corps commandant General Robert Neller
A picture of the marine was shared by Marine Corps commandant General Robert Neller

A female US Marine has become the first woman to complete the Corps' notoriously gruelling infantry officer course, seeing off dozens of male candidates who failed the selection training.

The physical and mental tests include hikes carrying loads up to 152 pounds (69 kg), swimming, obstacle courses, land navigation and weapons assembly. Typically a quarter of Marines who take part fail to make the grade.

Under former President Barack Obama, the US military opened all positions to women, including combat roles, for the first time in 2016 in a bid to make the armed forces more inclusive.

The female lieutenant, who wanted to keep her identity private, was one of 88 Marines out of 131 who started the course in July to make it through the 13-week programme - graduating in Quantico, Virginia, on Monday, the military said.

“Proud of this officer & her fellow leaders,” tweeted Marine Corps commandant General Robert Neller alongside a photo of the woman during training.

The Marine Corps says its “gruelling 13-week course trains and educates newly selected infantry and ground intelligence officers in leadership, infantry skills, and character required to serve as infantry platoon commanders”.

The lieutenant's next assignment will be at the 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton in California, it said.

As an officer she is expected to lead a platoon of typically around 40 Marines.

“Marines expect and rightfully deserve competent and capable leaders, and these... graduates met every training requirement,” General Neller said in a statement.

About 15 per cent of more than 1.3 million U.S. active duty troops are women, according to the Department of Defense.

Earlier this year, the Corps was rattled by nude photo sharing scandal involving a private Facebook group and its surreptitious distribution of explicit images of women in the armed forces, often with obscene, misogynist commentary.

Thomson Reuters Foundation

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