Female Marine Calls Women in Combat an ‘Unnecessary Risk’
A female Marine who advocates against allowing women to be officially allowed to fight in the infantry appeared on Fox & Friends on Monday morning, saying allowing women in combat is an “unnecessary risk.”
Capt. Katie Petronio acknowledged that there “there’s really no front lines anymore” and that women are already fighting in key war scenarios. But, she told Fox News co-host Gretchen Carlson, “The costs definitely out-weigh the benefits. It’s not going to help the individual and it’s not going to help the institution. We’re a war-fighting institution and I don’t think this change is going to help anybody.”
“There’s a misconception outside the Marine Corps that allowing women to take on these roles that it could possibly restrict opportunities for promotion. In the Marine Corps men and women are promoted at the same rate,” she said. “My concern, as I point out in my article, is there’s these gender-specific medical concerns that are going to come with opening these fields I’m not so sure we’ve thought about. And on the backside of that, there’s going to be costs associated with these medical conditions and are we ready to pay the price for that?”
Petronio said that she’s experienced weight loss, muscular atrophy and polycystic ovarian syndrome, the causes of which are not known. “It’s a type of combat environment these days that is very strenuous and I was only doing a portion of what our infantry brothers do. I’m physically fit, I’m definitely in the top of the females for physical fitness, however, I degraded, and I understand that every female’s going to break down at a different rate. But our male counterparts are breaking down also and I just think it’s an unnecessary risk that we could be taking on.”