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Wars - NWO - Sexual assault.

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posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 10:39 AM
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Jessica is joining a civil lawsuit bringing claims against former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, charging that under their watch the military failed to adequately and effectively investigate rapes and sexual assaults within the ranks.



As the war in Afghanistan passes its ten-year mark, sexual assault runs rampant within the ranks, with an estimated one in three female service members raped during their service, according to at least one peer-reviewed study. This is in a military where women comprise more 11 per cent of active duty service members deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan and more than 15 per cent of the total military, with at least 200,000 active duty women currently serving. This epidemic also affects men: 60 per cent of women serving in the National Guard and Reserve, along with 27 per cent of men, are estimated to have experienced Military Sexual Trauma (MST). Perpetrators rely on a chain of command that appears to offer virtual impunity for sexual assaults committed against lower-ranking service members



Military reports and Congress-appointed task forces acknowledge that sexual assault within the military is widespread. While the Department of Defense (DoD) has repeatedly said it is attempting to curb the problem, the most recent evidence shows that it has failed to adequately address the spread of this outbreak.



While this step has increased the number of reports and created avenues for survivors to seek personal care, it does not launch an investigation into the assault. "Restricted reporting allows the military to ignore criminal aspects of sexual assault and to just take care of it," says Greg Jacob, a former Marine and the current policy director for the Service Women's Action Network (SWAN), an organisation dedicated to advocacy and providing a healing community for military service women.



Military officials claim that improvements have been made since the Defense Task Force's 2009 report. "DoD has a zero tolerance policy on sexual assault," says Cynthia Smith, SAPRO press spokesperson. "Over the past two years, DoD has affirmed its commitment to preventing and effectively responding to sexual assault. The department's focus has been on reducing the stigma associated with reporting, providing sufficient training for commanders, and ensuring adequate training and resources for prosecutors and investigators."



Yet, the prosecution rates of sexual assault in the military remains at eight per cent, a dismal percentage in light of the staggering number of assaults that are believed to go unreported. This compares to a 40 per cent prosecution rate for sexual assault charges in civilian courts, which itself is considered low. For cases that do make it to trial, sexual assault conviction rates are astoundingly low. According to SAPRO's most recent annual report, in 2010, of 3,158 reports of military sexual assaults, only 529 alleged perpetrators were convicted, while 41 per cent were acquitted or had charges dismissed. Some six per cent were discharged or resigned in lieu of courts-martial, which means that they were allowed to leave their jobs in order to avoid sexual assault charges.



Some survivors of sexual assault claim that SAPRO's "zero tolerance" policy has only succeeded in creating an environment where the command has incentive to deny and cover up sexual assault. "They have all of these generic catch phrases that sound great," says Jessica. "But in reality, 'zero tolerance policy' means that when you make a complaint, it is hidden. Assault reflects badly on the command. What results is cover ups."



A sexual assault prevention poster released by SAPRO reportedly urges soldiers to "wait until she's sober" before propositioning a woman for sex. "The military believes falsely that if you eliminate alcohol you can eliminate sexual assault," says Jacob. "There is perception that it is the result of bad decision making on the part of the victim."



Selena Coppa, a former Army Sergeant of eight years and a current member of IVAW tells of an Army Specialist who was molested by another Army Specialist while drunk and passed out. "The woman who was assaulted found out the next morning what had happened. She wanted to do something or say something. Everyone was like, what are you talking about? That is not sexual assault, only sex counts as sexual assault."



For those who do seek redress for sexual assault and rape through the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), the legal code governing military service members, many face an uphill battle in which they are pressured to drop their charges at every step along the way.



When Jessica was raped by a senior officer and his friend, she reported the assault to her command. However, she says that the ensuing investigation was nothing more than a retaliatory measure inflicted by a command that was more interested in covering up assaults and protecting their own reputations. "My command, and the [military lawyer] ordered to do it, produced not a thorough, but a voluminous - as cover ups often are - investigation that proved that I was routinely called disgusting denunciatory names by junior and senior Marines alike, but that because I wore make up and running shorts in the summer, that I therefore welcomed the harassment and subsequent assault and did not deserve protection," she says.



These military sexual assaults are in addition to the countless rapes and sexual assaults that have been carried out against civilians at the 800 US military bases around the world, including within occupied populations in Iraq and Afghanistan. While there have been several high-profile scandals exposing US military rapes and slayings of Iraqi and Afghan civilians, as well as sexual assault and humiliation as a tool of torture, there is little information about overall rates of military sexual assault of civilian populations overseas. If sexual assault rates within the military are any indicator, sexual violence would seem to be endemic to the US' global military presence.



Last April, Jennifer (a pseudonym for protection), who is a civilian, reported sexual assault by her then-boyfriend after he returned from a tour in Afghanistan with the Marine Corps. Her alleged assaulter's sergeant major told her that she sounded like a "crazy ex-girlfriend" and that her sexual assault charges were not viable. Jennifer spent the next year and a half contacting everyone she could think of in hope that the military would take her charges seriously. She watched as her assault charges were ignored and dismissed by SAPRO, the NCIS, and even the Pentagon. After navigating countless meetings and phone calls with caseworkers, sexual assault survivor advocates, and even several congressional representatives, Jennifer feels that she has made little progress in her effort to get a fair process through military channels, and, to date, there is no indication that her charges will bear any consequences for her alleged assaulter. Within two months of her report, her alleged assaulter was promoted, and she says that he may be deployed any day, if he is not already.


Military sexual assault and rape 'epidemic'



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 10:40 AM
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in the invaded country , men and women are being :

1.Killed
2.Raped
3.Injured or hurt emotionally
4.Destructed and destroyed infrastructures
5.Feeling insecurity and chaos
6.Paying by their resources (oil or mines) to get their security and infrastructures back.

in the invader side , men and women are being :

1.Killed
2.Raped
3.Injured or hurt emotionally
4.Destructed and destroyed infrastructures
5.Feeling insecurity and chaos
6.Paying taxes to support the invasion

but ,
It is the conqueror side which starts the war and causes those problems for both sides.

 


Who takes the beneficiaries ?



TPTB , the bankers , multinational corporations are the ones who use the opportunities to get all the resources and money they could.

Stop invasion.



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 10:48 AM
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I read here forwarding email which I received just today. Jessica is indeed being truthful about these things.
But we are talking about the Military and they are basically accountable to no one.

The conqueror always initiates the war, but does not always WIN the war.

it may very well be, the next war will be lost and lost big time.

We need to get out of the world and back to our borders.

There is nothing good right and just in the waging of a war even if it is done for a noble purpose.
DH



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 10:55 AM
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reply to post by DavidsHope
 





The conqueror always initiates the war, but does not always WIN the war.


I would cite Germany as a good example of that, but what part of Germany lost that war? The Nazis won, they're still in charge of many things, the German people lost that war.
Usually the initiators and conquerors do win, if necessary, behind the scenes.

I don't celebrate the 4th of July, I live in "New England". A behind the scenes victory for England, to the public, we won our independence. Must be why I still have to pay property taxes when I own my home outright. Yay freedom!



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 11:10 AM
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reply to post by DavidsHope
 


Thank you for replying.



But we are talking about the Military and they are basically accountable to no one.


This is how it should not be.Who are the people in military except our brothers and sisters ? Who has made the rules for them , except our brothers and sisters ?

There should be rules and strict measures to abide them.



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 11:56 AM
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reply to post by JibbyJedi
 




The Nazis won, they're still in charge of many things, the German people lost that war.


Could you give me more details ?

Meet the Real Adolf Hitler!!

Rothschild family

Ashkenazi Jews



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 12:25 PM
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Originally posted by hmdphantom
reply to post by JibbyJedi
 




The Nazis won, they're still in charge of many things, the German people lost that war.


Could you give me more details ?

Meet the Real Adolf Hitler!!

Rothschild family

Ashkenazi Jews


Werner Von Braun

By 1937, he was the head of the Peenemeunde Rocket Center and leader of the Nazi rocket program that eventually developed the V-1 “buzz bomb” and the deadly V-2, the world’s first ballistic missile.


US recruited ex nazis

American counterintelligence recruited former Gestapo officers, SS veterans and Nazi collaborators to an even greater extent than had been previously disclosed and helped many of them avoid prosecution or looked the other way when they escaped, according to thousands of newly declassified documents.

edit on 24-10-2011 by JibbyJedi because: (no reason given)



posted on Oct, 24 2011 @ 07:34 PM
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Originally posted by hmdphantom
reply to post by DavidsHope
 


Thank you for replying.



But we are talking about the Military and they are basically accountable to no one.


This is how it should not be.Who are the people in military except our brothers and sisters ? Who has made the rules for them , except our brothers and sisters ?

There should be rules and strict measures to abide them.



I do so agree; I recall my father telling me of Korea, that TPTB in the military told their underlings as little as possible. Were given only the information they needed to get the job done. The why of something was never asked by anyone under anyone else. No one needed a reason, only and order. they could not question. Only obey the orders.
Don't know if it is the same now, but if it is, we may be in for a real ride.
Our brothers in the military are going by some very unfair rules. How can they test a thing if they are ordered not knowing the purpose?
this is a good thread and it needs to move forward quickly.
DH
DH



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