Kirby Dick’ gut-wrenching documentary The Invisible War explores the preponderance of rape in the
U.S. military.
The film uses interviews of victims of sexual assault with
cases going back to the 1960s and up to the present. While each story has its
particular differences, all reflect the double horror of not only being raped
but seeing their perpetrators walk away.
In addition, many are injured in the assaults and can’t get
proper medical care for the long-term effects of those injuries, physical and
psychological.
The film reveals the unjust military system that provides no
accountability to rapists. There is no court these victims can appeal to.
Instead, each unit is under the authority of a unit commander, who serves as
judge and jury in such cases. At times, this person is the perpetrator, and the
victim is left with no recourse but to resign, often with a dishonorable
discharge.
Those interviewed for the film joined the armed services (whether
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines or Coast Guard) out of a strong patriotism. Many
had other family members who had military careers.
The statistics, which, the film notes, all come from the
Department of Defense, are alarming:
• more than 20 percent of women in the U.S. military have
been sexually assaulted;
• in 1991, over 200,000 had reported sexual assault;
• 80 percent of assaults are not reported;
• 15 percent of recruits have committed rape before entering
the military;
• 40 percent of homeless female veterans have been raped;
• women who have been raped have a higher PTSD (post-traumatic
stress disorder) rate than men who have been in combat;
• 1 percent of men (20,000 per year) in the military are
sexually assaulted (and not by homosexuals);
• the average sex offender has 300 victims.
The film also interviews military counselors in the film who point
out that when there is no accountability for sexual assaults, that is an
invitation for sex offenders to do as they wish.
Congress has tried to address this travesty, and each time,
spokespeople for the military insist they have a no-tolerance policy. Yet it
continues without abate. And since the military is outside the civil court
system, victims have no recourse. The courts have ruled that rape is an
occupational hazard of the military.
The military does acknowledge some cases. In 2010, it
cataloged 3,158 cases of sexual assault, but only a sixth of these came to
court-martial, and only 175 men, one in 20 of those charged, did any jail time.
Major General Mary Kay Kellogg, director of the Sexual Assault
Prevention and Response Office, tells the camera that assault victims should
petition the Defense Department’s Attorney General. But of the 2,994 cases
forwarded to the AG, not one was investigated.
We learn that one woman’s assailant “is still in the Air
Force and was awarded Airman of the Year during her rape investigation.”
Another assailant “became a supervisor at a major U.S. corporation and sexually
assaulted a female employee. He was never charged and lives in Queens, N.Y.”
Last April 14, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta watched the
film. Two days later he took the decision to prosecute away from commanders.
It’s something, but it’s not nearly enough.
Today, The Invisible War received an Academy Award nomination for best documentary. I hope this means more people will see it and that action is taken to address such injustice.
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