March 16, 2013
Female Marine general: Women can handle combat
AP Photo
U.S. Marine Corps Brig. Gen. Loretta Reynolds, commanding officer of the Marine Corps Training Depot on Parris Island, S.C.. says she is confident that women in the Corps will do well in combat, if need be.
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AP Photo
Female recruits form up at the Marine Corps Training Depot on Parris Island, S.C.
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Reynolds is one of the two active-duty female general officers in the Marine Corps. There also are two female generals in the Marine Corps Reserve.

Pausing from training recently, recruit Jennifer Martinez of Greenville, Texas, said she followed her father and grandfather into the military, although they both served in the U.S. Air Force. The 18-year-old said she thinks she could serve in a combat zone.

"Boot camp has prepared you for everything," Martinez said. "It's prepared you mentally, physically, emotionally. Especially with the drill instructors. They do a great job of yelling."

Now overseeing a company of female recruits and drill instructors, 1st Sgt. Rena Bruno commanded men during a deployment to Iraq. The petite 110-pound veteran of 13-years in uniform said that, as a logistics manager, she dealt with dangerous convoy duty and learned "to hold my pistol a little closer to my body."

"My Marines were looking at me to guide them and ensure their safety. There was no time to really question that," Bruno said of being a female commander.

Bruno said women have to train for all challenges, including with upper-body workouts so they can pull another Marine out of harm's way, climb up a rope or carry battle armor and weaponry.

"We are focusing more on the whole upper body because we are going to be required to do pull-ups," Bruno said. "So a lot of our PT (physical training) sessions are geared toward that."

And can she do pull-ups?

"Guaranteed, I can get up on a pull bar and knock out eight, very easy for me," she said.

Told of Bruno's comments, Reynolds lauded the varied roles women have played on the battlefield.

"It's not all kicking down doors. It's a lot about ensuring the security of the locals. It's a lot of the counter-insurgency missions," that require information that female Marines can glean from locals that the males cannot, the general said.

And even the 6-foot, fit and trim Reynolds, who played basketball at the U.S. Naval Academy and still goes on early morning runs with her recruits, is preparing for the proposed new standards.

"I'm not ashamed to tell you I can't do a pull-up yet, but I'm working on it," the 48-year-old Reynolds said with a laugh.

Reynolds said she has to wonder at the new opportunities now offered to women in uniform, and while she was barred from much in her early days in uniform, she said she never felt she was being short-changed.

"I don't remember being stuck on, 'No, Reynolds, you can't do that,' " she said. "If I were to look back after the career I've had with regret, shame on me. I've been blessed. I've had command at every rank."

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