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Picture of KR_in_KY
Posted
Hello again!
After a lot of research I think I've finally decided what MOS field I want to go into and thats the 61xx field. Now what I'm curious about is the Lioness Program. Can any female Marine apply (or hand picked I'm not sure of the process) for that no matter their MOS? It sounds like something I'd be interested in, so I'm curious of how to go about doing it!

One more thing, I used the find button for the 61xx field and I found something that said something about volunteering to jump for water rescues? Any info on that would be awesome.

Thanks in advance
Karli
 
Posts: 21 | Registered: Mon 15 December 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
29P
CWO of Marines



Posted Hide Post
KR,

Commands are assigned quotas they have to fill. Frequency depends on many factors.

Quotas are not determined by MOS. Usually just gender and rank.
 
Posts: 1163 | Registered: Thu 05 August 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
Marine
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What is the Lioness Program?
 
Posts: 3402 | Registered: Wed 02 October 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
29P
CWO of Marines



Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by jimnsc:
What is the Lioness Program?


Basically, we take female Marines, provide some training on searches and such, send them out to border checkpoints, MTT's, BTT's, etc... and they search females.
 
Posts: 1163 | Registered: Thu 05 August 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
MODERATOR, MARINE FORUMS

I'm innocent! I'm the John Boy.......


Picture of GyJDIrwin
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by jimnsc:
What is the Lioness Program?


You know I should bust your balls for that right Jim? Razz

quote:
MARINE CORPS AIR GROUND COMBAT CENTER, TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. — When the focus of military operations in Iraq shifted from direct combat actions to stabilization and peacekeeping missions, Marines in combat units manning tactical control points throughout the country began using search and seizure methods to capture insurgents trying to smuggle weapons and other contraband through the checkpoints.

However, since Muslim tradition does not allow a man to touch a woman who is not related to them and knowing American military personnel would not search them unless a female service member was present, insurgents began to use women to smuggle contraband and act as suicide bombers.

To counter this threat, the Marine Corps developed the Lioness Program, which was formed five years ago to provide culturally-sensitive searches on Iraqi women, according to an article written by Regina T. Akers, a Ph.D. historian at the U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington, D.C.

The Lioness Program attaches female Marines to combat units to search Iraqi women and children who may be trying to smuggle money or weapons through security checkpoints in Iraq. The “lionesses” also train Iraqi women how to conduct proper searches on other women.

“Any time you’re talking about cultural differences, or any other situation, if there is a female involved, you want a female to search them,” said Staff Sgt. James Baker, the Combat Center Provost Marshal’s Office operations chief. “If you don’t follow that rule, you could potentially subject a Marine to the potential hardships of sexual harassment or cultural infringement.

“When you’re in a foreign country or hostile environment, there are a lot of considerations you want to take into account, like cultural differences, language barriers and overall situational awareness,” added the Lexington, Ky., native.

Baker said the Lioness Program observed those differences and successfully struck a balance between maintaining good rapport with the Iraqi people and still allowing Marines to safely do their jobs while deployed.

Cpl. Jacqueline Parker, the Marine Wing Support Squadron 374 supply warehouse noncommissioned officer, was a member of the Lioness Program while on her second deployment to Iraq with her squadron last year. During the deployment, Parker was the only female in the squadron to attend the program.

After attending a week-long training program, she was attached to 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, to provide security and search authority for the battalion’s corpsmen while they offered medical treatment to local Iraqis.

“I led a group of female Marines attached to 1/3 in [Camp] Baharia, Iraq,” said the Mobile, Ala., native. “Basically what we did was set up a tent to search Iraqi women and children prior to giving them medical treatment.

“When I first went to the program, I was nervous – you never know what to expect,” Parker said. “Overall, it was an exciting experience for me, though, and I have no regrets whatsoever. It’s good to know you’re doing something to help people, and I like helping out.”

By affording female Marines like Parker the opportunity to serve directly alongside combat units, the Lioness Program inadvertently provided women with more equality on the frontlines.

“Twenty years ago, seeing a female [Marine] at a checkpoint with a bunch of 03s [infantrymen] would’ve been really uncommon,” Baker said. “Now, it’s almost become a norm. It really isn’t a big deal to see women on the frontlines or at these checkpoints.”

With “lionesses” continuing to serve in Iraq, the significance of women Marines serving side-by-side with combat units has been accented by their ability to perform their duties as well as any other Marines manning the checkpoints.

“I don’t think there was a Marine out there who didn’t understand the importance of having females there,” Baker said. “No one I know ever questioned their abilities or their knowledge. We didn’t look at them as females serving at a checkpoint, we just saw another Marine.”


Semper Fi

John


If you're gonna shoot, shoot! Don't Talk.
 
Posts: 11655 | Registered: Tue 25 February 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
Marine
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Actually, I did research it, but, to my knowledge, nothing has been posted about it on these boards I thought it would be nice to get someone with firsthand knowledge to do so. Smile
 
Posts: 3402 | Registered: Wed 02 October 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
MODERATOR, MARINE FORUMS

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One more for our Little Sis. Rest in Peace.

quote:
A 20-year-old corporal who lists her mom as her hero in an online profile was identified by the Defense Department as the fifth female Marine killed in Iraq since 2003.

Cpl. Jennifer M. Parcell, 20, was killed Feb. 7 “while supporting combat operations” in Anbar province, according to a Feb. 8 Defense Department release.

Parcell, of Bel Air, Md., was assigned to the Okinawa, Japan-based Combat Logistics Regiment 3. According to her profile on the networking Web site Myspace.com, Parcell was a landing support specialist.

Parcell had headlined her MySpace profile with “going to be chillin in Iraq for awhile,” and described herself as a 5-foot-2-inch yoga enthusiast who loved to “have fun doing nothing at all.”

Parcell last logged onto the site Jan. 29.

Four other female Marines have been killed in Iraq, according to Defense Department statistics.

Maj. Megan McClung, 34, was killed by a roadside bomb Dec. 6, 2006, while escorting media near Ramadi.

Lance Cpl. Juana NavarroArellano, 24, was killed during combat in Anbar province April 8, 2006.

Cpls. Holly Ann Charette, 21, and Ramona M. Valdez, 20, were killed when their convoy was hit by a car bomb June 23, 2005.



‘Lioness’ killed by bomb

By Beth Zimmerman
Staff writer

A female Marine who died in Iraq’s Anbar province Feb. 7 was killed at a checkpoint while participating in the Corps’ Lioness program, according to a Feb. 23 Marine Corps news release.

Cpl. Jennifer M. Parcell, a landing support specialist with Okinawa, Japan-based Combat Logistics Regiment 3, assumed her billet with the Lioness program Feb. 1, according to a spokesman for III Marine Expeditionary Force on Okinawa. The program uses female Marines from different military occupational specialties to search Iraqi woman at checkpoints.

Parcell, who was a few weeks shy of returning to Okinawa, was killed when an Iraqi woman she was searching detonated an explosive vest, the release said.

Parcell was the fifth female Marine to be killed in Iraq since the war began in 2003.

The last time the Corps lost Marines in the Lioness program was June 23, 2005, when Cpls. Holly Ann Charette, 21, and Ramona M. Valdez, 20, were killed when their convoy was hit by a car bomb.


Semper Fi

John


If you're gonna shoot, shoot! Don't Talk.
 
Posts: 11655 | Registered: Tue 25 February 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
That's Mr. HollywoodMarine to you.
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Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by jimnsc:
Actually, I did research it, but, to my knowledge, nothing has been posted about it on these boards I thought it would be nice to get someone with firsthand knowledge to do so. Smile

Look here:
 
Posts: 6016 | Registered: Thu 03 April 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete Message
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