A recent military report on sexual assault in the military shocked
many in Washington and around the nation, but a leading expert on
military personnel revealed the prevalence of men assaulting other men
is one of the major headlines in this study.
The extended analysis of the report first appeared in Monday’s edition of the the Washington Times.
The Defense Department survey of sexual assault in the military
during fiscal 2012 estimated 26,000 assaults took place in the armed
forces. Nearly 3,000 of them were formally reported. Just more than 6
percent of women reported being victims of assault and 1.2 percent of
men said the same. Given the much larger number of men in the military,
those numbers suggest 14,000 of the assaults in the Pentagon study
happened to men.
Among the assaults formally reported, 88 percent of reports came from
women and 12 percent from men. The numbers are getting dramatically
worse.
“The number of reports of sexual assaults among military personnel
have actually increased by 129 percent since 2004,” said Center for
Military Readiness President Elaine Donnelly, who pointed out the number
of formal reports of sexual assault jumped from 1,275 to 2,949 in just
eight years. Continue at WND
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