Posted on Mar 20, 2016
CPT Multifunctional Logistician
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The bottom line is that a very small percentage of victims trust their chain-of-command enough to report a SHARP violation. Furthermore, when victims actually do report an incident, they are further victimized by the reprisal they experience by their chain-of-command, as 62% of victims report receiving reprisal from their chain-of-command after they file a report. Why are we failing our Soldiers?
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SSgt Carpenter
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As a male soldier who has spent the majority of my time in a combat engineer company, take my thoughts with a grain of salt if you must, but here they are...

SHARP training as it stands is a joke. If the Army wants to change the culture, I believe that we must focus, on right/wrong, the Army values, etc., not an hour or two hour long lecture on what constitutes sexual harassment, and what is sexual assault. Forget the niceties about "Quid pro quo," and focus on the fact that such behavior is incompatible with who we are as soldiers! There are forms of sexual harassment that a soldier could commit innocently, through carelessness, or ignorance, but most violations DO NOT occur because a soldier doesn't know. It's because they don't care, or believe that they are above the rules. Or because they're drunk.

We've had a lot of talk on RP about Army leaders who are looking out for number one, toxic leaders, etc. I believe that the majority of the 62% falls into that category. Leaders don't want bad news on their watch, and some will do what they need to to cover it up, or try to make it go away.

The one company I was in that had females, had such a bad environment that I wouldn't have blamed anyone who didn't trust leadership enough to report a SHARP incident. In fact I said so on the command climate survey. The fact is, every bit of news traveled in that company. Good leaders squash gossip.

My takeaway: Revamp SHARP training, with a much sharper focus on the ethics, and promote leaders who lead, promote an environment of trust (kill gossip) and many of the problems will solve themselves with time. Focusing on SHARP, EO and other IMPORTANT issues, instead of focusing on the environment that CAUSES those issues kills morale, and causes the cycle of low quality leaders and poor environments to continue.

Sometime I should put my thoughts together, and try to find some research to back this up, but for now that's my thoughts.
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
8 y
Your "Thoughts" sound pretty Logical to me.
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LTC Thomas Tennant
LTC Thomas Tennant
8 y
Not bad young Jedi. But the key is LEADERSHIP. The leaders in you chain of command have to give a sh*&. They have to foster an environment where every Soldier, regardless of rank or sex, is respected, is valued and habitually validated. I'm old school and believe in "LBE" leadership where the leader and the lead is based on an open and honest relationship....where the each can grab the LBE straps and have an eyeball to eyeball discussion. Some of my best conversations were when a troop told me I was about to trip on my ....... boot laces. Keep in mind my reaction went from WTF to ops you're right.
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CPL S McGooter
CPL S McGooter
8 y
This writer is an optimist. I was an early co-ed unit, in 75-77, 2 years. I was an E4. from my perspective, in my rank, the ladies were the best thing that ever happened for my sex life. Now, as a 60 year old geezer taxpayer, here is the opposite perspective: That battalion was the most un-ready to go to war unit, ever. Roughly 1/2 of the male, married, officers, including our light colonel, were diddling with the WACs. I walked in on my own O3 captain, with a E1 WAC on his desk, legs spread. On my ETS (exiting the service) medical exam, on the same base, the lady doctor tried to screw me in the exam room. Granted I was not the hair-losing fat slob I'm now, and dare I say, fit and attractive. This was all stateside, for what its worth. Reality check, do all the phony talking you want. Biology is biology. If Trump is elected, he needs to reverse all the co-ed stuff to pre-1970 status. Who knows, he may just have the kahonies (pun intended) to do it.
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SSgt Carpenter
SSgt (Join to see)
8 y
CPL S McGooter - I deployed with an integrated unit. I know what you're talking about. However, just because individuals are going to satisfy their "needs" doesn't mean that female troops need to be subjected to harassment or assault.
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Capt Mark Strobl
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Problem #1: Too often the accused and the victim are in the same chain of command. Then, what to do with the accused after the case hits the CoCO's desk? Include the 1stSgt, platoon commanders, the platoon sgts... etc. Everyone circles the wagons to protect their respective service member. Now let's introduce the "EEO Officer" (or, whatever the tittle may be). That person probably had a BBQ last weekend with one of the accused/victim chain of command as well. Oh yes, this EEO billet is probably collaterally assigned to someone who works in the -1 or -3 shop. In the civilian world, such cases would simply be turned over to law enforcement --an effective (and very detached) third party. Due to structure & mission, the military simply is not well equipped to deal with sexual harassment.

Problem #2: "Sensitivity Training" Everybody calls it something different. But, we used to call it a waste of our day. Twice a year, we filled a classroom, dimmed the lights, and took a nap as "Death by Powerpoint" took center stage. The presentation always reflected obtuse scenarios. Those that listened didn't need to hear it. Those that needed it said to stared at their watches. The command dutifully checked the requisite box... and we were released.

Why don't victims trust their chain of command? Unfortunately, they've been trained NOT to.

Sorry, CPT (Join to see), I'm only addressing the symptoms. Real solutions happen when we address the cause.
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MSG Senior Enlisted Advisor
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I don't think the Amy is failing. I moved from a line unit 1SG and with little experience leading or interacting with female soldiers I was given a BDE HHC. After fourteen months at the helm my commander and I had zero SHARP, IG, or EO complaints with 231 officers, warrants, and enlisted assigned. I attribute our success to having and building leaders that care and invest time and effort into their people. Making time for an effective NCO/Soldier development program that is dynamic and addresses weaknesses in the skill set of the unit is key to foster teamwork and responsibility to the unit. Blanket assessments of perceived issues are not a solution. It takes individual effort to make group success or improvement. As with everything in life to achieve success it takes effort and mandatory power point isn't cutting it.
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MAJ FAO - Europe
MAJ (Join to see)
8 y
Good work, 1SG. Mouth the Army as an institution hasn't figured this out yet. Just look at the numbers of sexual assaults and the issues with reprisals. This is one of many issues that need to be taken away from the chain of command.
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SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
SGT (Join to see)
8 y
1SG, I worry a great deal about your comment. Not having any official complaints is distinct from preventing problems or solving existing subsurface issues. I truly believe you are doing your task, but your statement is identical to the root problem identified by the OP and later posts; too many toxic leaders would say the same, as in reality they are moving heaven and earth to prevent any negative reports and to keep that all-important green box on the metric chart. (Our over-concentration on metrics, well that's a whole other problem within the Army.)

The only real solution to promote real SHARP change is a concentration on organizational ethics and truly holding Soldiers accountable for their moral and ethical behavior.

The only real solution to prevent under-reporting and an Army society that won't report problems is to a total shift to CID-only involvement on SHARP matters. Troopie shows up drunk to duty? Sure, that's a Command function and they should be the ones foremost in the communication loop. Troopie sexually assaults a fellow Troopie? Nope. CID needs to step in, separate the personnel, and investigate as Command and all other fellow Soldiers keep their danged mouths shut and concentrate on mission.
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MSG Senior Enlisted Advisor
MSG (Join to see)
8 y
SGT (Join to see) I'm with you on holding people accountable and educating people on how easy it is to throw away a career on a bad decision. SHARP in it's current form is far to broad to have a cookie cutter solution. I've had soldiers that should've had people put in prison for what was done to them and I've had soldiers making false accusations to work the system. I do know that from the rank of SFC to 1SG my life was made easier by investing time and effort into making my officers, NCOs and soldiers successful and it worked for me and my people.
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