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Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Women and War

Jane, We Hardly Knew Ye Died

By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
Published: September 24, 2006
The New York Times


LT. EMILY J. T. PEREZ, 23, a West Point graduate who outran many men, directed a gospel choir and read the Bible every day, was at the head of a weekly convoy as it rolled down roads pocked with bombs and bullets near Najaf. As platoon leader, she insisted on leading her troops from the front.

Two weeks ago, one of those bombs tripped her up, detonating near her Humvee in Kifl, south of Baghdad. She died Sept. 12, the 64th woman from the United States military to be killed in Iraq or Afghanistan. Eight died in Vietnam.

Despite longstanding predictions that America would shudder to see its women coming home in coffins, Lieutenant Perez’s death, and those of the other women, the majority of whom died from hostile fire (the 65th died in a Baghdad car bombing a day later), have stirred no less — and no more — reaction at home than the nearly 2,900 male dead. The same can be said of the hundreds of wounded women. (full story)

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The Fallen
Profiles of the 65 American female
soldiers who have died in Iraq or
Afghanistan.

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
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Multimedia
A "Girly" Woman With a Purple Heart (mp3) - Anne Hanson, 25,
of the Minnesota National Guard, talks about her 10 months in
Iraq, and how she was injured by a roadside bomb.

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