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Investigation Finds Women in the U.S. Army Face Greater Risk of Death from Fellow Soldiers Than from Enemy Combatants

By

Daniel Johnson, Austin Campbell

4h ago· 17 min readenNews

Summary

A first-of-its-kind investigation by The Intercept reveals that women serving in the U.S. Army face a greater threat of death from fellow soldiers than from enemy combatants. The article details the case of 23-year-old Sarah Roque, who was murdered by a fellow soldier at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and contextualizes this within a broader pattern of violence, sexual assault, and systemic failures in the military's handling of crimes against female service members. The investigation highlights how institutional culture, lack of accountability, and inadequate protections leave women soldiers more vulnerable to harm from within their own ranks than from external threats.

Source

Hacker NewsInvestigation Finds Women in the U.S. Army Face Greater Risk of Death from Fellow Soldiers Than from Enemy Combatantstheintercept.com

Key quotes

· 3 pulled
Even now, I still can't believe it. That murderers could exist in one of the supposedly safest places in the country.
The greatest threats to women serving in the Army come at the hands of male soldiers.
She wasn't in a war zone, and the killer wasn't an enemy combatant.
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A first-of-its-kind investigation by The Intercept found that the greatest threats to women serving in the Army come at the hands of male soldiers.

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