[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 6 (Monday, January 11, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H260-H264]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WOMEN AIRFORCE SERVICE PILOTS
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Hardy). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 6, 2015, the gentlewoman from Arizona (Ms. McSally)
is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
General Leave
Ms. McSALLY. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members
have 5 legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks and
to include extraneous material on the subject of my Special Order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentlewoman from Arizona?
There was no objection.
Ms. McSALLY. Mr. Speaker, I rise to talk about a very special group
of women who were mentors to me and who were pioneering heroes of our
country. These women were the Women Airforce Service Pilots, the WASPs.
Some people don't know that much about them, but here is a picture of
them as they flew airplanes in the World War II era. When we needed
everybody to serve in whatever capacity one could in our country, they
needed women to step up and become pilots in order to do all sorts of
different missions, like towing targets for the gunners on the ground
to learn how to shoot things down, like training men to go on to fly in
combat, like ferrying airplanes all over the theaters to deliver them
where they needed to be in the combat zone and bringing them back for
maintenance. They were test pilots and engineers. You name it.
These women were asked to step up and serve. They went through
training. They put on the uniform. They lived in the barracks. They
learned how to march. They were pioneers for women like me, who later
on served as aviators in the military.
There are just a little over 1,000 of these amazing women who served
in World War II. They weren't given Active-Duty status, although that
was the intent of General Arnold when they set up this program.
If you think back then, the thought of having women military pilots
was a little bit of a cultural hang-up. We will let women be Rosie the
Riveter, and we will let women serve in support positions. But pilots?
Now, that is kind of crazy talk.
So they had a little bit of a problem culturally, but they didn't
care. They chose to serve anyway. They said, ``I am going to step up
and serve my country. I am going to do that as a pilot. I am going to
do this with honor and with valor,'' just like their male counterparts
did in these very same missions before them, alongside them, and then
after them.
Thirty-eight of them died in training or in conducting missions.
Thirty-eight of them paid the ultimate sacrifice. They weren't even
given veterans' benefits or any benefits after perishing in the line of
duty, but they still continued to serve because their country needed
them.
It was not until 1977 that they were actually given veteran status
after the fact. They were then given honorable discharges. They were
given the medals that their male counterparts got for serving as Active
Duty in the military. They were allowed to be buried, with honors, in
veterans' cemeteries across the country and were given full military
honors, which they deserved.
They were actually allowed, as they should be allowed, to be in
Arlington National Cemetery, alongside other heroes who have gone
before them. Yet, we just found out within the last few weeks that that
has been rescinded by the Department of Army.
That happened quietly back in March of 2015 to these heroes, who
deserve to be recognized and who deserve to be a legacy in Arlington
National Cemetery so that future generations will know what they did
and will know of the doors that they opened in the way that they
served. It was rescinded by the Army.
We didn't know about this until Elaine Harmon, one of the WASPs,
passed away. I saw her handwritten will when I me with her family last
week. It reads, ``I desire to be in Arlington National Cemetery. I want
my ashes there.''
Her family put in the request like everybody else does, and they were
denied. We now found out that the Army has rescinded that and that it
is no longer allowing these pioneering women to be laid to rest in
Arlington.
Elaine Harmon's ashes are sitting on a shelf in a closet in her
granddaughter's home, awaiting her final resting place in Arlington,
which she deserves. The Army gave us some bureaucratic answer about,
oh, they are running out of space, and, by mistake, they opened it up.
In 2002, they actually allowed women to be in Arlington. Only two
women took advantage of this and asked to be, in their own right, in
Arlington. Then the Army turned around and rescinded it. Again, they
gave some bureaucratic answer.
They are on the wrong side of this. We have looked into all of the
legalities. The Army has all of the authorities that they need to allow
these heroes to be laid to rest in Arlington, but they are choosing not
to do so.
We have introduced legislation. We are going to make sure that it
happens, but we are calling on them to actually
[[Page H261]]
change it tonight. Right now, the Secretary of the Army or the
Secretary of Defense or the President could tonight say: Do you know
what? Elaine Harmon and the other WASPs--there are only a little over
100 who are still living--are going to be allowed to have their ashes
in Arlington National Cemetery alongside other heroes. This is the
least they could do, and they could do it tonight.
So I am leading the Special Order tonight. This is a bipartisan
Special Order. This is bipartisan legislation, and it is bicameral.
When we raised awareness of this issue and got the legislation
together, we had nearly 80 sponsors right away on this bill who said:
Let's change this thing.
Today the Senate introduced a similar bill, and we are going to work
together to get this thing done. We want to continue to raise awareness
to this issue, this egregious violation of these women. We want this
thing changed now. It takes a little bit of time sometimes around here
to work through legislation.
In the meantime, Elaine Harmon's ashes are sitting on a shelf in a
closet. That is not the way we treat our heroes. That is not the way we
treat our pioneers who paved the way for military aviators, like me, to
be able to serve in the way we did, and it needs to be changed tonight.
We have a number of individuals here on both sides of the aisle who
are going to be sharing this time with me tonight. I first yield to my
good friend and colleague, the gentlewoman from California (Mrs.
Davis), who is the lead Democratic cosponsor of this bill.
Mrs. DAVIS of California. Thank you so much.
I am so glad that my colleague from Arizona is here to speak to this.
She is very uniquely qualified to do that as one of the first women
pilots--or the first--to actually fly in combat.
As I remember, the women who joined us a few years ago here in the
Capitol who were part of the WASPs were here to receive Gold Medals for
their heroic acts during the war and for really coming forward and
being part of that volunteer band of women who had had some experience
in flying, but who could not have imagined in their wildest dreams
doing what they were asked to do, but they were delighted to do it.
As I will share, they actually wanted to do more, but there were some
other people who took over and asked them to go home and enjoy their
lives after they had given so much. So I am just delighted to join in
this effort and to right this injustice for military trailblazers who
were truly ahead of their time.
When the call came to serve in World War II, the WASPs answered that
call just like millions of other Americans. They logged over 60 million
miles in over 12,000 aircraft. As my colleague has said, 38 WASP women
died while serving their country.
In 2009, as I mentioned, the WASPs were awarded the Congressional
Gold Medal for flying military missions in World War II. Boy, even when
they were here, they were just a strong group of women who delighted in
seeing one another and in reminding themselves of the amazing stories
that they brought.
More than anything else, they serve today as great role models to
women who were considering going in the Air Force, of course, and in
the Navy, flying for our country, but, also, for taking on some
remarkable challenges in their lives. They really represent that for
all of us.
They fought, of course, and they died in service to their country.
They trained in military style. They slept on metal cots like everybody
else and marched and lived under military discipline. That is why we
feel they deserve the full honors that we give our war heroes.
As has been mentioned, they were given those honors, but because we
have a problem of space, it was decided that perhaps they were not at
the top of the list. We need to be sure that we provide for everyone
who needs to be there.
There are many WASPs who may not necessarily choose to be at
Arlington National Cemetery, but for those who have chosen in working
with their families--and their families have fought hard for them--this
is something that we need to do.
I want to particularly mention--and I thought this was really fun to
read--one of the articles about these WASPs.
This is Eddy, who is saying, ``I thought it was the nastiest thing
that they''--speaking of the Army Air Forces officials--``could have
done to us.'' This was while she was receiving visitors at her home in
Coronado. ``They fired us. They gave our jobs to Air Force men who
didn't want to go overseas. I would have gone overseas in a minute,''
she said. ``I was a (heck of) a good fighter pilot.''
In my community of San Diego, in El Cajon, I also have a woman named
Joyce Secciani, who perhaps was not as forthright as Eddy.
But despite some fading memories, at 87, she still shares Vivian's
passion for the WASPs and her disappointment with its demise. She was
also one of the 1,102 women who flew in the all-volunteer program
between 1942 and 1944.
She remarked, ``All of us felt bad to lose (our flying jobs)--all of
us wanted to keep up our ability to fly,'' because they knew that, with
prevailing chauvinistic attitudes, there would be no pilots' work for
them in the civilian realm.
We need to be sure that we don't lose our perspective about the work
that these women did and that we honor them in this way, that we honor
them and their families who supported them as well, because we know,
with all of our military families, it is not just the person who
serves, but it is the entire family who serves as well.
That was certainly true of these WASPs, whose family members worried
about them and were concerned about them as they carried on with their
duties as forcibly as they did.
Let's send that message. Let's continue to work hard. I know that the
WASPs are also planning a museum to honor them and to make sure that
the country never forgets the work that they did because it was
necessary.
Had they not been there to do that work, many, many people would not
have received the materials. Whatever it was, they were making sure
that it got to our fighting warriors during World War II.
{time} 1930
I am so delighted that my colleague is choosing to move forward with
this. I want to turn it back to her, and I know that there are other
colleagues of mine over here that would like very much to join in this.
Ms. McSALLY. Thank you, Congresswoman Davis. I really appreciate your
partnership on this issue. Together we can show the American people
that we can be united on these things that matter to support our
veterans and support our heroes and, again, put the pressure on the
administration that we have oversight of to actually fix this wrong
right now. I really look forward to continuing working with you on it.
I yield to the gentleman from Maine (Mr. Poliquin), who is joining
this discussion as a cosponsor on the bill, very strongly supporting
this initiative.
Mr. POLIQUIN. Mr. Speaker, I thank the Congresswoman.
I don't think it much matters if you are a man or you are a woman,
but you serve in the United States military. Anybody who has stood up
for this country to protect our freedom, protect our way of life,
protect our kids, they should receive the full benefits, the full
honors of anybody who served in uniform.
Now, tonight, as Congresswoman McSally said, we can fix this. There
is absolutely no reason whatsoever why the Pentagon should, for some
reason, say there is no room at Arlington. Are you kidding me?
Over 1,000 of these brave, patriotic women, during a time where, as
Congresswoman McSally and Congresswoman Davis mentioned, they were not
always welcomed in doing what men were doing, they stood up, they stood
up and they left their homes and they left their families. They did
what was right. They served this country with honor, with dignity. They
flew 78 different types of aircraft all over the world. Over 60 million
miles were logged. Look at this picture.
I salute you, Congresswoman, for bringing this before us.
Now, do you think any of these WASPs were saying, ``Well, I don't
know, we just can't get this done, we just can't perform this mission,
I am sorry''? Well, the Pentagon needs to step up right now. They need
to find a
[[Page H262]]
way to make sure, if these WASPs want to be interred at Arlington, they
should be.
Now, some of the missions that these brave women flew on included
transporting these vehicles all around the world. You know what they
also did? They towed targets for men on the ground that were practicing
artillery. Did you hear one of these WASPs complain, ``Gee, I hope that
these men will hit the targets instead of us''?
The least the Pentagon can do is to take this seriously, listen to
the will of the people, and make sure that these brave women are so
honored by being interred, if they wish, at Arlington.
Now, one of these humble American heroes is a woman by the name of
Betty Anne Brown, who very recently passed away at age 92. Now,
wouldn't she be proud of all of us today standing up and asking that
our country, that the Pentagon does the right thing?
I salute Ms. McSally for her leadership on this issue. The Pentagon
can do what is right today. As you mentioned, Congresswoman,
legislation is not needed if our Commander in Chief or the folks who
run the Pentagon stand up and do what is right.
These women deserve every right to be buried at Arlington if they so
wish.
Thank you very much, and I am honored to cosponsor this bill.
Ms. McSALLY. Mr. Speaker, I thank Mr. Poliquin. I really appreciate
his strong support and strong words in support of this effort here.
I yield to the gentleman from Rhode Island (Mr. Langevin), my good
friend. I think back to how many years ago it was this week, actually,
when I was your guest at the State of the Union Address. So I have
appreciated your support to me when I was in the military and the
fights that we had to make sure that women were treated fairly and,
also, your strong support on this particular effort.
Mr. LANGEVIN. Mr. Speaker, I thank Congresswoman McSally for
yielding. I want to thank her for bringing our attention to this
important issue this evening.
I am proud to serve with her on the House Armed Services Committee. I
know she is very proud to represent the people of Arizona in the Second
Congressional District there.
I might make note that Ms. McSally's roots are from my home State of
Rhode Island. She and I grew up in the same neighborhood, and I am
proud to have worked with her on several issues since she has arrived
in Congress. I was proud, again, back then to have her as my guest to
the State of the Union Message as she mentioned.
Again, I thank you for raising this important issue. I find it
completely disheartening that the Women Airforce Service Pilots have
been denied interment in one of our Nation's most sacred national
burial grounds where we honor our men and women who have served.
These brave female aviators of World War II embody courage,
resiliency, and patriotism. Again, I am proud to support Congresswoman
McSally's efforts to reinstate their interment eligibility in Arlington
National Cemetery. Without these women, some of whom made the ultimate
sacrifice for our country in one of its greatest times of need, our
Nation would not stand where it does in the world today. We are
indebted to them for their service.
The very least that we can do, Mr. Speaker, is to honor them with the
dignity and the respect that they have earned and so deserve. We have
got to see this policy reversed. I know that we will. It is a
bipartisan effort. I am proud to join with my colleagues on both sides
of the aisle in raising attention to this issue and insisting that we
ensure that these brave female aviators of World War II, again, who
embody the courage and resiliency and patriotism that this country so
admires and that we are grateful for, and that we see that they are
properly given the honor that they deserve.
Again, I want to thank Congresswoman McSally for shedding this light
on this misguided injustice.
Ms. McSALLY. Mr. Speaker, I thank Mr. Langevin.
Again, I appreciate your support on this bill and your friendship
over the years. I look forward to working together to getting this
mission done and then additional things in the future. Thank you so
much for your strong support for our heroes.
I yield to the gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen). She has
been a strong advocate, as others who have spoken today, for the WASPs
and especially the push for the Congressional Gold Medal. I am just
honored to have you as a cosponsor and a strong advocate on this bill.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. I am so pleased, so honored, so humbled to be part
of your Special Order. In the short time that you have been in
Congress, you have been a real leader on so many important issues, and
I think none as important as the one that you are spearheading today.
I rise today to support you in your mission to give due recognition
to the Women Airforce Service Pilots, otherwise known as WASPs, not the
other WASPs that you know about. These are the real ladies that got the
job done. They are a remarkable group of women who served our country
proudly during World War II.
As you heard from the other speakers, our country turned to female
pilots to deliver planes to our military air bases overseas, tow
targets for live antiaircraft artillery practice, and simulate strafing
missions. They became the first women in U.S. history to fly for our
proud military.
Out of more than 25,000 women who applied for the program, only 1,704
were accepted in noncombat roles. These courageous American women
logged in more than 60 million miles between 1942 and 1944, but it
wasn't until 1977 that Congress passed legislation that gave these
patriotic women their much-deserved veteran recognition.
In 2002, Arlington National Cemetery decided to allow WASPs, among
others listed as Active Duty designees, to receive benefits consistent
with the status that they had so rightfully earned. However, the
Department of the Army recently rescinded this decision and made these
brave women aviators of World War II ineligible for burial at Arlington
National Cemetery.
As the author of the legislation--and the gentlewoman and I have
talked about this repeatedly--awarding WASPs the Congressional Gold
Medal in the year of 2009, I am honored to stand with my friend and
colleague, Congresswoman Martha McSally, a true patriot in her own
right, to ensure that the WASPs have the right to have these services
alongside the rest of our war heroes. These patriotic women selflessly
helped defend our country. They deserve full military honor.
I am humbled and proud to represent south Florida, and I would like
to inform the gentlewoman that this has been home to some of these
remarkable heroine women. I am going to mention some of their names:
Frances Rohrer Sargent, Helen Wyatt Snapp, Ruth Schafer Fleisher,
Shirley Kruse, and Bee Haydu. Some are with us, and some are no longer
with us. Some are not in great shape because they served in World War
II. It is happening throughout our Nation where we see our finest
passing away.
In this time of great challenges to women, those women that you have
there before us, they pushed beyond the boundaries. They brought new
opportunities for women to come.
My daughter-in-law, Lindsay, she flew combat missions in Iraq and
Afghanistan for the Marines, but she would not have been able to do so
without the women who came before her. Just as you are a pioneer--to
the gentlewoman I say thank you for your patriotic duty--but you stand
also on their shoulders. These pioneers fought for the values of
freedom and democracy. It is our duty to ensure that they are not
denied the recognition for their service.
We shouldn't be begging for this. With the valiant efforts of these
American heroines, the United States and our allies were able to
successfully defeat the Axis Powers during World War II.
I thank you, Congresswoman McSally, for introducing this important
legislation that would make the Women Airforce Service Pilots eligible,
once again, for the services in Arlington National Cemetery with full
military honors. I agree with you that we don't need the legislation;
that tonight, the Secretary of the Army could do the right thing, as he
had done before, sign the order making this happen.
We will continue the battle in their names. Thank you so much to the
gentlewoman. Thank you for spearheading
[[Page H263]]
this effort. Thank you for taking this on. You are a valuable member of
this institution. Thank you for the time.
Ms. McSALLY. I want to thank the gentlewoman from Florida. As soon as
I mentioned it to Ileana, she was like: This is wrong. We have got to
get involved. We have got to fix this.
So I appreciate your strong advocacy before I got here, and your
continued advocacy as a wingwoman in this cause.
You know, for the WASPs in this story and this cause, it is not just
the right thing to do for the country. For me, it is also personal.
These women opened the door for me to be able to be a pilot in the Air
Force and, when the doors were opened, to transition to be a fighter
pilot in the Air Force.
I will be honest with you, I didn't hear about them when I was in
high school. This is one reason why it is so important that we allow
them to be laid to rest in Arlington, so that it is part of the
education for future generations.
It wasn't until I went off to the Air Force Academy that I actually
learned about the WASPs and learned about what they did. I just didn't
even imagine that we would have women military pilots in the 1940s in
World War II, but we did.
I got to meet some of these amazing women when I first came to Tucson
to fly the A-10 Warthog, started my training. There were several of
them that lived in southern Arizona, and I got to become friends with
them, and they became mentors to me and encouragers to me.
As the doors were opening up for us to transition into fighters,
there was hardly anybody we could really look to who understood what it
was like to be in challenging circumstances where you are the only
woman. People have attitudes about whether you can or cannot or should
or should not do what you are doing as an aviator. But these women
understood that. They put up with the same biases and the same
discrimination as they served. They flew in World War II.
As I was looking around for someone to have as a role model, these
women were incredible friends to me and supporters and wingwomen to me.
Here is one picture I want to show you. This is Ruth Helm, one of the
Tucson residents who, sadly, made her final flight over the last year.
This is when she was inducted into the Arizona Aviation Hall of Fame.
This is a picture of the two of us in civilian clothes as she was
inducted there.
{time} 1945
These women paved the way for me, but they encouraged me. Even at my
most challenging times, when I was feeling discouraged, I would sit
down with them, and they would just fire me up to live to fight and fly
another day.
Despite the fact that they were told to leave the military after all
they did, they still were proud. They didn't have a chip on their
shoulder. They were grateful for the opportunities that they had. They
laughed off some of the challenges that they went through. They just
started encouraging me, ``Come on, you can do it. We did it.'' I just
was able to kind of get back in there and continue to push forward
because of what they did before me to open up the doors for me.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Will the gentlewoman yield?
Ms. McSALLY. I yield to the gentlewoman from Texas.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Obviously we share a compassion and passion for
these wonderful women. We also serve on the Committee on Homeland
Security together.
First of all, let me thank you for your service and thank you so very
much for bringing this very important issue, this bipartisan issue to
the floor of the House and certainly to your colleagues. I am looking
forward to working with you on this issue.
I just want to say that one of my greatest joys in the United States
Congress was the military war zones that I had the chance to go to,
starting with the Bosnian war. I came in in that timeframe and traveled
to that area, Kosovo and Albania, and then, of course, Iraq and
Afghanistan and certainly a number of other sites where issues of
conflict were going on.
There I saw a myriad of women who stood on the shoulders of these
women, who are now in a variety of the branches, not just aviators or
in the Air Force in particular, but they stood on the shoulders of
these women. It gave me a sense of pride and duty to say to them,
``Thank you.''
Women are unique. Many of them are mothers or sisters and daughters
who are in the service, or they take care of children, or they are
nurturers for someone else. We have a particular role, but yet they are
in the military leaving their families.
Just coming in today, I read an article about the ranger who is from
my constituency who just came out of ranger school and is from Houston.
I simply want to say, this is the right thing to do.
Every year--and I think you have joined us now as you have come to
Congress--we go on Memorial Day week to Arlington and lay a wreath for
women who died in the line of duty or in the service of their country.
Does anyone realize the numbers of women? We have been doing this now
for more than a decade, and the women of the House join us. They do
that because this is a valuable part of America's history.
To the lady, the aviator that now, I wouldn't say languished, but is
with her granddaughter, her ashes are with her granddaughter, I want to
make a public commitment joining you to say that her ashes should be in
a place where she can rest in peace. We should move this quickly. If it
requires an independent action by the Army, a reconsideration, I am
sure none of us would be offended by the Army rescinding this
particular--how should I say it?--action.
I just wanted to come and thank you. I want to thank my colleague
Susan Davis and all of my colleagues who have been on the floor. I did
not want to miss this opportunity.
Coming from Texas, I think, as I walk down the streets of Houston or
travel throughout the State of Texas, I see veterans and Active Duty
everywhere. We are proud of that. In urban centers like Houston, you
would think not, but they are dominant there.
Just this past Christmas, we had what we call Toys for Kids and
honored veterans' families. This is an important mission, and I want to
join you in this mission. We have gotten our assignment. We really need
to work. I think the American people need to know that all of us will
join together to honor either our veterans, our fallen soldiers, or
those who were the pioneers who I know the story of, who stood when
they were called and did not step away from duty, did not step away
from the danger, did not step away from possible death as they pursued
the cause of this country and to protect this country.
I thank you for yielding to me.
I am ready to roll up my sleeves. Let's get busy. Let's help find a
resting place for this dear sister and servant of the Nation. Let's
find a resting place going forward for all of those who have served
this wonderful and great country. They deserve it.
Ms. McSALLY. I thank the gentlewoman from Texas for joining the
conversation tonight, again, to continue to highlight this egregious
action that was taken that is putting our heroes in a place, especially
Elaine Harmon, right now, where she has nowhere to be able to rest in
peace. The place that she wanted to be is denying her, even though her
service and the criteria are very clear that she has earned that right.
I really appreciate you joining this bipartisan mission. We are not
going to rest until the mission is complete. I want to thank the
gentlewoman for that.
As I was mentioning, this isn't just the right thing to do, but this
is personal for me. As I transitioned into fighters, these women, these
pioneers who opened up the door for me to even have the opportunity to
become a fighter pilot, they mentored me. They walked alongside me.
They encouraged me. They gave me some perspectives from their own
training and their own experiences. They made me laugh. They made me
cry. They were friends who just paved the way for me.
You think about the debates we have had in this body over the years.
I mean, women couldn't be pilots again in the military until, the late
1970s or early 1980s, they finally opened up the door for women to be
pilots. But they could only serve in noncombat roles.
[[Page H264]]
When they had that debate, that didn't have to be theoretical or
hypothetical. They had the example of these amazing women who did what
they did in World War II--again, over a thousand of them, under
extraordinary circumstances, flying by themselves, often just trying to
figure it out in bad weather and how they were going to land and
dealing with emergencies and clearances and just doing what it took in
order to get the mission done, get the plane where it needed to be,
train the men to go off and fly in combat, tow the targets, do the
simulated strafing runs, all the test piloting, everything, to include
risking their lives. Thirty-eight of them died.
This is personal to me. These three women pictured in this photo--
Dawn Seymour, Eleanor Gunderson, and Ruth Helm--they are sitting in
this photo in the front row of the change of command ceremony that I
had where I took over command of an A-10 fighter squadron, which was an
historic day for our country that we finally had a woman doing that. It
was an historic day for me to be able to take command of a squadron. I
invited them and asked them to sit in the front row. I honored them in
my change of command speech because I wanted to make sure that
everybody there knew that I only had the opportunities that I had in
the military because they paved the way.
These three women are personal friends of mine. Two of them have
since had their final flight. Dawn Seymour is still with us, but the
other two have passed away. We have to keep their legacy going. We have
to make sure the next generations know how they served with honor at a
time when the country needed them. We have to make sure that Elaine
Harmon and any of the other WASPs who want to have their ashes in
Arlington Cemetery are allowed to do that.
Let's be clear. The only reason these women were not considered
Active Duty at the time was because of gender biases and discrimination
against women. That is the only reason. Had they been a man doing those
jobs, they would have been Active Duty in the Army Air Corps; they
would have been discharged honorably; and under the current guidelines,
they would have been eligible to have their ashes at Arlington. The
only reason they were not Active Duty at the time was because of gender
discrimination.
Now this is 2016. It is time for that to stop. We thought it was over
in 1977 when we finally retroactively gave them that veteran status.
They were given those honorable discharges and the medals that they
deserved from serving in World War II. We opened up the door for them
to have military honors and to be laid to rest in veteran cemeteries
around the country.
Arlington Cemetery opened up the doors to them finally--a little
late, but in 2002. Last March, without telling anybody, they quietly
rescinded that. It was just the last slap of gender discrimination
against these amazing pioneers. It needs to be overturned immediately.
This is the right thing to do for Elaine Harmon and for the other women
who are still living. There are about 100 of them who are still with
us; and for the next generations who need to know about their service,
they deserve to be laid to rest next to the other heroes who are there.
The Secretary of the Army has all the authority he needs to let
Elaine Harmon's ashes be in Arlington. Let's be clear. This does not
take legislation. He has all the authority he needs to make that happen
tonight. If he won't do it, the Secretary of Defense can. If he won't
do it, then President Obama can. We should not wait another day, Mr.
Secretary, Mr. President, before making the decision and calling on
Elaine Harmon's family and saying, ``It is approved. Elaine can rest in
peace in Arlington National Cemetery,'' which is what she deserved and
what she asked for. We should not be lingering another day.
As we continue to call on the administration to do the right thing,
we are not going to sit by idly. We have got our legislation
introduced. We have got almost 80 cosponsors in the House. We have got
a Senate version of the bill that was introduced today, led by Senator
Mikulski and Senator Ernst, also a bipartisan bill. We are going to
continue to push this forward to make this right for our heroes, these
Women Airforce Service Pilots, these WASPs. It is the least that we
could do for all they have done for us.
The last thing I want to say before I close out is that this just
seems to be a cruel irony and a cruel contradiction if you think about
it. Just last month, the Pentagon announced that they are opening up,
finally, all positions in the military to women. It has been a long
road to get to that place. I have been a strong advocate for that
happening for a very long time.
We are a country that is about equal opportunity. We are a country
that treats people as individuals. Our foundations are based on not
treating people as a class. We should always, and in the military as
well, pick the best man for the job, even if it is a woman.
It has been a long haul to get over our biases as a country about
what we think women as a whole group could or should do in service to
our military. Gradually, positions have been opened. Gradually, women
have continued to show that, when called, they will serve valiantly and
with honor. They will fight and they will die, if needed, for our
freedoms and our liberty.
At the time that the Pentagon is opening up all positions to women in
the military that they are qualified for, they are closing the doors to
Arlington for the pioneers who made that happen. That is a cruel
hypocrisy and contradiction, and it needs to be made right tonight.
So again, I call on the Secretary of the Army, Secretary of Defense,
and the President--perhaps he could announce it in his speech tomorrow
night--that one of the legacy things that we are going to do for our
heroes, for our pioneers, for these amazing women, is to allow them to
be laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery. We owe it to them. They
paved the way as trailblazers. We owe it to them to be able to rest
alongside the other heroes and to be able to continue to educate the
next generations about their legacy.
All I will say to the WASPs is: I have got your back. You had mine,
and I have got yours now. It is the right thing to do.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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