As western military forces were increasingly
deployed in peace enforcement,
peace-keeping, and peace building, it
suited the military to recruit women,
when traditional masculine militaries
were so woefully equipped for their new
role. In a US Army report on the conduct
of US troops in Kosov@, one soldier
reported: "I dont think we were prepared
for what we came into.... We expected
to get fired at and things like that. We
didnt expect things to be so calm and
laid back." With "overly aggressive tendencies"
and a lack of adequate training
in peacekeeping tasks, some soldiers
"experienced difficulties" tempering their
combat mentality for adapting and transitioning
to peacekeeping duty.3 It is thus not surprising that a significant
percentage of women recruited to
NATO forces have found themselves
deployed on peace-keeping missions,
where essentialist assumptions about gender
have assumed - despite their military
training - that their innate feminine qualities
will uniquely suit them for peace-keeping.4 Similar arguments for the inclusion
of women have also been highlighted
as "talking points" in educational packs
produced by peace organisations: "Women
are better able to control violent tendencies.
Women are seen as less of a threat, so
are less likely to provoke violence. Women
seem to be more willing to look for reconciliation
in disagreements, rather than use
force. Male soldiers are more likely to control
aggression if women are present."5 If women are the antidote to the military's
inability to construct a real peace,
how do antimilitarists address a femi-nised,
militarised peace?
"Women are allowed to wage
peace but not to decide for peace"6
Donna Pankhurst has characterised the
exclusion of women from post-war peace-processes
as a "gendered peace", where
those in power decide on a peace which
either marginalises the post-war needs of
women, or actively limits or restricts
their rights.7 Advocates of an increased role for
women in post-conflict peace-processes are
not naïve about the barriers that they face
or the history of the repeated marginalisation
of women in such processes. Despite
the confidence built by women in war,
holding families and societies together,
and - in the absence of men - adopting or
undermining traditionally masculine roles,
women have almost inevitably found
themselves excluded from the peace.
International organisations are also
recognising the role that women play in
preventing war and sustaining peace, and
- as expressed by the aspirations of UN
SC Resolution 1325 - advocate that
women make that final shift from peace-makers
to peace builders.
If women get to the peace talks, is an
acceptance of militarisation the inevitable
consequence of their participation in
building the peace that follows war? Given
the relocation of power that both feminism
and antimilitarism demand, can we propose
non-militarised alternatives to peace
building, inclusive of womens rights and
acknowledging their agency?8
Women redefining security
One solution lies in redefinitions of security
which articulates the security needs
of individuals and communities, rather
than the security concerns of states.
Along with NGOs of the south, some
womens NGOs have redefined security -
where the military is longer a player.
Significantly, they also reject the security
offered to states who agree to participate
in the project of globalisation.
On the eve of the 2000 G-8 meeting,
members of the East Asia-US Women's
Network Against Militarism challenged
G-8s ideas of "national security": "These
economic policies can never achieve genuine
security. Rather, they generate gross
insecurity for most peoples of the world
and devastate the natural environment.
Economic policies are inextricably linked
to increasing militarisation throughout
the world. Militaries reap enormous profits
for multinational corporations and
stockholders through the development,
production, and sale of weapons of
destruction. Moreover, militaries main-tain
control of local populations and
repress those who oppose the fundamental
principles on which the world economic
system is based."
Even the UN has accepted redefinitions
of security, which presuppose the allocation
of resources for peace away from the
military, but this security relies on the
participation of states in IMF and World
Bank programmes. The project of
redefining security is subsumed to the
interests of militarised industrial states.
In the real alternative, security is access to
basic rights and resources, and the reallocation
of power from the military and
those institutions which derive their
power from continued militarisation. A
gendered redefinition of security alone
challenges the power of the military, and
sets the stage away from war.
A gendered antimilitarism
"Violence against women is not an accident
of war: it is a strategic weapon of
war that has been used for the purpose of
spreading terror, destabilising societies and
breaking resistance, rewarding soldiers and
extracting information. Violence against
women, including torture, forcible displacement,
sexual assault, rape and murder
has also been used a method of ethnic
cleansing and as an element of genocide."9
"Make this pledge" - subvertising a WW2 propaganda poster encouraging women's complicity in the war.
IMAGE: WEATHERVANE GREEN
However they attempt to re-gender the
military, women - and their children
- remain the primary victims of war; and
violence against women rarely ends when
war ends, but continues in the community,
in the home. That violence will only
end when security is defined by social justice,
and not through the barrel of a gun.
New strategies against militarism have
to acknowledge that the traditional binary
oppositions of "women and peace" and
"men and war" have shifted, blurring the
boundaries between the (fe)male warrior
and his(her) weeping mother (father). How
does the antimilitarist movement engage
with this changed, and still changing
landscape? Do we develop our own critique
and responses, or do we stand outside
these processes, return to a more active
seizing of the old binary divisions - a
return to the feminist antimilitarist discourses
of the 1980s - positioned outside
of these debates, outside of the systems
that seek to accommodate, encompass and
co-opt women as peacemakers?
Notes: 1 Reuters, 10 January 2002. 2 NATO Review, Vol 29.2, summer 2001. 3Washington Post, 18 September 2000. 4 For differing views within NATO, "Can soldiers be peacekeepers and warriors?" NATO Review Vol 49.2, 2001. 5 Peace Pledge Union, Women and Peace (Resource pack for teachers and students) 6 Sevdie Ahmeti, "Women, what a complex term of reference", Network of East-West Women, 14 November 2000. 7 Donna Pankhurst, Women, Gender and Peacebuilding, University of Bradford Department of Peace Studies Working Paper 5, August 2000. 8 Anu Pilay, Remaining at the Edge, PN 2443. 9 NGO Working Group on Women, International Peace and Security, UN Security Council, 23 October 2002. Siân Jones works with the Aldermaston Womens Peace Camp(aign) (AWPC) and is part of London Women in Black. AWPC, 157 Lyndhurst Road, Worthing, W Sussex, Britain (UKm 07904 450 308; email: awpc@gmx.co.uk; http://www.aldermastonwpc.gn.apc.org).