http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Articles/2013/04/30/Military-Sexual-Assaults-Cost-More-Than-872-Million.aspx#page1#ixzz2RzHbfC9D
The Veterans Affairs department spent almost $872 million in 2010 to deal with the health impacts of sexual assaults on former military personnel.
This figure is based on the $10,880 dollars the Veterans
Administration spends to treat each sexual assault victim after he or
she leaves the service.
The $872 million does not include costs for victims still in the military.
In 2011, the last year that information on sexual assaults is
available, 3,192 cases were reported to Pentagon brass. Former defense
secretary Leon Panetta estimated nearly 20,000 occur each year within
the military. According to a 2011 military health survey, one in five
soldiers said they had been touched inappropriately since joining.
It’s not clear how much the Pentagon spends dealing with these
attacks. But because of the nature of how the military deals with sexual
assault allegations, it’s likely that it costs the Pentagon tens of
millions of dollars.
“It’s bound to be more than we would ever guess given the number of
people who are coming forward, both women and men, reporting that they’d
been sexually assaulted,” said Deborah Tucker, executive director of
the National Center of Domestic and Sexual Violence. “They’re eligible
for six visits with a counselor before it’s given to their command. They
get caught up in the military’s own sexual assault office staff at each
installation.”
“If you start counting all of that, plus medical costs, because I’m
sure people are getting not only
forensic exams and ongoing care for
injuries sustained, it’s a staggering number,” Tucker added.
In recent months, after years of ignoring or covering up sexual
assaults, advocates have made great strides in raising awareness of
sexual violence in the military. After an Air Force colonel’s sexual
assault conviction was overturned and the officer was transferred away
from the victim, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered a review a military law governing rape cases.
“These changes would increase the confidence of service members and
the public that the military justice system will do justice in every
case,” Hagel said earlier this month.
But Congress is demanding more. A recent report commissioned by
lawmakers found that rape cases often lead to cases of post-traumatic
stress disorder and recommended DOD to more to combat them. The report
also made clear that the military would be paying for these PTSD cases
long after soldiers left the service.
“Increased efforts by DOD are necessary, and a zero-tolerance
approach should be implemented," the Institute of Medicine said in its
report. “Previous wars have demonstrated that veterans' needs peak
several decades after their war service.”
AN ISSUE OF READINESS
Recently,
the military began to speak about sexual assault not as a legal or
moral problem, but one of readiness, A Navy myths and facts worksheet
published in 2012 lists the belief that rape does not hurt readiness as a
myth.
“The crime of sexual assault takes an immeasurable toll on the victim
and diminishes the Department of Defense’s overall capability by
undermining core values, degrading mission readiness, subverting
strategic goodwill, and raising financial costs,” the Navy wrote in the
worksheet.
But rape is clearly not a budget priority. The program that deals with rape prevention – the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (SAPR) Program – has a budget of just $14 million dollars.
DOD has never aggregated the total costs of dealing with all aspects
of sexual assault. This includes counseling, costs related to the trial,
medical care while the victim is still in the military, and costs of
imprisoning soldiers who are found guilty.
NEXT STEPS
Much
of the media attention this issue has received concerned cases in which
women were assaulted. But according to the military, the majority of
sexual assaults – 56 percent - actually involve men.
Tucker said the Pentagon must act to remove the stigma attached to
these attacks. Many men and women are ashamed and refuse to come
forward. They also fear that reporting the assault could hurt their
military careers.
She added that the military must put more money into prevention programs that stop assaults before they happen.
“The emphasis has to be more and more on prevention and to explain to
people that any time they push someone to engage in contact with them
that’s not given with consent, it’s assault,” she said.
One such prevention effort was unveiled this month. The Pentagon paid
an undisclosed amount to WILL Interactive, a Maryland firm that makes
interactive movies, to create a video game in which soldiers are
confronted with choices while drinking at a bar. The goal of the game,
called Team-Bound, is to educate soldiers on what constitutes sexual
assault. DOD likes it so much it’s ordered a sequel.
But advocates dismissed the game as a waste of money.
“For decades, leaders in our military have thought that they can end
the epidemic of sexual assault in the military simply through training
programs," Nancy Parrish, president of Protect Our Defenders, told NBC News. "Not only is it a waste of taxpayer dollars, it is affront to victims of sexual assault."
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