US Air Force faces growing sex scandal
The US Air Force said Thursday at least 31 female cadets were victims
of alleged sexual assault by military instructors in a widening scandal
at the service’s training command.
General Edward Rice, commander of Air Education and Training Command,
said authorities are investigating 12 male training instructors for
suspected sexual misconduct at Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio,
Texas.
He said nine of the 12 instructors were from the 331st Training
Squadron, and that the problem appeared to be confined mostly to that
unit.
The commander of the squadron was relieved of his duty earlier this
month over the allegations, Rice told a news conference at the Pentagon.
It was unclear how long sexual misconduct had been going on at
Lackland but the Air Force believed the abuses dated back to 2009, he
said.
Rice said “we have identified some 31 victims and are actively
seeking any others that may have been affected by this.”
He also said an Air Force officer outside the training command, Major
General Margaret Woodward, would carry out an independent review looking
at how his command has handled the scandal.
One trainer, Staff Sergeant Peter Vega-Maldonado, has pleaded guilty
to having an inappropriate relationship with a trainee, and also
provided testimony that he had improper relations with 10 cadets.
The Air Force strictly bans any personal relationship between
instructors and cadets.
Another trainer faces charges of rape and sexual assault and his
trial is due to begin next month.
Lawmakers have voiced alarm over the allegations at Lackland as well
as a broader problem of sexual assault inside the military.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has launched new initiatives to try to
tackle the problem, but activists and former officers say thousands of
cases go unreported as young service members are afraid of jeopardizing
their careers.
At the Air Force briefing, Rice said the vast majority of the
service’s 500 training instructors perform their jobs with great skill
and “no one is more angry and disappointed than they are that a
relatively small number of their cadre has cast a shadow over the entire
program.”
“We are all committed to doing everything possible to investigate
those allegations, to take care of the victims, to hold the perpetrators
accountable, and to fix any institutional problems that may have
facilitated this completely unacceptable behavior,” he said. AFP |