The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© 2018 AFPWoman qualifies to become fighter jet pilot for 1st time in Japan
TOKYO©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© 2018 AFP
42 Comments
Login to comment
Jonathan Prin
Fly me to the sky ;)
glorfindel
Way to go! Fly high in the sky, and lead others with your courage!
Yubaru
"Called on" more like "urged" and everyone knows what a failure that has been. If he truly wants to open leadership positions to women, find positions with in his own cabinet first and more importantly put women that are qualified to do the job in them, and not just window dressings or "it's their turn" in the pecking order!
If you can't get women into leadership positions from within the government FIRST how in the world do you expect the corporate world to follow?
Lead by example, not by your mouth!
Chop Chop
Congratulation to First Lieutenant Misa Matsushima. I wish you all the best.
extanker
Congratulations, LT.
America has developed some outstanding women fighter pilots and it's great to see Japan starting to do the same. Better late than never.
gogogo
I feel the need... the need for speed :)
TrevorPeace
Nice to see. I hope FL Matsushima's achievement goes really deep into the minds of young (and not so young) women in Japan. She could be that tip of the iceberg Japan's women of all ages need to recognize in themselves. Here's hoping.
papigiulio
Great, so she is the Jeannie Leavitt of Japan. That's pretty cool. Hope she kicks ass in the sky.
Ah_so
Good for her and good for Japan.
Matt Hartwell
Good development.
Goodlucktoyou
How many are men?
Alexandre T. Ishii
That's something special to me. I want to see her in one of those scrambles very frequent these day. Protect us from the sky, lady Misa!
Mocheake
Great job! This should be a source of pride for the women of Japan. Hope she gets all the support she needs from the male brass too.
CaptDingleheimer
Awesome. Surprised this hasn't happened yet.
OssanAmerica
Congratulations to FLt Matsushima. This is good news.
Ganbare Japan!
Amazing news! I would love to see more young girls enrolling in Japanese military in front line rolls. Women can do anything in Japan!
noypikantoku
Good progress and good for her! But Japan is still way far behind regarding sexual inequality , why? They still tolerate the idea that women cannot be Sushi Chefs and the entire society embrace that idea including the gender equality activists.
Chico3
Great for her! Congratulations! You had a long fight and won. Unfortunately, Japan is still far behind in other gender limited job areas, such as male flight attendants. I'm sure she'll be a great role model for others to follow. Don't let anyone tell you that you can't do anything because of who you are. Those people don't matter.
starpunk
In America there are still some clods who complain that 'gender equality' will eliminate the father-daughter dances at our schools. That's a disgusting 'tradition' in the first place, so I say BRING ON THE PROGRESS!
starpunk
Good news indeed. Hope her male brass accept her as an equal. The first female US pilot disciplined for an adulterous affair basically due to explicit sexism. They were looking for something on her.
Women have been in combat (for America) since the 1994 Haiti invasion. There was resistance to the idea here but no one thinks of it now. Same thing with jet fighter flight. Congratulations to FLt Matsushima. I hope she sets a foundation for more women fighters.
smithinjapan
Congrats!
ArtistAtLarge
Excellent.
Samit Basu
This is actually a pretty sad story.
Japan's neighbors China(2012), Korea(2002), and North Korea(2015) all had female fighter pilots long before Japan did.
Japan is the last country to have opened this opportunity to women and illustrates Japan's deep-rooted gender inequality that still strongly discriminates against women.
starpunk
The US has been fighting a drone war in Yemen since Obama's second term so you may be right!
Luddite
Congratulations F/Lt Matsushima.
Netgrump
It will provide the opportunity to encounter larger opponents and the ability to cover remote islands constantly.
Vernon Watts
GREAT!!! If I could, I would give her an F-22!!!
ebisen
As an ex pilot myself, I don't understand this debacle about women and flying... They are just as good as the men, take the same amount of training and make the same mistakes. There is absolutely no justifiable difference between the two sexes. Unlike in other combat areas (marines, seals, etc), where sheer physical strength and body size do come into play, and where women will be at disadvantage at times, men and women are on equal terms when it comes to flying.
Hawkeye
Gambatte!
socrateos
This is so cool. Hopefully more to follow.
Goodlucktoyou
as a feminist, just want to know the ratio.
Samit Basu
@ebisen
The event of women getting killed in combat in warzone and returning home in a body bag can be controversial.
Women pilots are less able to pull and sustain 9G. In close-in dogfight, this can be fatal. Flying cargo jets and other large support planes is fine, but not the fighter jets.extanker
The difference is negligible and more related to height and weight than just gender. There's no reason to exclude them from any type of aircraft.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3753357
As a combat arms veteran myself, I have my own concerns about mixed genders in some direct combat units on the ground, but in the air, what's between your legs makes absolutely no difference.
Strangerland
It doesn't matter whether women are less able to do this or not, it matters whether a given woman is able to do it or not. Denying all women the right to try to become fighter pilots because of this would be bigotry, denying equal opportunity.
Jakko
We don't need armies.
extanker
I guess somebody forgot to tell that to North Korea and China.
girl_in_tokyo
How is women in battle controversial? Should women not have the same choice as men to dedicate their lives to their country and fellow citizens?
I am proud of First Lieutenant Matsushima - of her hard work and dedication.
OssanAmerica
It is controversial because there exists an ingrained belief among all nations that war is something carried out by men. This undoubtedly goes back to the earliest human history where women and children remained at home in the cave while the man went out and hunted for food or fought with other tribes. The women were to be protected because they could bear and raise children. For the same reason abducting the females of the enemy tribe was commonplace. Fast forward to the 20th century and women are found in the military but in administrative or nurse roles. Now women are officers, doctors, what have you. Women first became pilots in support roles but now can be fighter pilots. Warships can have women Captains. The key here is that much of modern warfare is conducted to a great extent with equipment, vehicles etc that do not rely on on mass or individual strength. But women are now found in combat roles as well. So this "controversy" for the most part really has to do with historical bias on the part of men more than anything else. Hope this helps.
ebisen
Actually anyone getting killed in combat and coming back in a coffin is very controversial, I have no idea what you're talking about.
Nadège
Go woman ! ^^
OssanAmerica
Not really. There's nothing controversial about men being sent home in body bags or coffins from combat. In principle that's been going on for as long as there has been combat and we progressed from leaving our dead, to burying our dead, to bringing them home. The actual cause and reasons for the conflict itself has in many cases been "controversial" at least since Vietnam in the U.S.
That is completely different from the controversial aspects of women fatalities in combat being sent home in bodybags.
starpunk
As a veteran myself I know what you mean. Women were first in combat during the invasion of Haiti in 1994. Soldiers wore urban warfare armor that hid everything - including breasts. Local people nicknamed the US forces 'ninja turtles' because of the armor.