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Pregnant Soldiers May Face Court-Martial

Updated 7:20 p.m. EST

A U.S. general in Iraq who listed pregnancy as a reason for court-martialing soldiers said Tuesday that he would never actually seek to jail someone over the offense, but wanted to underline the seriousness of the issue.

Last month, Maj. Gen. Anthony Cucolo issued a policy that would allow soldiers who become pregnant and their sexual partners to be court-martialed. But he appeared to back away from the policy in a conference call with reporters, saying the policy was intended to emphasize the problems created when pregnant soldiers go home and leave behind a weaker unit.

"I have never considered court-martial for this, I do not ever see myself putting a soldier in jail for this," said Cucolo, who oversees U.S. forces in northern Iraq. But since pregnant women automatically go home, their units are left short-staffed, he said.

"I need every soldier I've got," Cucolo said. "I need them for the entire duration of this deployment."

With so many young men and women serving so far from home, battlefield pregnancies are bound to happen. Cucolo today shed some light on how often. He said that in the six weeks since he issued the order making pregnancy punishable by court martial, four women have become pregnant and three men identified as the fathers.

"The men stay in combat and the women are sent home because they're pregnant but both receive the same punishment unless there are other circumstances," Cuculo told CBS News correspondent David Martin in a telephone interview from his headquarters in Tikrit.

This time, the punishment for both sexes was a letter of reprimand.

"I consider the male soldier as responsible for taking a soldier out of the fight just as responsible as the female soldier that I lose," Cuculo said.

Cucolo commands a task force of 22,000 soldiers, which oversees northern Iraq, including cities such as Tikrit, Kirkuk and Mosul. He said he has 1,682 female soldiers.

As soon as the military knows a soldier is pregnant, she is immediately sent home.

"If you are a pregnant female in a combat zone, you are redeployed, period. That is actually not my call, that is just what we do," he said.

Cucolo is believed to be the first to make the pregnancy an offense that could be dealt with by court-martial — for both the man and the woman. The ruling only applies to troops under his command. He said women who are raped would not be subject to this order.

"I have to accomplish a very complex mission," he said. "I'm going to do what it takes to maintain our strength."

Cuculo has 1,600 women under his command and said he can't afford to lose a single one.

"They fly helicopters, run my satellite communications; They repair just about everything I have," he told Martin.

The move drew sharp criticism from the National Organization for Women. President Terry O'Neill said it is "clearly wrongheaded and stupid" and "obviously not a good policy."

Cucolo's order outlines some 20 barred activities. Most of them are aimed at keeping order and preventing criminal activity, such as selling a weapon or taking drugs.

Troops also are prohibited from "sexual contact of any kind" with Iraqi nationals. And, they cannot spend the night with a member of the opposite sex, unless married or expressly permitted to do so.

The general said he consulted with a number of women in his unit before coming up with the policy and all supported it. He also consulted with his unit's lawyer.

"It's a very difficult issue because pregnancy does impede readiness," said Genevieve Chase, the founder of American Women Veterans, an organization designed to help female veterans. "Enforcing the rule of this is what's going to be difficult."

Chase said she was especially concerned about holding both males and females responsible.

The general said that since his Nov. 4 policy went into effect, four women and three men have been found in violation of it.

The women and two of the men received letters of reprimand that will not become part of their permanent record, the general said. The third man would receive a letter of reprimand in his file — a more serious punishment — because he was also found guilty of offenses including adultery.

All the women were sent home.

Chase also said there is already a heavy stigma on women who get pregnant in the battlefield.

"Every time a female does get pregnant there's that automatic assumption, that you're trying to get out of the deployment," she said.

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