"Institutionalization of WPS principles enhances our operational effectiveness..."

 

 

 

 

 

Women, Peace and Security

U.S. Northern Command's (USNORTHCOM) Women, Peace and Security (WPS) Program is part of an international effort to promote the meaningful contributions of women in the defense and security sectors at home and around the world. USNORTHCOM seeks to institutionalize WPS across USNORTHCOM missions and functions to improve operational effectiveness, promote opportunities for the meaningful participation of women in decision-making across the command, and ensure safety, security and human rights for all.

OUR APPROACH (PDF)   

 

  

Our Program

USNORTHCOM’s WPS approach is anchored in two decades of practice, in U.S. national law, U.S. strategy, and DoD and USNORTHCOM commander’s implementation guidance. WPS is founded upon abundant evidence showing that women’s safety and security is directly linked to a country’s stability, and that persistent barriers to women’s advancement in defense undermines organizational effectiveness and national security. WPS provides unique opportunities, both throughout USNORTHCOM and with our partners, to reinforce women’s empowerment, meaningful participation in decision-making, protection from violence, and access to resources. It is both a values-based approach, and also a practical one. When USNORTHCOM and our partners advance the principles of WPS, we not only strengthen our security and defense institutions and interoperability, evidence shows it also leads to more stable and resilient societies.  

Our Strategic Framework

Implementation of the WPS program is a USNORTHCOM priority. WPS at USNORTHCOM is guided by the following WPS mission, vision and end states which are implemented internally within the command and externally with partner nation militaries.  

Mission – USNORTHCOM integrates WPS principles into its strategies, plans and operations to better defend the homeland, strengthen partnerships, and provide flexible response to civil authorities. 

Vision – Institutionalization of WPS principles enhances the operational effectiveness of USNORTHCOM and our partner militaries. 

End States  
  • Exemplify a diverse, resilient, flexible organization 
  • Ensure the safety, security, and human rights of women/girls, especially during conflict and crisis 

History of WPS

In 2000, the United Nations (UN) Security Council adopted UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, the first resolution to address the disproportionate and unique effects of armed conflict on women and girls.  

In 2011, the United States published the first U.S. National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, in accordance with Executive Order 13595.  

In 2017, the president signed into law the Women, Peace and Security Act (Public Law 115-68), making this the first legislation of its kind in the world to acknowledge the multifaceted roles of women throughout the conflict spectrum and call on the U.S. government to promote the meaningful participation and protection of women globally.  

In June 2019, the U.S. government released the U.S. Strategy on Women, Peace and Security, making the U.S. the first country in the world with both a comprehensive law and whole-of-government strategy on WPS. The strategy compelled the Department of Defense (DoD), Department of State, and Department of Homeland Security to develop WPS implementation plans.  

The requisite DoD Women, peace, and Security Strategic Framework and Implementation Plan was signed June 2020. 

A graphic illustrating the history of WPS implementation.

WPS Today 

Although Women, Peace, and Security is two decades old, as a government and a military, our understanding of the scope and value to our organizations and operational effectiveness of gender integration into everything we do, continues to expand and evolve. 

Data, analysis and new tools for understanding the value of addressing (and the detrimental impact of ignoring) gender dynamics are being developed and tested across our defense and security efforts. For example, practical lessons on the value of applying gender analysis and perspective in operations were gained in stabilization operations, such as in the form of female or mixed-gender engagement teams in Afghanistan and Iraq, and in peacekeeping operations such as in Haiti. UN data shows that increasing female representation within a peacekeeping formation to 30 percent or higher had a civilizing effect on peacekeeping forces and helped mitigate instances of sexual and gender-based violence perpetrated by peacekeeping troops.

Today, in the era of emerging, diverse, and often concurrent security threats – such as cyberattacks, violent extremism, terrorism, climate change, natural disasters, global pandemics, and strategic competition – it is necessary to harness the strengths and perspectives of our entire population to successfully address these challenges and mitigate their effects. 

No military commander would ever choose to make a decision with only 50 percent of the information. WPS is about the force multiplying effect of women and the ability to employ the full scope of our human capital to address the complex challenges of today, and those of tomorrow 

WPS Resources

WPS News

May 5, 2023

WHINSEC conducts WPS symposium

WHINSEC conducts its sixth-annual Women, Peace, and Security symposium.

May 5, 2023

USNORTHCOM hosts WPS Barrier Analysis Focus Group

In its continuing effort to expand and evolve the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) program, U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) hosted a series of WPS barrier analysis focus groups for command members from Feb. 28 to Mar. 3, 2023, at the North American Aerospace Command and USNORTHCOM headquarters on Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado.

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Disclaimer: Partner news external links contained herein are made available for the purpose of peer review and discussion. The thoughts and opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of NORAD and USNORTHCOM, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.

WPS Photos

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WPS Video

Video by Petty Officer 2nd Class William Dodge
TRIDENT JUNCTURE 2018 - German Captain Jan Kopitzki, the Deputy Commander of the 2nd Company Multinational Engineer Battalion Conducts Interview During River Crossing Training
Allied Joint Force Command Naples
Oct. 23, 2018 | 6:06
NATO partners and allies assigned to the 2nd Company Multinational Engineer Battalion, part of the Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTC) conducted river crossing training as part of Exercise TRIDENT JUNCTURE 2018. The training was led by German forces and included Soldiers and vehicles from Latvia, Ireland, Norway and the Netherlands. The training was held on multiple days at Camp Røedsmoen located in Rena, Norway. The footage seen in B-roll package was collected on October 23, 2018.

German Captain Jan Kopitzki, the Deputy Commander of the 2nd Company Multinational Engineer Battalion: “Today we are here at the water crossing site with the amphibious breaching platoon. Additionally we have some parts of construction machines and diving groups added to the platoon in order to ensure the traffic before, over and after the river; so the main aim is that every part of the troops which are going over the water can march to the water fluently then can go over the water and drive from the water without any delay. So therefore, we need the amphibious rigs but we also need part that make sure the entrance to the water is straight so that everybody can drive to the water safely and out safely.”

“So far this exercise for me and my company has been a very good opportunity to train with multinational forces and to show our own capabilities and to train our own capabilities and additionally to that the training area here in Norway is really great and its good to see new areas and new training areas and new grounds to train they provide us with some possibilities to train which we don’t have in Germany.”

Journalists: Sgt. Marc-Andre Gaudreault and MC2 Brett Dodge

Shot-list
00:00:00
Black Video
00:04:29 (German/English)
German Captain Jan Kopitzki introduces himself first in German then in English. “So, my name is Captain Jan Kopitzki I am deputy company commander of the 2nd company multinational engineer battalion and today I am the crossing site commander.”

00:29:09
Captain Kopitzki explains what his team is doing at the exercise site in German
then English.
“So, today at the site we are ensuring wet gap crossing using amphibious rigs M3 to carry over the water national German and multinational parts of the VJTF brigade using ferry traffic.”
00:01:02:26
Captain Kopitzki describes in more detail the training exercise in German then English.
“Its taking place at the river Loepsun which is close approximately 2km away from camp Røedsmoen.”
00:01:24:26
Captain Kapitzki elaborates on exercise specifics first in German then English. “Today we are here at the water crossing site with the amphibious breaching platoon. Additionally we have some parts of construction machines and diving groups added to the platoon in order to ensure the traffic before, over and after the river; so the main aim is that every part of the troops which are going over the water can march to the water fluently then can go over the water and drive from the water without any delay. So we have a clear march to the water, over the water and away from the water. So therefore we need the amphibious rigs, of course, but we also need part that make sure the entrance to the water is straight so that everybody can drive to the water safely and out safely.”
00:03:19:00
Captain Kapitzki describes previous day’s events first in German then English. “So yesterday, we sent parts from Belgium and the Netherlands over and one reconnaissance platoon from Great Britain and today we sent over a Latvian platoon from our own company. So the amphibious M3s is a unique capability of our company and our nation. It ensures no matter how big the water gap is and if there are infrastructure bridges missing or are destroyed we can send the troops of the VJTF brigade over.”

00:04:33:15
Captain Kapitzki describes how his troops are enjoying the exercise thus far, first in German then English.
“So far this exercise for me and my company has been a very good opportunity to train with multinational forces and to show our own capabilities and to train our own capabilities and additionally to that the training area here in Norway is really great and its good to see new areas and new training areas and new grounds to train they provide us with some possibilities to train which we don’t have in Germany.”

00:05:37:14
Captain Kapitzki describes his company’s preparedness for the elements first in German then English.
“So the German Armed Forces provided us with all the equipment we needed for this cold weather and provided us with the training we needed. Our forces are prepared to train in these weather conditions.”
00:06:01:28
Black video
#ENDS#
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WPS Coordinator
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