WASHINGTON - The US military received a record number of sexual assault reports in 2016, the Pentagon has said, calling it a sign of service members' trust in the system.
Sexual assault and harassment in the US military has come under scrutiny after a scandal involving some Marines sharing immoral photos of women online came to light. The US military has opened an inquiry and senior lawmakers on Capitol Hill have denounced the violations.
Service members reported 6,172 cases of sexual assault in 2016 compared to 6,082 last year, an annual military report showed. This was a sharp jump from 2012 when 3,604 cases were reported.
"We see the increase in rates of reporting as an indicator of a continued trust in our response and support systems," said Elizabeth Van Winkle, performing the duties of assistant secretary of defense for readiness, at a press conference.
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, in a statement, questioned if there was actual progress.
"The truth is that the scourge of sexual assault in the military remains status quo," she said.
"Today's report disappointedly shows a flat overall reporting rate and a retaliation rate against survivors that remains at an unacceptable six out of 10 for a third year in a row."
Within the report was an anonymous survey, conducted every two years, which found that 14,900 service members experienced some kind of sexual assault in 2016, from rape to groping, down from 20,300 in 2014.
But 58 percent of victims experienced reprisals or retaliation for reporting sexual assault, the report showed.
"The fight to end sexual assault, sexual harassment and related misconduct in the military is far from over," said Van Winkle. "We do not confuse progress with success."
The Marine Corps has been rattled by a scandal involving a private Facebook group called "Marines United" and its surreptitious distribution of explicit images of women in the armed forces, often with obscene, misogynist commentary.