Sexual harassment in the U.S. military: Restoring balance to SHARP
How 2025 Policy Updates Can Address Unpunished Serial and False Accusations
For more than a decade, the U.S. military has lived inside a quiet paradox. It built one of the world’s strongest sexual harassment and assault prevention systems—designed to protect victims, build trust, and restore dignity. Yet portions of that same structure have been quietly undermined by a tiny minority who learned to weaponize the process without consequence.
The results have been corrosive. Leaders became afraid to mentor across gender lines. Soldiers began viewing routine professional interaction as liability exposure. Careers were destroyed long before fact-finding ever began. Over time, this climate eroded readiness, morale, retention, and trust.
This shift was not subtle. Conversations changed. Commanders began speaking through witnesses rather than directly with subordinates. Counseling forms replaced mentorship. Officer–NCO relationships calcified under suspicion. When a complaint was filed—accurate or fabricated—chains of command prepared for administrative collapse.
A system built to protect became capable of institutional betrayal.
In 2025, that environment finally began to shift. The Army’s standalone SHARP (Sexual Harassment/Assault Response and Prevention) regulation (AR 600-52) professionalizes victim advocacy and oversight, while updated administrative procedures under AR 15-6 give commanders tools to evaluate credibility early and pursue accountability for knowingly false claims.
These reforms exist inside a broader warfighting reset led by the Secretary of War, whose vision rejects performance theater in favor of lethality, merit, discipline, and truth. Under this direction, SHARP reform is not cultural posturing—it is operational necessity. A lethal Army must also be an honest Army.
Credibility safeguards do not weaken survivor protection; they preserve it by ensuring that legitimate reports retain institutional trust and moral authority.
That matters because trust is the foundation of fighting power.
A Program That Drifted Off Balance
Nobody disputes why SHARP exists. Sexual harassment and assault destroy lives, sabotage units, and degrade combat readiness. SHARP was necessary—and remains necessary.
But the program lost balance.
Fear took over. And fear metastasized.
Fear that questioning credibility meant attacking survivors.
Fear that demanding evidence would be labeled retaliation.
Fear that a single allegation—true or not—could end a career.
Under those incentives, silence became rational behavior.
Inside that climate, Soldiers and leaders made predictable choices. Mentors stopped mentoring. Officers avoided informal interaction. NCOs refused private counseling sessions. Commands operated as if every interpersonal exchange carried legal consequence.
This was not discipline. It was paralysis.
The Army does not teach leaders to fear subordinates. It teaches them to build them, develop them, correct them, and trust them. SHARP fear inverted that hierarchy—and the force weakened as a result.
Why the 2025 Policy Shift Matters
In 2025, that environment finally began to change.
AR 600-52, the Army’s first standalone SHARP regulation, professionalizes prevention and response, clarifies reporting pathways, and removes survivor support from command personality. It treats SHARP as a professional institution rather than a cultural slogan.
But the structural return to fairness lives in updated AR 15-6 procedures.
Credibility Assessment Before Investigation
Commanders—working with legal advisors—must now determine whether credible information exists before launching a full investigation.
This moves the system from suspicion-based escalation to evidence-based judgment.
Credibility is no longer intuitive or optional. It requires examination of motive, internal consistency, documentary support, plausibility, and corroboration. The standard is military—not political: preponderance of evidence.
Delayed Administrative Destruction
Previously, Soldiers were flagged on accusation alone. That single trigger froze promotions, schools, PCS orders, and evaluation timing—often for six months or longer.
Now, flags are delayed until credible information exists.
This change is monumental. One missed board cycle can end a career long before innocence is established. Justice delayed is not neutral—it is decisive.
Article 107 Enforcement
AR 15-6 now links credibility findings to Article 107 accountability. Proven intent to deceive—supported by evidence rather than disbelief—can trigger consequences.
Indicators include digital contradictions, timeline manipulation, messaging patterns, location conflicts, and retaliatory motive. SHARP can no longer ignore evidence in the name of optics.
The Distinction That Changes Everything
The Army has finally codified what leaders have always known:
Unsubstantiated does not mean false.
Unsubstantiated means there is insufficient evidence.
False means proven deception.
A credibility review does not punish unsubstantiated reports. It prevents institutional damage when proven deception is treated as consequence-free.
This distinction protects victims. If false claims are shielded from scrutiny, legitimate reports inevitably become suspect. Accountability strengthens belief—it does not weaken it.
Serial Misuse of SHARP: Rare, Real, and Institutionally Damaging
Most SHARP reports are sincere. Most Soldiers who come forward do so in good faith.
But a small number exploit the system:
Filing complaints after adverse evaluations.
Filing claims when confronted for misconduct.
Re-filing when earlier allegations collapse.
Resetting timelines across commands to avoid pattern detection.
These cases are rare—but the damage they cause is enormous. Leaders are relieved. Careers end short of retirement. Formations lose experience overnight. Trust fractures across the chain of command.
A Representative Guard Pattern
Across multiple states, a Guardsman previously counseled for workplace failures filed overlapping SHARP complaints against a senior officer.
Timelines shifted. Investigations followed.
The accused officer—nearly two decades of service, deployments, and a previously unblemished record—was flagged, relieved, and separated short of retirement.
The accuser faced no review.
This “pattern reset” phenomenon corrodes trust across the force, particularly in Title 32 environments where oversight is fragmented and accountability uneven.
Senior Leaders Knew—and Stayed Silent
This is the hardest truth to acknowledge.
Commanders, SHARP professionals, IG offices, and JAGs saw credibility collapse. They recognized motive patterns. They saw repeat complainants.
They also watched colleagues removed immediately upon allegation.
Silence became survival.
The current reform environment breaks that silence. The signal is unmistakable: truth matters again.
The Guard Vulnerability—and a Real Fix
The National Guard remains uniquely exposed. Fifty-four state systems, uneven investigative capability, and no transparent pattern tracking allow misuse to persist across boundaries.
A permanent solution is achievable.
A SHARP accountability layer within IPPS-A could track allegation metadata, outcomes, and pattern indicators across components. This would protect victims from bad actors in uniform—not just bad leaders—and restore institutional memory.
Looking Back: A Path to Justice
For the first time in years, Soldiers harmed by misuse have viable redress.
Credibility requirements open doors for Boards for Correction, Inspector General review, and retirement-eligible Soldiers to challenge material injustice. The path is narrow—but real.
Policy Path Forward
Standardize Credibility Matrices
Require uniform credibility checklists across formations to prevent command-culture swings.
Integrate SHARP Accountability into IPPS-A
Close state silos and prevent pattern resets.
Reform Flag Timing
Require renewal justification and maintain credible thresholds.
Protect Board Eligibility
Allegations alone should not erase years of earned opportunity.
Preserve Sanctuary Integrity
Administrative action must not bypass substantiated findings.
Trust Is Lethality
Trust is not soft. Trust is steel.
A force cannot fight if leaders fear their own formation. Mission Command depends on mutual trust vertically and horizontally. Without it, lethality collapses—not from lack of skill, but from institutional self-doubt.
Modern warfare demands decentralized execution, disciplined initiative, and leaders willing to act without constant legal cover. Those conditions cannot exist in an organization conditioned to treat every professional interaction as potential misconduct.
ADP 6-22 names mutual trust as the first principle of leadership. It is not optional. It is operational.
A military that cannot distinguish between unproven claims and proven deception cannot protect victims, leaders, or the trust that makes victory possible.
Mark W. Castillon served in the Army National Guard from 2004 to 2024, including deployments in support of Operations Iraqi Freedom and New Dawn and domestic emergency response from Hurricane Katrina through the COVID-19 pandemic. He advocates for veteran mental health, whistleblower protection, leadership accountability, and due-process reform.