Ladies, the Australian Army wants you: the Amazonian, leather-clad, warrior-women of Australia.

Army chiefs are reportedly being urged to find “Xena warrior-women” to form all-women combat units, inspired by the fantasy character from the cult ’90s TV series starring Lucy Lawless.

According to the discussion paper found on the official army website, Major Elizabeth Boulton is encouraging army chiefs to embrace society being on the cusp of a “Xena Return” and warrior women reaching their full potential. “Don’t be scared of Xena, enable her and get out of the way,” the document reads.

Major Boulton also suggests that these Xena platoons should not be subjected to the same physical standards as men: “Army should aim to be the home of ‘Xena’ personalities (no matter what they look like on the outside and what form their strength comes in — which of course is not always physical).”

“The idea of using all-female teams is untapped in the Australian Army. Should the physical standard be lowered for women seeking to join the Special Forces (SF) or should a female only SF capability be established?”

The move is the latest push for female inclusion in the army in order to reach its long-term goal of 25 percent female participation. In 2016, female participation was at 12.1 percent.