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75th Ranger Regiment

The 75th Ranger Regiment, also known as Army Rangers,[3] is the U.S. Army's premier light infantry unit and special operations force within the United States Army Special Operations Command.[1][4] The regiment is headquartered at Fort Benning, Georgia and is composed of a regimental headquarters company, a military intelligence battalion, a special troops battalion, and three Ranger battalions.

75th Ranger Regiment
75th Ranger Regiment's distinctive unit insignia
Active1984–present
1942–present (1st Battalion)
2006–present (Regimental Special Troops Battalion)
Country United States of America
Branch United States Army
TypeSpecialized Light Infantry[1]
RoleSpecial Operations
Size3,623 personnel authorized:[2]
  • 3,566 military personnel
  • 57 civilian personnel
Part of U.S. Army Special Operations Command
United States Special Operations Command[1]
HeadquartersFort Benning, Georgia, U.S.
Nickname(s)Army Rangers
Airborne Rangers
Motto(s)Sua Sponte ("Of their own accord")
Rangers Lead the Way
Color of Beret  Tan
Engagements

Notable operations:

Websitewww.soc.mil/rangers/75thrr.html
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel J.D. Keirsey
Command Sergeant MajorCommand Sergeant Major Bret Johnson
Insignia
Regimental coat of arms
NATO Map Symbol
(1998)

NATO Map Symbol
(2017)

U.S. Infantry Regiments
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74th Infantry Regiment 85th Infantry Regiment

The 75th Ranger Regiment primarily handles direct action raids in hostile or sensitive environments, often killing or capturing high-value targets. Other missions include airfield seizure, special reconnaissance, personnel recovery, clandestine insertion, and site exploitation.[4][5] The regiment can deploy one Ranger battalion within eighteen hours of alert notification.[4]

The 75th Ranger Regiment is one of the U.S. military's most extensively used units. On December 17, 2021, it marked 7,000 consecutive days of combat operations.[6]

History

Origin

American Ranger history predates the American Revolutionary War. Captain Benjamin Church formed Church's Rangers, which fought hostile Native American tribes during King Philip's War.[7] In 1756, Robert Rogers recruited nine Ranger companies to fight in the French and Indian War. They were known as "Rogers' Rangers". The 75th Regiment's history dates back these rifle companies organized by Rogers, which made long-range attacks against French forces and their Indian allies, and were instrumental in capturing Fort Detroit.[8]

During the American Revolutionary War, Rogers served as a Loyalist officer on the side of the Crown and many of his former Rangers served on both sides. One, John Stark, commanded the 1st New Hampshire Regiment, which gained fame at the Battles of Bunker Hill and Bennington.[9][10] Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys in Vermont were also designated as a ranger unit. In 1775, the Continental Congress later formed eight companies of expert riflemen to fight in the Revolutionary War. In 1777, this force commanded by Daniel Morgan, was known as The Corps of Rangers. Francis Marion, "The Swamp Fox", organized another famous Revolutionary War Ranger element known as "Marion's Partisans".[10] Perhaps the most famous Ranger unit in the Revolutionary War was Butler's Rangers, from upstate New York.

During the War of 1812, companies of United States Rangers were raised from among the frontier settlers as part of the regular army. Throughout the war, they patrolled the frontier from Ohio to Western Illinois on horseback and by boat. Rangers participated in many skirmishes and battles with the British and their American Indian allies.

After the Civil War, more than half a century passed without Ranger units in the United States.

World War II battalions

1st Ranger Battalion

Soon after the United States entered World War II in 1941, General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff of the United States Army, envisioned an elite unit of fifty men selected voluntarily from the 34th Infantry Division.[11] To create and lead this new unit, Marshall picked Major William Orlando Darby, who was serving as General Russell P. Hartle's aide in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where he was frustrated with his lack of hands-on experience. On 8 June 1942, Darby—now known as the founder of the modern Rangers—was put in charge of the First Ranger Battalion under General Hartle.[12]

On 19 August 1942, fifty Rangers fought alongside Canadian and British Commandos in the ill-fated Dieppe Raid on the coast of occupied France. Three Rangers were killed and several captured. The first American soldier killed in Europe in World War II, Ranger Lieutenant E. V. Loustalot, was part of this raid. During the mission, Loustalot took command after the British captain leading the assault was killed. While attempting to reach a machine gun nest at the top of a cliff, he was wounded three times by enemy fire and killed.[13]

In November 1942, the entire 1st Ranger Battalion entered combat for the first time when they landed at Arzew, Algeria during Operation Torch. The First were split into two groups in hopes of assaulting Vichy-French batteries and fortifications before the 1st Infantry Division would land on the beach. The operation was successful, and the unit sustained minimal casualties.[11]

On 11 February 1943, the Rangers moved 32 miles (51 km) to raid an Italian encampment at Sened Station. Moving at night, the Rangers slipped to within 50 yards (46 m) of the Italian outpost and began their attack. It took the battalion only 20 minutes to overtake the garrison and achieve their objective. Seventy five Italians were killed and eleven were taken prisoner.[11] Darby, along with four other officers and nine enlisted, was awarded the Silver Star Medal for this action.[14] The battalion itself gained the nickname the "Black Death" by the Italians.[12]

At the time, the Italians still held the pass at Djebel El Ank, located at the far east edge of El Guettar. The Rangers linked up with engineers elements of the 26th Infantry, First Infantry Division, to attack the area in preparation for the Battle of El Guettar. The First Rangers orders were to move overland, on foot 12 miles (19 km) to outflank the enemy's position. In eight hours of fighting, the Americans captured the objective; the First Rangers took 200 prisoners.[15]

Creation of 3rd and 4th Ranger Battalions

With the success of the First Ranger Battalion during the Tunisian campaign, Darby requested that the Rangers be expanded to a full Regiment. The request was granted. The Third and Fourth Ranger Battalions were authorized shortly after and were trained and led by veteran officers and NCOs from the First Battalion.[11] After getting the "green light" to expand, Darby ran into a problem: the Rangers only took volunteers. Darby, knowing that the best man for the job was not always a volunteer, sought out men around Oran. Although he was still limited in that he could only accept volunteers, he began to find ways around this. For instance, he began to give speeches, put up posters, and encourage his officers to scout around for eligible candidates. By June 1943, the three Ranger battalions were fully operational. 1st Rangers were still under Colonel Darby; the 3rd Rangers under Major Herman Dammer, and the 4th Rangers commanded by Major Roy Murray.[11][12]

1st and 4th Ranger Battalions were paired together and placed with General Terry Allen's 1st Division to spearhead the American landings of the Sicily campaign. Landing outside Gela, the Rangers took the town just after midnight, starting off the Battle of Gela. They held Gela, enduring 50 hours of constant attack by enemy artillery, tank, and air forces.[15][16]

Following their success, the two Ranger battalions were then ordered to take the town of Butera, a fortress suspended on the 1,319-foot (402 m) high edge of the cliff at Butera beach. After almost withdrawing from the battle, and requesting artillery to level the city, a platoon of Rangers volunteered to breach its defenses. Two privates, John See and John Constantine, sneaked in behind enemy lines and tricked the Italians and Germans into surrendering the city.[17]

Meanwhile, the 3rd Ranger Battalion headed out into the area of Agrigento, where they marched through Campobello, Naro, and Favara, successfully occupying each town. The 3rd then took the town of Porto Empedocle.[18]

Colonel Darby was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and was promoted by General George Patton; however, Darby, wanting to be closer to his men, turned down this promotion.[12]

Fall of 1st, 3rd and 4th Battalions

After a break for Christmas 1943, the Rangers were put together for a joint effort to occupy the town of Cisterna before the main infantry division moved in. On the night of 30 January 1944, the 1st and 3rd battalions moved into the town, passing many German soldiers who did not appear to notice the Rangers slip by.[19] The 4th Ranger Battalion, which approached the town from the opposite end, met opposition almost immediately on the road. During the night, the 1st and 3rd Ranger battalions separated by about 2 miles (3.2 km), and when daylight caught the 1st Ranger Battalion out in an open field, the Germans began their ambush. Surrounded and unable to escape, the two Ranger battalions fought on until they exhausted their ammunition and resources. The 4th Ranger Battalion pushed to save their comrades but were forced to withdraw. After five hours of fighting, the Rangers surrendered to the German armor and mechanized infantry. The two battalions sustained 12 killed, 36 wounded, and 743 captured—only eight were able to escape. The 4th Battalion suffered 30 killed and 58 wounded.[20]

This marked the end of the three Ranger battalions. The remaining 400 Rangers were scattered around the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, and the 137 original Rangers were sent home.[citation needed] 1st and 3rd Battalions were disbanded on 15 August 1944 while 4th Battalion was disbanded on 24 October 1944 at Camp Butner, North Carolina.[21]

2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions

 
2nd Ranger Battalion troops use rope ladders to scale Pointe du Hoc.

The 2nd Ranger Battalion and 5th Ranger Battalion were trained at Camp Forrest, Tennessee, on 1 April 1943. They first saw action 6 June 1944, during Operation Overlord. During D-day 2nd Rangers companies D, E, and F, were ordered to take a strategic German outpost at Pointe du Hoc. This coastal cliff was supposed to have several 155 mm artillery cannons aimed down at the beach.[22] Once they arrived at the bottom of the cliff, they had an enormous climb to make up rope ladders while receiving a barrage of machinegun fire from the Germans above. The 2nd Rangers took the area even with the intense German resistance but the guns were not in sight. A patrol scouting the area found the 155 mm coastal guns a mile away; the patrol party quickly disabled the guns and resistance in the area. In an interview, Leonard Lomell and Jack Kuhn explained the events that took place that day:

The guns had to have been taken off the Pointe. We were looking for any kind of evidence we could find and it looked like there were some markings on the secondary road where it joined the main road. We decided to leapfrog. Jack covered me, and I went forward. When I got a few feet forward, I covered him. It was a sunken road with very high hedgerows with trees and bushes and stuff like that. It was wide enough to put a column of tanks in, and they would be well hidden. We didn't see anybody, so we just took a chance, running as fast as we could, looking over the hedgerow. At least we had the protection of the high hedgerows. When it became my turn to look over, I said, "God, here they are!" They were in an orchard, camouflaged in among the trees.[23]

Meanwhile, the rest of the 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions spearheaded the attack on the beach at Omaha. An apocryphal story tells of when General Norman Cota, leading the 29th Infantry Division, met with Major Max F. Schneider, commanding the 5th Ranger Battalion. When Schneider was asked his unit by Cota, someone yelled out "5th Rangers!", to which Cota replied, "Well then Goddammit, Rangers, lead the way!" This drive cut the German line allowing the conventional army to move in. The phrase "Rangers lead the way" later became the motto of the regiment.[24][15][25] The 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions worked on special operation tasks in the Normandy Campaign. The two battalions fought in many battles such as Battle for Brest and the Battle of the Hurtgen Forest. The 2nd Rangers were responsible for capturing Le Conquet Peninsula, where they disabled a 280 mm gun and took many German prisoners.[14] The 2nd Ranger Battalion also went on to take several tactical German positions, cutting the German line in the Rhineland. In Saar west of Zerf, the 5th Battalion took an overlooking German position cutting of all supply routes to German forces.[26]

6th Ranger Battalion

The 6th Ranger Battalion was stationed in the Pacific, and served mostly in the Philippines and New Guinea. All operations completed by the 6th Battalion were done in company- or platoon-size behind enemy lines. They were the first soldiers to hit the Philippines, three days before the army would launch the first invasion. The 6th Ranger Battalion conducted long-range reconnaissance, operating miles past the front line.[15]

At Cabanatuan, on the island of Luzon in January 1945, a company of the 6th Ranger Battalion executed the Raid at Cabanatuan. The Rangers penetrated 22–24 miles (35–39 km) behind enemy lines, including crawling a mile (1 mile (1.6 km)) across an open field on their stomachs. During their final assault the Rangers destroyed a garrison of Japanese soldiers twice their size and rescued 500 POWs.[15][27]

The 6th Ranger Battalion's final mission was to secure a drop zone for 11th Airborne Division paratroopers 250 miles (400 km) into enemy territory. They linked up with the 37th Infantry Division and ended the war in the Philippines.[28]

Merrill's Marauders

 
Marauders badge

In August 1944, after five months of fighting in China Burma India Theater with the Japanese Army, Merrill's Marauders (5307th Composite Unit (Provisional)) were consolidated into then 475th Infantry, afterwards the 75th Infantry Regiment.[21] As a special force group led by Brigadier General Frank Merrill, to commemorate its companion Chinese Expeditionary Force (Burma), Merrill's Marauders put the sun from the National emblem of the Republic of China and the Star from Burma's flag on its badge. The lightning bolt signifies the swiftness of their strikes.[29] Merrill's Marauders would later become part of the regiment's lineage.[21]

Korean War

The outbreak of hostilities in Korea in June 1950 again signaled the need for Rangers. Fifteen Ranger companies were formed during the Korean War, drawing their lineages from the World War II era Ranger battalions.[21] The Rangers went to battle throughout the winter of 1950 and the spring of 1951. They were nomadic warriors, attached first to one Regiment and then to another. They performed "out front" work—scouting, patrolling, raids, ambushes, spearheading assaults, and as counterattack forces to regain lost positions.[30] In all six airborne Ranger companies, the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 8th, averaging 125 soldiers in each company served during the conflict. Two other companies, the 10th and 11th, were scheduled for Korea but were deactivated in Japan.[31] During the course of the Korean War, 100 Rangers were killed in action and 296 were wounded in action.[32]

Vietnam War

 
1st Cav Rangers making commo check prior to patrol, 12 February 1968

The history of Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP—pronounced "Lurp"), LRP, and Ranger units deployed during the Cold War in Europe and Vietnam is based on three time periods: 1) LRRP from late 1965 to 20 December 1967; 2) LRP from late December 1967 through January 1969; and 3) Ranger from 1 February 1969, to 1972 when the Vietnam War drew down and the U.S. Vietnam Ranger units were deactivated.[33] Despite sharing a similar name, these Ranger units under the 75th Infantry Regiment (Ranger) drew their lineages not from the World War II/Korean War era Ranger battalions but from 5307 Composite Unit, also known as Merrill's Marauders.[21] In 1974, their colors and lineage were passed to newly formed Ranger Battalions based in the United States.[33]

The first period above began in Vietnam in November 1966 with the creation of a provisional LRRP Detachment by the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile); followed by the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division; the 1st Infantry Division; and the 25th Infantry Division in June 1966. General William C. Westmoreland, commander of Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), ordered the creation of provisional LRRPs in all Infantry brigades and divisions on 8 July 1966. By the winter of 1966 the 4th and 9th Infantry Divisions had operational LRRP units, and in January 1967 the 196th Light Infantry Brigade had the same. The 101st Airborne Division "main body," while still at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, converted its divisional Recondo School into a provisional LRRP unit in the summer of 1967, before the division deployed to Vietnam. This provisional company arrived in Vietnam in late November 1967.[34]

 
Two 1st Cav LRP Ranger teams in Quang Tri, Vietnam, 26 July 1968

The second period began in late June 1967, when the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Earle G. Wheeler, authorized the formation of two long-range patrol companies for I and II Field Forces. Company E (Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol), 20th Infantry (Airborne) was activated on 25 September 1967 and assigned to I Field Force and stationed at Phan Rang. The nucleus of this unit came from the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division LRRP Platoon, along with soldiers from the replacement stream. Company F (Long Range Patrol), 51st Infantry (Airborne) was activated on 25 September 1967 and assigned to II Field Force stationed at Bien Hoa. Its nucleus came from the LRRP platoon of the 173d Airborne Brigade, along with soldiers from the replacement stream. Each of the two Field Force LRP companies had a strength of 230 men, and was commanded by a major.[34] In an apparent response to division commanders' tactical requirements, and bolstered by the combat effectiveness of the provisional LRRP units, in the winter of 1967 the Army authorized separate company designations for Long Range Patrol (LRP) units in divisions and detachments in separate brigades. The divisional LRP companies were authorized 118 men and the brigade detachments 61 men. The wholesale renaming of existing divisional LRP units occurred on 20 December 1967 in the 1st Cavalry, 1st Infantry, 4th Infantry, 9th Infantry, 23d (Americal), and 25th Infantry Divisions. LRP detachments were created in the 199th Light Infantry Brigade on 10 January 1968, in the 173d Airborne Brigade on 5 February 1968, and in the 3d Brigade 82d Airborne Division and 1st Brigade 5th Mechanized Division on 15 December 1968.[34]

On 1 February 1969, the final period of the existence of these units began when the Department of the Army redesignated the LRP companies and detachments as lettered Ranger companies of the 75th Infantry Regiment under the Combined Arms Regimental System (CARS). The "re-flagged" Ranger companies were: "A" V Corps Rangers, Fort Hood, Texas; "B" VII Corps Rangers, Fort Lewis, Washington; "C" I Field Forces, Vietnam; "D" II Field Forces, Vietnam; "E" 9th Infantry Division, Vietnam; F 25th Infantry Division, Vietnam; "G" 23rd Infantry Division, Vietnam; "H" 1st Cavalry Division, Vietnam; "I" 1st Infantry Division, Vietnam; "K" 4th Infantry Division, Vietnam; "L" 101st Airborne Division, Vietnam; "M" 199th Light Infantry Brigade, Vietnam; "N" 173rd Airborne Brigade, Vietnam; "O" 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, Vietnam; "P" 1st Brigade, 5th Infantry Division (Mechanized), Vietnam; "D/151" Indiana National Guard; and "F/425 " Michigan National Guard.[9] The third period ended when the Ranger companies were inactivated as their parent units were withdrawn from the war between November 1969 (starting with Company O, 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division) to 15 August 1972 (ending with Company H, 1st Cavalry Division).[33][34][9][35] On 9 June 1972, H Company (Ranger) lost SGT Elvis Weldon Osborne Jr. and CPL Jeffrey Alan Maurer to enemy action. Three other US soldiers were killed by non-hostile action that day, but SGT Osborne and CPL Maurer were the last US Army infantrymen killed on the ground, as well as the last Rangers killed in the Vietnam War.[36]

Post-Vietnam War

 
Rangers from 1/75 during a training exercise 1989–1990 1LT Joe Yorio, CPT Jeff Jarkowsky and SSG Paul Johnson

In January 1974, General Creighton Abrams, Army Chief of Staff, directed the formation of a Ranger battalion. General Kenneth C. Leuer was charged with activating, organizing, training and leading the first battalion sized Ranger unit since World War II. Though the Vietnam War era Ranger companies of the 75th Infantry Regiment (Ranger), which drew their lineages from Merrill's Marauders, had all been deactivated (or soon would be), they passed their lineages and colors to these new battalions. The 1st Battalion, which carried its legacy from Merrill's Marauders via Company C, 75th Infantry Regiment (Ranger) was activated and parachuted into Fort Stewart, Georgia, on 1 July 1974. The 2nd Battalion, which drew lineage from Company H, 75th Infantry (Ranger), followed shortly afterward with activation at Fort Lewis, Washington on 1 October 1974. The 3rd Battalion and Headquarters Company were activated and received their colors on 3 October 1984 from Company F, 75th Infantry Regiment (Ranger) at Fort Benning, Georgia. On 3 February 1986, the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Battalions of the 75th were consolidated with active and inactive units which carried the lineages of the World War II era: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Ranger Battalions. The regiment as a whole was concurrently redesignated as the 75th Ranger Regiment.[30][21][37][38][39]

The modern Ranger battalions were first called upon in 1980 when elements of 1st Ranger Battalion participated in Operation Eagle Claw, the Iranian hostage-rescue mission. In October 1983, 1st and 2nd Ranger Battalions spearheaded Operation Urgent Fury, conducting a dangerous low-level parachute assault to seize Point Salines Airfield and rescue American citizens at True Blue Medical Campus in Grenada.[30]

The entire 75th Ranger Regiment participated in Operation Just Cause, which lasted from December 1989 to January 1990. Rangers spearheaded the action by conducting two important operations. Simultaneous parachute assaults were conducted onto Torrijos/Tocumen International Airport, Rio Hato Airfield, and General Manuel Noriega's beach house to neutralize Panamanian Defense Forces. The Rangers captured more than 1,014 prisoners of war and more than 18,000 weapons.[30]

Elements of Company B, and 1st Platoon Company A, 1st Ranger Battalion, deployed to Saudi Arabia from 12 February 1991 to 15 April 1991 for Operation Desert Storm. They conducted raids and provided a quick reaction force in cooperation with allied forces.[30] In December 1991, 1/75 and the Regimental headquarters deployed to Kuwait in a show of force called Operation Iris Gold. The Rangers performed an airborne assault onto Ali Al Salem airfield, near Kuwait City, conducted a 50 km (31 mi) foot march through devastation (including mine fields) left from the ground campaign, conducted a live fire exercise, and left on foot.

In August 1993, elements of 3rd Ranger Battalion deployed to Somalia to help United Nations forces attempting to bring order to the chaotic and starving nation. On 3 October 1993, the Rangers conducted a daylight raid with Delta Force. They captured the high-value targets but the ensuing Battle of Mogadishu ended in chaos as the American forces were trapped for hours inside the city by Somalian militias, due to a series of planning and command errors, resulting in the death of several American soldiers. Rangers held improvised positions for nearly 18 hours, killing between 500 and 1,000 Somalis before American QRF, Pakistani, and Malaysian troops with armor rescued them and the American troops could retreat. The mission was seen as a pyrrhic victory[30]

Regimental Reconnaissance Company

In 1984, the 75th Ranger Regiment established a Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment (RRD). On 24 November 2000, the detachment deployed with a command-and-control element to Kosovo for Task Force Falcon.[30] By 2005, the unit—enlarged and renamed the Regimental Reconnaissance Company (RRC)—had become an elite special operations force and a member of Joint Special Operations Command.[40] In 2006, the Regimental Reconnaissance Company was moved into the new Regimental Special Troops Battalion.[41]

Regimental Special Troops Battalion

Several years into the War on Terror, the 75th Ranger Regiment created a Regimental Special Troops Battalion (RSTB) to help switch from short-term "contingency missions" to continuous combat operations.[30] Activated on 17 July 2006, the RSTB conducts sustainment, intelligence, reconnaissance and maintenance missions that were previously accomplished by small detachments assigned to the Regimental Headquarters and then attached within each of the three Ranger battalions. The battalion consists of the Ranger Reconnaissance Company, the Ranger Communications Company (RCC), the Ranger Military Intelligence Company (RMIC), and the Ranger Selection and Training Company (RST&C).[41] The RSTB draws its lineage from Company N, 75th Infantry Regiment (back to Merrill's Marauders) and Company B, 1st Ranger Infantry Battalion.[42]

Global War on Terrorism

While the Ranger Regiment has traditionally been considered an elite light infantry force, its operations in Afghanistan and Iraq from 2001 to 2012 demonstrated its ability to conduct a full range of special operations missions.

In October 2007,[citation needed] a D Company was added to each of the three battalions of the 75th Ranger Regiment.[43]

By 2012, the 75th Ranger Regiment was conducting sustained combat operations in multiple countries, deploying from multiple locations in the United States—an unprecedented task for the regiment. Rangers conducted combat operations with almost every deployed special operations, conventional, and coalition force in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. The Ranger Regiment executed a wide range of operations, including airborne and air assaults into Afghanistan and Iraq, mounted infiltrations behind enemy lines, complex urban raids on high-value targets (HVTs), and rescue operations.[30] Ranger battalion operational tempo while deployed was high. During one Afghanistan deployment, the 1st Ranger Battalion conducted more than 900 missions, captured nearly 1,700 enemy combatants (including 386 high-value targets), and killed more than 400 fighters.[44]

By mid-2015 each Ranger battalion had completed its twentieth deployment to Afghanistan and Iraq.

Army Times reported that in December 2016, the first female officer completed RASP, making the 75th Ranger Regiment the first special operations unit to have a female soldier graduate its selection course.[45]

Operation Enduring Freedom – Afghanistan

After the events of 11 September 2001, Rangers were called into action for the War on Terror. On 19 October 2001, 200 Rangers of 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment spearheaded ground forces by conducting an airborne assault to seize Objective Rhino during the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan,[46] the opening battle of Operation Enduring Freedom – Afghanistan. Spc. Jonn J. Edmunds and Pfc. Kristofer T. Stonesifer became the first combat casualties in the War on Terror when their MH-60L helicopter crashed at Objective Honda in Pakistan, a temporary staging site used by a company of Rangers from 3rd Battalion.[47][48] Ranger protection force teams were part of Task Force Sword, a black SOF unit whose primary objective was capturing or killing senior leaders and HVTs with al-Qaeda and the Taliban.[49] A squadron of Delta Force operatives, supported by Rangers from TF Sword, conducted an operation outside Kandahar at a location known as Objective Gecko; they missed the mission's target but killed some 30 Taliban fighters in a heavy firefight.[50][51]

In November 2001, the 75th Ranger Regiment carried out its second combat parachute drop into Afghanistan: a platoon-sized Ranger security element, including the Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment Team 3 conducted the missions: Objective Wolverine, Raptor and Operation Relentless Strike. During the Battle of Tora Bora in December 2001, a CIA Jawbreaker team (a small group of CIA SAD ground branch operators) requested that the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment be inserted into the mountains to block escape routes from Tora Bora to Pakistan. They would serve as an "anvil" while Special Forces with the Afghan Militia Forces would be the "hammer". With the attached Air Force Combat Controllers, the Rangers could have directed airstrikes onto enemy concentrations or engaged them in ambushes, but their requests to do so were denied.[52]

In March 2002, 35 Rangers from 1st Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment had been assigned as QRF for all Task Force operations, but only half of the platoon was available for the Battle of Takur Ghar. In the final days of Operation Anaconda, a mixed force of Rangers travelling in Blackhawk helicopters backed up operators from DEVGRU who intercepted a convoy of al-Qaeda fighters traveling in three SUVs via three MH-47Es. A firefight left 16 al-Qaeda fighters dead and two seriously wounded and captured. On 18 August, Rangers and other coalition special forces joined the 82nd Airborne Division in Operation Mountain Sweep, carrying out five combat air assault missions in the area around the villages of Dormat and Narizah, south of Khowst and Gardez. The force found an anti-aircraft gun, two 82mm mortars, recoilless rifles, rocket-propelled-grenade launchers, machine guns, small arms and ammunition for all of them; they also detained 10 people. Later in 2002, TF 11 was replaced by a small JSOC element manned by SEALs and Rangers.[53]

In 2003, after Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was arrested in a joint CIA-ISI operation in Pakistan, Rangers and 82nd Airborne Division troops helped transport him to a U.S. black site prison. After the troops secured an improvised desert strip in a dry river bed near the Pakistani border, an MC-130 Combat Talon plane landed and lowered its ramp, whereupon SEALs from DEVGRU drove Desert Patrol Vehicles carrying the detainee up the ramp into the back of the plane, which taxied and lifted off.[54]

In summer 2005, during Operation Red Wings, a Ranger patrol retrieved HM2 Marcus Luttrell five days after he went missing.[55]

In July 2006, in Helmand Province, two MH-47Es from 160th SOAR attempted to insert a combined strike element of DEVGRU, Rangers, and Afghan commandos so they could attack a compound. With some troops on the ground, a large insurgent force ambushed them; both helicopters were struck by small arms fire. One MH-47E pilot put his aircraft in the line of fire to protect the assault team disembarking from the other MH-47E, but was struck by an RPG and crash-landed without serious injury. The Ranger commander and an attached Australian commando organized an all-round defense while the other MH-47E held back the advancing insurgents until its Miniguns ran out of ammunition. An AC-130 Spectre joined the battle and kept the downed crew and passengers safe until a British Immediate Response Team helicopter recovered them. The AC-130 then destroyed the MH-47E wreck, denying it to the Taliban.[56] Also that year, a six-man RRD (Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment) team from the 75th Ranger Regiment attached to the JSOC Task Force inserted into the Hindu Kush mountain range after intelligence indicated that an insurgent chief, Haqqani, would be entering Afghanistan from Pakistan. After establishing an OP almost 4,000 meters above sea level, the RRD team waited and watched for their target. Insurgents arrived and began to fire on the Ranger team, whose attached JTAC called in an orbiting B-1B strategic bomber. The airplane killed an estimated 100 insurgents, but not Haqqani.[57]

 
A Ranger assault team assaults a compound in Nerkh district in Wardak province, Afghanistan,[58] on 19 November 2009.

In 2007, after a CIA source reported seeing Bin Laden in Tora Bora, many theater ISR assets were sent the area. The initial plan based around a small helicopter assault force soon expanded to include Special Forces ODAs and a Ranger element to provide a cordon for the SEALs. Eventually, the operation was launched under the cover of Air Force bombing, but after fruitless searching through the mountains, no sign of Bin Laden was found.[59]

In June 2009, Army soldier Bowe Bergdahl was captured by the Taliban. Over the five years that he was held by the Taliban and Haqqani Network, Rangers and DEVGRU "spun up" operations to rescue him, but each resulted in a "dry hole."[60]

 
Rangers armed with M4A1 carbines in SOPMOD Block II clear a room during a night raid in Helmand Province, Afghanistan,[61] on 26 August 2012.

On 8 October 2010, a troop from DEVGRU and two squads of Rangers tried to rescue Linda Norgrove, who was being held by the Taliban in compounds in the Korangal Valley. The rescue mission failed when a DEVGRU operator accidentally killed Norgrove with a grenade.[62]

For actions between 14 and 16 November 2010, Charlie Company 1/75th, received the Valorous Unit Award for extraordinary heroism, combat achievement, and conspicuous gallantry.[63]

With ISAF's surge in Afghanistan at its peak in summer 2011, 1/75th (and Bravo Company in particular) received the Meritorious Unit Citation for actions during Operation Enduring Freedom between 15 May – 28 August 2011. These included conducting continuous combat operations, including time-sensitive raids and deliberate movement-to-contact operations in enemy-held terrain beyond reach of friendly forces in places like Khost, Paktika and Nangarhar Province. Two Rangers from the battalion were killed during this time.[63] On 20 July, Delta Force supported by Rangers and Afghan SOF elements were inserted by the 160th SOAR into the mountainous region of Sar Rowzah District, Paktika Province. They were immediately engaged by insurgents who were heavily armed with DShK HMGs and RPGs; during that night's fighting, about 30 insurgents were killed. As the sun rose, dozens of remaining insurgents who had been hiding in bunkers and caves became visible, and armed UAVs, AH-6s, and MH-60 DAPs flew in close air support, as did ground attack aircraft. Fighting continued into a second day as bunkers and fighting positions were systematically cleared, some using then-recently issued Mk14 Antistructural Grenades. An estimated 80 to 100 Haqqani and foreign fighters were killed in the two-day battle.[64]

On 6 August, a platoon of U.S. Army Rangers began taking fire while trying to capture a senior Taliban leader in the Tangi Valley in Wardak province. A CH-47 helicopter carrying 38 American and Afghan servicemen was dispatched to help, but was shot down by the Taliban. All 38 aboard died in the deadliest single incident for Americans in the Afghanistan campaign.[citation needed]

Operation Iraqi Freedom

During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, all three Ranger Battalions were assigned to a new Task Force whose goals were to seize key locations, conduct long-range special reconnaissance, and capture HVTs. On 24 March 2003, 3rd Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment conducted a combat drop onto H-1 Air Base, securing the site as a staging area for operations in western Iraq. A company of Rangers and Royal Marines from 45 Commando flew into Iraq from Jordan to secure H-2 and H-3 airbases after they were captured by US, British and Australian SOF. On 26 March, B Company, 2/75th supported DEVGRU operators in the Objective Beaver raid on a suspected chemical and biological weapons site north of Haditha; they engaged numerous gunmen but found no chemical or biological weapons. On 1 April 2003, 290 Rangers from 1/75th and 2/75th helped rescue Private 1st Class Jessica Lynch; also that day, Delta Force and 3/75th captured the Haditha Dam and held it for five days.[65]

After the invasion, the main 75th Ranger element deployed to Iraq carried out operations in northern Iraq and was based out of Mosul or Tikrit, supported by a small element of Delta Force operators. The DEVGRU squadron were supported by a reinforced Ranger platoon as was the Delta Force squadron, all part of the overall effort by JSOC in Iraq.[66][67] On 18 June 2003, Delta Force operators and Rangers flew from Mosul via helicopter to chase a vehicle convoy of Ba'ath Party Iraqis who were fleeing over the border into Syria; JSOC suspected that Saddam Hussein was part of the convoy so the convoy was destroyed by an AC-130 Spectre. The operators then conducted a heliborne assault into a nearby compound that proved to be a Ba'athist safe house for ferrying former regime elements across the border. The operators came under fire from Syrian border guards, leading to a firefight that left several Syrians dead and 17 captured. Hussein was not in the convoy, but several of his cousins were.[67][68]

 
Rangers conduct a security halt in Iraq, 26 April 2007.

On 23 July 2005, in Baghdad, Rangers acted as a back-up force for the British Special Boat Service during Operation Marlborough.[69]

On 1 January 2006, Rangers raided a remote farmhouse outside Baghdad, capturing several gunmen without a fight and rescuing British freelance journalist Phillip Sands, who had been kidnapped a week earlier.

In Ramadi, the Rangers switched to riskier daylight raids after insurgents learned to move out of the city at night.[70]

In November 2006, a new secret directive sanctioned by President Bush allowed U.S. forces in Iraq to kill or capture Iranian nationals if they were targeting coalition forces. The directive reflected Hezbollah's success in the 2006 Lebanon War and Iran's defiance on its nuclear issue; the new mission was known by its acronym CII (Counter Iranian Influence). The CII missions were given to Task Force 17, a new command based around the headquarters of an Army Special Forces group.[66] To support TF 17, Rangers from B Company 2/75th flew into Sadr City to hunt a Shia Special Groups leader, leading to a fierce street battle; the Rangers conducted a fighting withdrawal that was likened to "Mogadishu Mile." More than 45 insurgents were killed with no Ranger losses; when the Iraqi government was made aware of the operation, permission to conduct operations in Sadr City was immediately withdrawn, limiting the Task Force's targeting.[71]

In June 2008, Rangers eliminated perhaps their highest-profile target yet: Abu Khalaf, deputy leader of al Qaeda in Iraq. A reinforced platoon of Rangers assaulted the target house, codenamed Objective Crescent Lake. As the Ranger assault element placed their explosive breaching charges, two sentries on the roof of the house armed with AK-47 assault rifles approached them, who were then killed by an attached 4-man sniper team from the Ranger battalion's sniper platoon. The assault element breached the house and methodically cleared each room; in one room, Rangers arrested a man and a woman. When the man reached under his clothing, the Rangers shot him, then the woman as she leapt on his body. The man was found to be wearing a suicide-bomb vest filled with ball bearings. Meawhile, Khalaf ran to the road with a pistol and was shot dead by the Ranger snipers. The Rangers also discovered a plan for a chemical weapon attack on a coalition base.[71]

By this time, the Rangers had sent an additional platoon to Iraq to help conduct a day-night raiding cycle, and conducted up to 100 missions in one three-month deployment.

After January 2009, the new Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) required JSOC and Ranger operations to seek Iraqi judicial permission for each mission.[71]

On the night of 18 April 2010, ISOF troops, supported by U.S. troops, raided a terrorist safe house near Tikrit in Iraq, the ISOF killed Abu Ayyub al-Masri and Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, the two leaders of ISI; 16 others were also arrested. A US UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter supporting the mission crashed, killing a Ranger NCO from 3/75th and wounding the aircrew.[72][73][74]

War in North-West Pakistan

In March 2006, DEVGRU operators and a Ranger element are alleged to have attacked an al-Qaeda training camp in North Waziristan in Pakistan. In an operation reportedly named Operation Vigilant Harvest, they were flown across the Afghan-Pakistani border and killed as many as 30 terrorists, including the Chechen camp commandant Imam Asad. The operation has been credited to the Pakistani Special Service Group.[75]

On 1 May 2011, a Ranger element was assigned to support Operation Neptune Spear, aimed at killing or capturing Osama bin Laden. The Ranger element and additional SEALs in MH-47E Chinooks served as QRF; the Ranger element would also protect the FARP north of Abbottabad. Following the successful completion of the operation, a Ranger team transported the bin Laden's body to the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson for burial at sea.[76]

Operation Freedom's Sentinel

In November 2015, the U.S. military sent a company of Rangers to southeastern Afghanistan, as part of the post-ISAF phase of the war in Afghanistan, to help Afghan counter-terrorism forces destroy an al-Qaeda training camp in a "fierce fight" that lasted for several days.[77]

On the evening of 26 April 2017, 50 Rangers from 3/75th joined 40 Afghan commandos in a joint US-Afghan raid on the headquarters of Abdul Hasib, the emir of ISIS-K, in a village in Achin District, Nangarhar Province. The force was flown into Mohmand Valley and within minutes were engaged in a heavy, close-quarter firefight with ISIL-KP militants. AC-130 gunships, Apache helicopters, F-16 fighters, and drones were called in. In the 3-hour firefight, two Rangers died (one each from C and D Companies, possibly from friendly fire) and one was wounded, while 35 ISIL-KP militants (including Abdul Hasib and an unspecified number of ISIL-KP leaders) were killed.[78][79][80]

Operation Inherent Resolve

In March 2017, as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, CNN reported that about 100 Rangers in Strykers and armored Humvees deployed in and around Manbij, Syria, to protect the 11th MEU, which was providing artillery and other support to U.S.-backed forces in the battle to liberate Raqqa from ISIL, rather than the typical mission of training, advising and assisting local forces. U.S. officials took the unusual step of publicly talking about the Ranger deployment and where they are located to protect against them inadvertently coming under fire from forces fighting in the region or Turkish, Russian, or Syrian government forces.[81]

Regiment Military Intelligence Battalion (RMIB)

On 22 May 2017, the Ranger Regiment Military Intelligence Battalion was established to specialize in intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, cyber, and electronic warfare operations. Based at Fort Benning, it consists of the Military Intelligence Company (MICO), Cyber Electro Magnetic Activities company (CEMA), and Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC).[82] It draws its lineage from Company P, 75th Infantry (back to Merrill's Marauders) and Company B, 2nd Ranger Infantry Battalion.[83]

Operation Kayla Mueller

On 26 October 2019, the Rangers, Delta Force, and the 160th SOAR killed ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.[84]

Organization

Unit Combat Service Identification Badge
(a.k.a. Ranger Scroll)
Beret Flash Location
Regimental Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC)
 
 
Fort Benning, Georgia
Regimental Military Intelligence Battalion
  • HHC
  • Military Intelligence Company
  • Cyber Electro Magnetic Activities Company
 
Regimental Special Troops Battalion
 
1st Ranger Battalion
  • HHC
  • Alpha Company (Rifle)
  • Bravo Company (Rifle)
  • Charlie Company (Rifle)
  • Delta Company (Rifle)
  • Echo Company (Support)
 
 
Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia
2nd Ranger Battalion
  • HHC
  • Alpha Company (Rifle)
  • Bravo Company (Rifle)
  • Charlie Company (Rifle)
  • Delta Company (Rifle)
  • Echo Company (Support)
 
 
Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington
3rd Ranger Battalion
  • HHC
  • Alpha Company (Rifle)
  • Bravo Company (Rifle)
  • Charlie Company (Rifle)
  • Delta Company (Rifle)
  • Echo Company (Support)
 
 
Fort Benning, Georgia

Lineage

Consolidated with the 475th Infantry and unit designated as 475th Infantry on 10 August 1944
Inactivated on 1 July 1945
Allotted to the Regular Army on 26 October 1954
Activated on 20 November 1954
Inactivated on 21 March 1956
Reorganized with Headquarters on 1 July 1984

Modern Ranger selection and training

Qualifications

 
U.S. Army Rangers, assigned to 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, prepare for extraction during Task Force Training at Fort Hunter Liggett, California, 30 January 2014.
  • Be a U.S. citizen
  • Be on active duty and volunteer for assignment
  • Have a General Technical Score of 105 or higher
  • No physical limitations (PULHES of 111221 or better)
  • Qualify and volunteer for Airborne training
  • A person of good character (no pending UCMJ action or drug or alcohol related incidents within 24 months)
  • Must enlist into or currently hold a Military Occupational Specialty found in the 75th Ranger Regiment
  • Able to attain at minimum a Secret clearance
  • Pass physical requirements which include the Ranger Fitness Test (58 push-ups, 69 sit-ups, run 5 miles in 40 minutes or less, 6 pull-ups), Water Survival Assessment, and 12-mile footmarch with a 35lb rucksack and weapon in under 3 hours[85]

Additionally Army officer applicants must:

  • Be an officer of grade O-1 through O-4[86]
  • Qualify for a Top Secret Security Clearance
  • Meet Year Group specific criteria
  • Hold an officer Military Occupational Specialty found in the 75th Ranger Regiment.[87]

Selection and training

Every volunteer for the Regiment, from new recruit to officer and any senior leader selected to command in the Regiment, will go through the Ranger Assessment and Selection Program (RASP) to assess their ability and provide the basic skills required to be an effective member of the 75th Ranger Regiment.[88]

For new soldiers, RASP is conducted after applicants complete their basic Military Occupational Specialty course and graduate from the Army's Parachutists Course (Airborne School). For soldiers, both enlisted and officer, who have completed their first tour of duty and meet the recruiting qualifications, a RASP date will be scheduled upon application and conditional acceptance to the 75th Ranger Regiment.[88]

RASP includes two levels of training: RASP 1 for junior non-commissioned officers and enlisted soldiers (pay grades E-1 through E-5) and RASP 2 for senior non-commissioned officers, officers, and warrant officers. Candidates train in physical fitness, marksmanship, small unit tactics, medical proficiency, and mobility. Training is fast-paced and intense, ensuring Ranger candidates can handle continued training and worldwide operations upon reaching their assigned Ranger unit. Throughout the course, candidates are screened to ensure that only the best soldiers are chosen for the Ranger Regiment. All candidates must meet the course requirements in order to serve in the Ranger Regiment. Upon completion of RASP, candidates will don the tan beret and 75th Ranger Regiment Scroll.[89]

RASP 1

Ranger Assessment & Selection Program 1 (RASP 1) is an 8-week selection course for junior non-commissioned officers and enlisted soldiers (pay grades E-1 through E-5) that is broken down into two phases. Ranger candidates endure a grueling test of physical and mental endurance, road marches with rucksacks, land navigation, leadership skills, and weapons training—performed under continuous food and sleep deprivation.[90] Graduates have the advanced skills all Rangers are required to know to start their career with the 75th Ranger Regiment. Phase 1 focuses more on the critical events and skill level 1 tasks and Phase 2 focuses on training in marksmanship, breaching, mobility, and physical fitness.[89]

RASP 2

Ranger Assessment & Selection Program 2 (RASP 2) is a 21-day selection course for senior non-commissioned officers, officers, and warrant officers. Candidates' physical and mental capabilities are tested as they learn the special tactics, techniques and procedures of the Regiment, as well as learning the expectations of leading and developing young Rangers.[89]

Continued training

To maintain readiness, Rangers train constantly. Rangers focus on the "Big 5": marksmanship, physical training, medical training, small unit tactics, and mobility.[91]

Throughout their time in the Ranger Regiment, Rangers may attend many types of special schools and training. Depending on occupation and job requirements, members of the 75th Ranger Regiment enjoy unparalleled access to countless military schools, including Jumpmaster, Sniper, Pathfinder, Military Freefall, Scuba, Survival-Evasion-Resistance-Escape (SERE), Special Operations Combat Medic and others. Before serving as a leader in the Regiment, Rangers are also expected to attend and graduate Ranger School. Members of the regiment may also get joint training and non-traditional military and civilian schooling.[88]

Rangers are trained in "do-it-yourself" emergency medicine. Based on the premise that 90% of deaths from wounds are suffered before reaching medical facilities and that there are not enough medics and doctors to go around, the regiment began to train Rangers to give themselves immediate, preliminary treatment. A 2011 study found a 3 percent death rate from potentially survivable causes in the 75th Regiment between October 2001 and April 2010. That compares with a 24 percent rate in a previously reported set of U.S. military deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, which included troops who didn't have Ranger-style training.[92]

RFS/RFM

As a U.S. Army Special Operations Command unit, the Rangers maintain more stringent standards for their personnel. If at any point a Ranger is deemed to be failing to meet these standards he may be relieved and removed from the regiment. This is commonly referred to as being RFSed, short for "Released For Standards". A Ranger can be RFS'd for virtually any reason, ranging from lack of motivation to disciplinary problems. Similarly, a Ranger physically incapable of performing his mission through prolonged illness or injury can also be removed from the regiment through a process referred to as RFM or "Relieved For Medical reasons".

Honors, mottos and creed

The 75th Ranger Regiment has been credited with numerous campaigns from World War II onwards. In World War II, they participated in 16 major campaigns, spearheading the campaigns in Morocco, Sicily, Naples-Foggia, Anzio, and Leyte. During the Vietnam War, they received campaign participation streamers for every campaign in the war. The regiment received streamers with arrowheads (denoting conflicts they spearheaded) for Grenada and Panama. To date, the Rangers have earned six Presidential Unit Citations, nine Valorous Unit Awards, and four Meritorious Unit Commendation, the most recent of which were earned in Vietnam and Haditha, Iraq, respectively.

Sua Sponte, Latin for Of their own accord is the 75th Ranger Regiment's Regimental motto. Contemporary rangers are triple-volunteers: for the U.S. Army, for Airborne School, and for service in the 75th Ranger Regiment.[93]

The motto "Rangers lead the way!" dates from 6 June 1944, during the Normandy Landings on Dog White sector of Omaha Beach. Then Brigadier General Norman Cota (assistant CO of the 29th ID) calmly walked towards Maj. Max Schneider (CO of the 5th Ranger Battalion) while under heavy machine gun fire and asked "What outfit is this?" Someone yelled "5th Rangers!" To this, Cota replied "Well then Goddammit, Rangers! Lead the way!"[24][15][25]

The term "Ranger"

Organizations define the term "Ranger" in different ways. For example, the annual "United States Army Best Ranger Competition," hosted by the Ranger Training Brigade, can be won by pairs of participants from the 75th Ranger Regiment, or by ranger-qualified entrants from other units in the U.S. military. For an individual to be inducted into the U.S. Army Ranger Association's "Ranger Hall of Fame," they "must have served in a Ranger unit in combat or be a successful graduate of the U.S. Army Ranger School." The Ranger Association further clarifies the type of unit: "A Ranger unit is defined as those Army units recognized in Ranger lineage or history."[94] Acceptance into the U.S. Army Ranger Association is limited to "Rangers that have earned the U.S. Army Ranger tab, WWII Rangers, Korean War Rangers, Vietnam War Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol members and Rangers, and all Rangers that participated in Operations Urgent Fury, Just Cause, Desert Storm, Restore Hope, Enduring Freedom, as well as those who have served honorably for at least one year in a recognized Ranger unit."[94]

Ranger term controversy

There is some dispute over the use of the word "Ranger." According to John Lock,

The problems of the Ranger Tab and indeed Ranger history is in large part caused by the lack of a clear-cut definition of who is a Ranger. The Ranger Department, the Infantry School, and Department of the Army have in the past carelessly accepted the definition of a Ranger unit to include the use of terms 'Ranger-type' and 'Units like Rangers,' and 'Special Mission Units.' In his book Raiders or Elite Infantry, David Hogan of the Center of Military History writes that 'By the time of the formation of LRRP units..., Ranger had become a term of legendary connotations but no precise meaning.' For the want of a definition of who and what is a Ranger, integrity was lost. As a result of Grenada, circumstances have changed. Since 1983, men have had the opportunity to earn and wear an authorized Ranger unit scroll or an authorized Ranger Tab or both. But there is a need for a firm definition of who and what constitutes a RANGER. Without that definition, we face the likelihood of future controversy.[95]

Beret change

 
COL Richard D. Clarke wearing the Regiment's tan beret. The tan beret may only be worn by those assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment or have served in the Regiment for one year and are assigned to a unit within USASOC.

In June 2001, Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki gave the order to issue black berets to regular soldiers. At the time, black berets were being worn exclusively by the Ranger Regiment. This created discontent within the 75th Ranger Regiment and even led to retired Rangers going on nationwide road marches to Washington, D.C. to protest against the decision.[96] Because there was not a Presidential authorization to the regiment for exclusive wear of the black beret, they switched to wearing a tan beret to preserve a unique appearance, tan being reflective of the buckskin worn by the men of Robert Rogers' Rangers during the French and Indian War.[97] A memorandum for the purpose of changing the Ranger beret from black to tan was sent and approved in March 2002.[98] Press releases were issued and articles were published all over the nation about this change in headgear after it was formally announced by the Regimental Commander, Colonel P. K. Keen.[99] In a private ceremony, past and present Rangers donned the tan beret on 26 July 2002.[100] The Army G-1 released a memorandum in October 2017 stating the following: WEAR OF THE TAN BERET OUTSIDE OF RANGER REGIMENT. The memo from the Army G-1 expands authorization for wear of the Tan Beret in the following assignments: Headquarters elements of Combatant Commands, The Joint Staff, Department of the Army Headquarters, U.S. Special Operations Command, U.S. Army Special Operations Command, U.S. Special Operations Command Joint Task Force, Theater Special Operations Command, and Joint Special Operations Command. The Tan Beret is authorized for Ranger-qualified Soldiers in the above listed assignments if they previously served in the 75th Ranger Regiment and departed on honorable terms. This was formalized in DA Pam 670–1 in January 2021.[101]

Notable members

 
Rangers descend in an MH-6 Little Bird helicopter flown by pilots from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment during a staged demonstration.

Colonels of the Regiment

Sequence Name From To Comments
3rd Colonel Wayne A. Downing May 1984 November 1985 Commander, 2–75th Ranger Battalion; Commander, USSOCOM
4th Colonel Joseph S. Stringham July 1985 August 1987 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion
5th Colonel Westley B. Taylor, Jr. June 1987 June 1989 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion
6th Colonel William F. Kernan June 1989 June 1991 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion; Commander, USJFCOM
7th Colonel David L. Grange June 1991 August 1993 Deputy Commander, 1st SFOD-D (Delta Force)
8th Colonel James T. Jackson July 1993 July 1995 Commander, 3–75th Ranger Battalion
9th Colonel William J. Leszczynski July 1995 June 1997 Commander, JTF-Bravo, Honduras
10th Colonel Stanley A. McChrystal June 1997 August 1999 Commander, 2–75th Ranger Battalion; Commander, US Forces Afghanistan
11th Colonel Purl K. Keen July 1999 July 2001 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion; Deputy Commander, USSOUTHCOM
12th Colonel Joseph L. Votel October 2001 August 2003 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion, Commander, USSOCOM; Commander, USCENTCOM
13th Colonel James C. Nixon June 2003 8 July 2005 Commander, 3–75th Ranger Battalion
14th Colonel Paul J. LaCamera 8 July 2005 9 August 2007 Commander, 3–75th Ranger Battalion; Commander, USARPAC; Commander, UNC/CFC/USFK
15th Colonel Richard D. Clarke, Jr. 9 August 2007 6 August 2009 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion; Commander, USSOCOM
16th Colonel Michael E. Kurilla 6 August 2009 28 July 2011 Commander, 2–75th Ranger Battalion; Commander, USCENTCOM
17th Colonel Mark W. Odom 28 July 2011 25 July 2013 Commander, 3–75th Ranger Battalion; DCG-S, 82nd Airborne Division
18th Colonel Christopher S. Vanek 25 July 2013 25 June 2015 DCO, 75th Ranger Regiment
19th Colonel Marcus S. Evans 25 June 2015 29 June 2017 Commander, 3–75th Ranger Battalion; Chief of Staff, USSOCOM
20th Colonel Brandon R. Tegtmeier 29 June 2017 12 July 2019 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion; DCG-O, 82nd Airborne Division
21st Colonel Todd S. Brown 12 July 2019 23 July 2021 Commander, 1–75th Ranger Battalion
22nd Colonel Jim (JD) Kiersey 23 July 2021 Incumbent Commander, 3–75th Ranger Battalion

Note: The above list accounts for 20 Colonels, missing are the first two. Assignment dates are based on various biographies and may not all line up properly. Specific dates are based on reports of changes of command.

See also

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General references

  • Neville, Leigh (2015), Special Forces in the War on Terror, General Military, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 978-1472807908, OCLC 889735079.
  • Urban, Mark (2012). Task Force Black: The Explosive True Story of the Secret Special Forces War in Iraq (1st ed.). New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-1-250-00696-7. OCLC 759914001. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  • Garland, Albert N.; Smyth, Howard McGaw (1965). (PDF). Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2012.

Further reading

External links

  • 75th Ranger Regiment Home Page
  • Official Recruiting Website
  • Fort Benning Profile
  • Army.mil profile
  • Goarmy.com profile

75th, ranger, regiment, confused, with, 75th, infantry, regiment, ranger, 75th, infantry, regiment, united, states, also, known, army, rangers, army, premier, light, infantry, unit, special, operations, force, within, united, states, army, special, operations,. Not to be confused with 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger or 75th Infantry Regiment United States The 75th Ranger Regiment also known as Army Rangers 3 is the U S Army s premier light infantry unit and special operations force within the United States Army Special Operations Command 1 4 The regiment is headquartered at Fort Benning Georgia and is composed of a regimental headquarters company a military intelligence battalion a special troops battalion and three Ranger battalions 75th Ranger Regiment75th Ranger Regiment s distinctive unit insigniaActive1984 present1942 present 1st Battalion 2006 present Regimental Special Troops Battalion Country United States of AmericaBranch United States ArmyTypeSpecialized Light Infantry 1 RoleSpecial OperationsSize3 623 personnel authorized 2 3 566 military personnel 57 civilian personnelPart ofU S Army Special Operations Command United States Special Operations Command 1 HeadquartersFort Benning Georgia U S Nickname s Army RangersAirborne RangersMotto s Sua Sponte Of their own accord Rangers Lead the WayColor of Beret TanEngagementsWorld War II Western Front North African campaign Italian campaign Operation Overlord Battle of Pointe du Hoc Battle for Brest Battle of Hurtgen Forest Cold War Korean War Vietnam War Invasion of Grenada War on Drugs Invasion of Panama Persian Gulf War Somali Civil War Battle of Mogadishu Kosovo War War on Terror Operation Enduring Freedom Iraq War War in North West Pakistan Operation Freedom s Sentinel Operation Inherent ResolveNotable operations Operation Rutter Operation Torch Operation Husky Operation Overlord Raid at Cabanatuan Operation Delaware Operation Eagle Claw Operation Gothic Serpent Operation Enduring Freedom Operation Rhino Operation Anaconda Operation Kayla MuellerWebsitewww wbr soc wbr mil wbr rangers wbr 75thrr wbr htmlCommandersCurrentcommanderColonel J D KeirseyCommand Sergeant MajorCommand Sergeant Major Bret JohnsonInsigniaRegimental coat of armsNATO Map Symbol 1998 NATO Map Symbol 2017 U S Infantry RegimentsPrevious Next74th Infantry Regiment 85th Infantry RegimentThe 75th Ranger Regiment primarily handles direct action raids in hostile or sensitive environments often killing or capturing high value targets Other missions include airfield seizure special reconnaissance personnel recovery clandestine insertion and site exploitation 4 5 The regiment can deploy one Ranger battalion within eighteen hours of alert notification 4 The 75th Ranger Regiment is one of the U S military s most extensively used units On December 17 2021 it marked 7 000 consecutive days of combat operations 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin 1 2 World War II battalions 1 2 1 1st Ranger Battalion 1 2 2 Creation of 3rd and 4th Ranger Battalions 1 2 3 Fall of 1st 3rd and 4th Battalions 1 2 4 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions 1 2 5 6th Ranger Battalion 1 3 Merrill s Marauders 1 4 Korean War 1 5 Vietnam War 1 6 Post Vietnam War 1 7 Regimental Reconnaissance Company 1 8 Regimental Special Troops Battalion 1 9 Global War on Terrorism 1 9 1 Operation Enduring Freedom Afghanistan 1 9 2 Operation Iraqi Freedom 1 9 3 War in North West Pakistan 1 9 4 Operation Freedom s Sentinel 1 9 5 Operation Inherent Resolve 1 9 6 Regiment Military Intelligence Battalion RMIB 1 9 7 Operation Kayla Mueller 2 Organization 3 Lineage 4 Modern Ranger selection and training 4 1 Qualifications 4 2 Selection and training 4 2 1 RASP 1 4 2 2 RASP 2 4 3 Continued training 4 4 RFS RFM 5 Honors mottos and creed 6 The term Ranger 6 1 Ranger term controversy 7 Beret change 8 Notable members 9 Colonels of the Regiment 10 See also 11 Citations 12 General references 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditOrigin Edit Main article United States Army Rangers American Ranger history predates the American Revolutionary War Captain Benjamin Church formed Church s Rangers which fought hostile Native American tribes during King Philip s War 7 In 1756 Robert Rogers recruited nine Ranger companies to fight in the French and Indian War They were known as Rogers Rangers The 75th Regiment s history dates back these rifle companies organized by Rogers which made long range attacks against French forces and their Indian allies and were instrumental in capturing Fort Detroit 8 During the American Revolutionary War Rogers served as a Loyalist officer on the side of the Crown and many of his former Rangers served on both sides One John Stark commanded the 1st New Hampshire Regiment which gained fame at the Battles of Bunker Hill and Bennington 9 10 Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys in Vermont were also designated as a ranger unit In 1775 the Continental Congress later formed eight companies of expert riflemen to fight in the Revolutionary War In 1777 this force commanded by Daniel Morgan was known as The Corps of Rangers Francis Marion The Swamp Fox organized another famous Revolutionary War Ranger element known as Marion s Partisans 10 Perhaps the most famous Ranger unit in the Revolutionary War was Butler s Rangers from upstate New York During the War of 1812 companies of United States Rangers were raised from among the frontier settlers as part of the regular army Throughout the war they patrolled the frontier from Ohio to Western Illinois on horseback and by boat Rangers participated in many skirmishes and battles with the British and their American Indian allies After the Civil War more than half a century passed without Ranger units in the United States World War II battalions Edit 1st Ranger Battalion Edit Soon after the United States entered World War II in 1941 General George C Marshall Chief of Staff of the United States Army envisioned an elite unit of fifty men selected voluntarily from the 34th Infantry Division 11 To create and lead this new unit Marshall picked Major William Orlando Darby who was serving as General Russell P Hartle s aide in Belfast Northern Ireland where he was frustrated with his lack of hands on experience On 8 June 1942 Darby now known as the founder of the modern Rangers was put in charge of the First Ranger Battalion under General Hartle 12 On 19 August 1942 fifty Rangers fought alongside Canadian and British Commandos in the ill fated Dieppe Raid on the coast of occupied France Three Rangers were killed and several captured The first American soldier killed in Europe in World War II Ranger Lieutenant E V Loustalot was part of this raid During the mission Loustalot took command after the British captain leading the assault was killed While attempting to reach a machine gun nest at the top of a cliff he was wounded three times by enemy fire and killed 13 In November 1942 the entire 1st Ranger Battalion entered combat for the first time when they landed at Arzew Algeria during Operation Torch The First were split into two groups in hopes of assaulting Vichy French batteries and fortifications before the 1st Infantry Division would land on the beach The operation was successful and the unit sustained minimal casualties 11 On 11 February 1943 the Rangers moved 32 miles 51 km to raid an Italian encampment at Sened Station Moving at night the Rangers slipped to within 50 yards 46 m of the Italian outpost and began their attack It took the battalion only 20 minutes to overtake the garrison and achieve their objective Seventy five Italians were killed and eleven were taken prisoner 11 Darby along with four other officers and nine enlisted was awarded the Silver Star Medal for this action 14 The battalion itself gained the nickname the Black Death by the Italians 12 At the time the Italians still held the pass at Djebel El Ank located at the far east edge of El Guettar The Rangers linked up with engineers elements of the 26th Infantry First Infantry Division to attack the area in preparation for the Battle of El Guettar The First Rangers orders were to move overland on foot 12 miles 19 km to outflank the enemy s position In eight hours of fighting the Americans captured the objective the First Rangers took 200 prisoners 15 Creation of 3rd and 4th Ranger Battalions Edit With the success of the First Ranger Battalion during the Tunisian campaign Darby requested that the Rangers be expanded to a full Regiment The request was granted The Third and Fourth Ranger Battalions were authorized shortly after and were trained and led by veteran officers and NCOs from the First Battalion 11 After getting the green light to expand Darby ran into a problem the Rangers only took volunteers Darby knowing that the best man for the job was not always a volunteer sought out men around Oran Although he was still limited in that he could only accept volunteers he began to find ways around this For instance he began to give speeches put up posters and encourage his officers to scout around for eligible candidates By June 1943 the three Ranger battalions were fully operational 1st Rangers were still under Colonel Darby the 3rd Rangers under Major Herman Dammer and the 4th Rangers commanded by Major Roy Murray 11 12 1st and 4th Ranger Battalions were paired together and placed with General Terry Allen s 1st Division to spearhead the American landings of the Sicily campaign Landing outside Gela the Rangers took the town just after midnight starting off the Battle of Gela They held Gela enduring 50 hours of constant attack by enemy artillery tank and air forces 15 16 Following their success the two Ranger battalions were then ordered to take the town of Butera a fortress suspended on the 1 319 foot 402 m high edge of the cliff at Butera beach After almost withdrawing from the battle and requesting artillery to level the city a platoon of Rangers volunteered to breach its defenses Two privates John See and John Constantine sneaked in behind enemy lines and tricked the Italians and Germans into surrendering the city 17 Meanwhile the 3rd Ranger Battalion headed out into the area of Agrigento where they marched through Campobello Naro and Favara successfully occupying each town The 3rd then took the town of Porto Empedocle 18 Colonel Darby was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross and was promoted by General George Patton however Darby wanting to be closer to his men turned down this promotion 12 Fall of 1st 3rd and 4th Battalions Edit Main article Battle of Cisterna After a break for Christmas 1943 the Rangers were put together for a joint effort to occupy the town of Cisterna before the main infantry division moved in On the night of 30 January 1944 the 1st and 3rd battalions moved into the town passing many German soldiers who did not appear to notice the Rangers slip by 19 The 4th Ranger Battalion which approached the town from the opposite end met opposition almost immediately on the road During the night the 1st and 3rd Ranger battalions separated by about 2 miles 3 2 km and when daylight caught the 1st Ranger Battalion out in an open field the Germans began their ambush Surrounded and unable to escape the two Ranger battalions fought on until they exhausted their ammunition and resources The 4th Ranger Battalion pushed to save their comrades but were forced to withdraw After five hours of fighting the Rangers surrendered to the German armor and mechanized infantry The two battalions sustained 12 killed 36 wounded and 743 captured only eight were able to escape The 4th Battalion suffered 30 killed and 58 wounded 20 This marked the end of the three Ranger battalions The remaining 400 Rangers were scattered around the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment and the 137 original Rangers were sent home citation needed 1st and 3rd Battalions were disbanded on 15 August 1944 while 4th Battalion was disbanded on 24 October 1944 at Camp Butner North Carolina 21 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions Edit 2nd Ranger Battalion troops use rope ladders to scale Pointe du Hoc The 2nd Ranger Battalion and 5th Ranger Battalion were trained at Camp Forrest Tennessee on 1 April 1943 They first saw action 6 June 1944 during Operation Overlord During D day 2nd Rangers companies D E and F were ordered to take a strategic German outpost at Pointe du Hoc This coastal cliff was supposed to have several 155 mm artillery cannons aimed down at the beach 22 Once they arrived at the bottom of the cliff they had an enormous climb to make up rope ladders while receiving a barrage of machinegun fire from the Germans above The 2nd Rangers took the area even with the intense German resistance but the guns were not in sight A patrol scouting the area found the 155 mm coastal guns a mile away the patrol party quickly disabled the guns and resistance in the area In an interview Leonard Lomell and Jack Kuhn explained the events that took place that day The guns had to have been taken off the Pointe We were looking for any kind of evidence we could find and it looked like there were some markings on the secondary road where it joined the main road We decided to leapfrog Jack covered me and I went forward When I got a few feet forward I covered him It was a sunken road with very high hedgerows with trees and bushes and stuff like that It was wide enough to put a column of tanks in and they would be well hidden We didn t see anybody so we just took a chance running as fast as we could looking over the hedgerow At least we had the protection of the high hedgerows When it became my turn to look over I said God here they are They were in an orchard camouflaged in among the trees 23 Meanwhile the rest of the 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions spearheaded the attack on the beach at Omaha An apocryphal story tells of when General Norman Cota leading the 29th Infantry Division met with Major Max F Schneider commanding the 5th Ranger Battalion When Schneider was asked his unit by Cota someone yelled out 5th Rangers to which Cota replied Well then Goddammit Rangers lead the way This drive cut the German line allowing the conventional army to move in The phrase Rangers lead the way later became the motto of the regiment 24 15 25 The 2nd and 5th Ranger Battalions worked on special operation tasks in the Normandy Campaign The two battalions fought in many battles such as Battle for Brest and the Battle of the Hurtgen Forest The 2nd Rangers were responsible for capturing Le Conquet Peninsula where they disabled a 280 mm gun and took many German prisoners 14 The 2nd Ranger Battalion also went on to take several tactical German positions cutting the German line in the Rhineland In Saar west of Zerf the 5th Battalion took an overlooking German position cutting of all supply routes to German forces 26 6th Ranger Battalion Edit The 6th Ranger Battalion was stationed in the Pacific and served mostly in the Philippines and New Guinea All operations completed by the 6th Battalion were done in company or platoon size behind enemy lines They were the first soldiers to hit the Philippines three days before the army would launch the first invasion The 6th Ranger Battalion conducted long range reconnaissance operating miles past the front line 15 At Cabanatuan on the island of Luzon in January 1945 a company of the 6th Ranger Battalion executed the Raid at Cabanatuan The Rangers penetrated 22 24 miles 35 39 km behind enemy lines including crawling a mile 1 mile 1 6 km across an open field on their stomachs During their final assault the Rangers destroyed a garrison of Japanese soldiers twice their size and rescued 500 POWs 15 27 The 6th Ranger Battalion s final mission was to secure a drop zone for 11th Airborne Division paratroopers 250 miles 400 km into enemy territory They linked up with the 37th Infantry Division and ended the war in the Philippines 28 Merrill s Marauders Edit Main article Merrill s Marauders Marauders badge In August 1944 after five months of fighting in China Burma India Theater with the Japanese Army Merrill s Marauders 5307th Composite Unit Provisional were consolidated into then 475th Infantry afterwards the 75th Infantry Regiment 21 As a special force group led by Brigadier General Frank Merrill to commemorate its companion Chinese Expeditionary Force Burma Merrill s Marauders put the sun from the National emblem of the Republic of China and the Star from Burma s flag on its badge The lightning bolt signifies the swiftness of their strikes 29 Merrill s Marauders would later become part of the regiment s lineage 21 Korean War Edit Main article Korean War Ranger Companies The outbreak of hostilities in Korea in June 1950 again signaled the need for Rangers Fifteen Ranger companies were formed during the Korean War drawing their lineages from the World War II era Ranger battalions 21 The Rangers went to battle throughout the winter of 1950 and the spring of 1951 They were nomadic warriors attached first to one Regiment and then to another They performed out front work scouting patrolling raids ambushes spearheading assaults and as counterattack forces to regain lost positions 30 In all six airborne Ranger companies the 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th and 8th averaging 125 soldiers in each company served during the conflict Two other companies the 10th and 11th were scheduled for Korea but were deactivated in Japan 31 During the course of the Korean War 100 Rangers were killed in action and 296 were wounded in action 32 Vietnam War Edit Main article 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger 1st Cav Rangers making commo check prior to patrol 12 February 1968 The history of Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol LRRP pronounced Lurp LRP and Ranger units deployed during the Cold War in Europe and Vietnam is based on three time periods 1 LRRP from late 1965 to 20 December 1967 2 LRP from late December 1967 through January 1969 and 3 Ranger from 1 February 1969 to 1972 when the Vietnam War drew down and the U S Vietnam Ranger units were deactivated 33 Despite sharing a similar name these Ranger units under the 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger drew their lineages not from the World War II Korean War era Ranger battalions but from 5307 Composite Unit also known as Merrill s Marauders 21 In 1974 their colors and lineage were passed to newly formed Ranger Battalions based in the United States 33 The first period above began in Vietnam in November 1966 with the creation of a provisional LRRP Detachment by the 1st Cavalry Division Airmobile followed by the 1st Brigade 101st Airborne Division the 1st Infantry Division and the 25th Infantry Division in June 1966 General William C Westmoreland commander of Military Assistance Command Vietnam MACV ordered the creation of provisional LRRPs in all Infantry brigades and divisions on 8 July 1966 By the winter of 1966 the 4th and 9th Infantry Divisions had operational LRRP units and in January 1967 the 196th Light Infantry Brigade had the same The 101st Airborne Division main body while still at Fort Campbell Kentucky converted its divisional Recondo School into a provisional LRRP unit in the summer of 1967 before the division deployed to Vietnam This provisional company arrived in Vietnam in late November 1967 34 Two 1st Cav LRP Ranger teams in Quang Tri Vietnam 26 July 1968 The second period began in late June 1967 when the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Earle G Wheeler authorized the formation of two long range patrol companies for I and II Field Forces Company E Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol 20th Infantry Airborne was activated on 25 September 1967 and assigned to I Field Force and stationed at Phan Rang The nucleus of this unit came from the 1st Brigade 101st Airborne Division LRRP Platoon along with soldiers from the replacement stream Company F Long Range Patrol 51st Infantry Airborne was activated on 25 September 1967 and assigned to II Field Force stationed at Bien Hoa Its nucleus came from the LRRP platoon of the 173d Airborne Brigade along with soldiers from the replacement stream Each of the two Field Force LRP companies had a strength of 230 men and was commanded by a major 34 In an apparent response to division commanders tactical requirements and bolstered by the combat effectiveness of the provisional LRRP units in the winter of 1967 the Army authorized separate company designations for Long Range Patrol LRP units in divisions and detachments in separate brigades The divisional LRP companies were authorized 118 men and the brigade detachments 61 men The wholesale renaming of existing divisional LRP units occurred on 20 December 1967 in the 1st Cavalry 1st Infantry 4th Infantry 9th Infantry 23d Americal and 25th Infantry Divisions LRP detachments were created in the 199th Light Infantry Brigade on 10 January 1968 in the 173d Airborne Brigade on 5 February 1968 and in the 3d Brigade 82d Airborne Division and 1st Brigade 5th Mechanized Division on 15 December 1968 34 On 1 February 1969 the final period of the existence of these units began when the Department of the Army redesignated the LRP companies and detachments as lettered Ranger companies of the 75th Infantry Regiment under the Combined Arms Regimental System CARS The re flagged Ranger companies were A V Corps Rangers Fort Hood Texas B VII Corps Rangers Fort Lewis Washington C I Field Forces Vietnam D II Field Forces Vietnam E 9th Infantry Division Vietnam F 25th Infantry Division Vietnam G 23rd Infantry Division Vietnam H 1st Cavalry Division Vietnam I 1st Infantry Division Vietnam K 4th Infantry Division Vietnam L 101st Airborne Division Vietnam M 199th Light Infantry Brigade Vietnam N 173rd Airborne Brigade Vietnam O 3rd Brigade 82nd Airborne Division Vietnam P 1st Brigade 5th Infantry Division Mechanized Vietnam D 151 Indiana National Guard and F 425 Michigan National Guard 9 The third period ended when the Ranger companies were inactivated as their parent units were withdrawn from the war between November 1969 starting with Company O 3rd Brigade 82nd Airborne Division to 15 August 1972 ending with Company H 1st Cavalry Division 33 34 9 35 On 9 June 1972 H Company Ranger lost SGT Elvis Weldon Osborne Jr and CPL Jeffrey Alan Maurer to enemy action Three other US soldiers were killed by non hostile action that day but SGT Osborne and CPL Maurer were the last US Army infantrymen killed on the ground as well as the last Rangers killed in the Vietnam War 36 Post Vietnam War Edit Rangers from 1 75 during a training exercise 1989 1990 1LT Joe Yorio CPT Jeff Jarkowsky and SSG Paul Johnson In January 1974 General Creighton Abrams Army Chief of Staff directed the formation of a Ranger battalion General Kenneth C Leuer was charged with activating organizing training and leading the first battalion sized Ranger unit since World War II Though the Vietnam War era Ranger companies of the 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger which drew their lineages from Merrill s Marauders had all been deactivated or soon would be they passed their lineages and colors to these new battalions The 1st Battalion which carried its legacy from Merrill s Marauders via Company C 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger was activated and parachuted into Fort Stewart Georgia on 1 July 1974 The 2nd Battalion which drew lineage from Company H 75th Infantry Ranger followed shortly afterward with activation at Fort Lewis Washington on 1 October 1974 The 3rd Battalion and Headquarters Company were activated and received their colors on 3 October 1984 from Company F 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger at Fort Benning Georgia On 3 February 1986 the 1st 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 75th were consolidated with active and inactive units which carried the lineages of the World War II era 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th and 6th Ranger Battalions The regiment as a whole was concurrently redesignated as the 75th Ranger Regiment 30 21 37 38 39 The modern Ranger battalions were first called upon in 1980 when elements of 1st Ranger Battalion participated in Operation Eagle Claw the Iranian hostage rescue mission In October 1983 1st and 2nd Ranger Battalions spearheaded Operation Urgent Fury conducting a dangerous low level parachute assault to seize Point Salines Airfield and rescue American citizens at True Blue Medical Campus in Grenada 30 The entire 75th Ranger Regiment participated in Operation Just Cause which lasted from December 1989 to January 1990 Rangers spearheaded the action by conducting two important operations Simultaneous parachute assaults were conducted onto Torrijos Tocumen International Airport Rio Hato Airfield and General Manuel Noriega s beach house to neutralize Panamanian Defense Forces The Rangers captured more than 1 014 prisoners of war and more than 18 000 weapons 30 Elements of Company B and 1st Platoon Company A 1st Ranger Battalion deployed to Saudi Arabia from 12 February 1991 to 15 April 1991 for Operation Desert Storm They conducted raids and provided a quick reaction force in cooperation with allied forces 30 In December 1991 1 75 and the Regimental headquarters deployed to Kuwait in a show of force called Operation Iris Gold The Rangers performed an airborne assault onto Ali Al Salem airfield near Kuwait City conducted a 50 km 31 mi foot march through devastation including mine fields left from the ground campaign conducted a live fire exercise and left on foot In August 1993 elements of 3rd Ranger Battalion deployed to Somalia to help United Nations forces attempting to bring order to the chaotic and starving nation On 3 October 1993 the Rangers conducted a daylight raid with Delta Force They captured the high value targets but the ensuing Battle of Mogadishu ended in chaos as the American forces were trapped for hours inside the city by Somalian militias due to a series of planning and command errors resulting in the death of several American soldiers Rangers held improvised positions for nearly 18 hours killing between 500 and 1 000 Somalis before American QRF Pakistani and Malaysian troops with armor rescued them and the American troops could retreat The mission was seen as a pyrrhic victory 30 Regimental Reconnaissance Company Edit Main article Regimental Reconnaissance Company In 1984 the 75th Ranger Regiment established a Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment RRD On 24 November 2000 the detachment deployed with a command and control element to Kosovo for Task Force Falcon 30 By 2005 the unit enlarged and renamed the Regimental Reconnaissance Company RRC had become an elite special operations force and a member of Joint Special Operations Command 40 In 2006 the Regimental Reconnaissance Company was moved into the new Regimental Special Troops Battalion 41 Regimental Special Troops Battalion Edit Several years into the War on Terror the 75th Ranger Regiment created a Regimental Special Troops Battalion RSTB to help switch from short term contingency missions to continuous combat operations 30 Activated on 17 July 2006 the RSTB conducts sustainment intelligence reconnaissance and maintenance missions that were previously accomplished by small detachments assigned to the Regimental Headquarters and then attached within each of the three Ranger battalions The battalion consists of the Ranger Reconnaissance Company the Ranger Communications Company RCC the Ranger Military Intelligence Company RMIC and the Ranger Selection and Training Company RST amp C 41 The RSTB draws its lineage from Company N 75th Infantry Regiment back to Merrill s Marauders and Company B 1st Ranger Infantry Battalion 42 Global War on Terrorism Edit While the Ranger Regiment has traditionally been considered an elite light infantry force its operations in Afghanistan and Iraq from 2001 to 2012 demonstrated its ability to conduct a full range of special operations missions In October 2007 citation needed a D Company was added to each of the three battalions of the 75th Ranger Regiment 43 By 2012 the 75th Ranger Regiment was conducting sustained combat operations in multiple countries deploying from multiple locations in the United States an unprecedented task for the regiment Rangers conducted combat operations with almost every deployed special operations conventional and coalition force in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom The Ranger Regiment executed a wide range of operations including airborne and air assaults into Afghanistan and Iraq mounted infiltrations behind enemy lines complex urban raids on high value targets HVTs and rescue operations 30 Ranger battalion operational tempo while deployed was high During one Afghanistan deployment the 1st Ranger Battalion conducted more than 900 missions captured nearly 1 700 enemy combatants including 386 high value targets and killed more than 400 fighters 44 By mid 2015 each Ranger battalion had completed its twentieth deployment to Afghanistan and Iraq Army Times reported that in December 2016 the first female officer completed RASP making the 75th Ranger Regiment the first special operations unit to have a female soldier graduate its selection course 45 Operation Enduring Freedom Afghanistan Edit After the events of 11 September 2001 Rangers were called into action for the War on Terror On 19 October 2001 200 Rangers of 3rd Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment spearheaded ground forces by conducting an airborne assault to seize Objective Rhino during the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan 46 the opening battle of Operation Enduring Freedom Afghanistan Spc Jonn J Edmunds and Pfc Kristofer T Stonesifer became the first combat casualties in the War on Terror when their MH 60L helicopter crashed at Objective Honda in Pakistan a temporary staging site used by a company of Rangers from 3rd Battalion 47 48 Ranger protection force teams were part of Task Force Sword a black SOF unit whose primary objective was capturing or killing senior leaders and HVTs with al Qaeda and the Taliban 49 A squadron of Delta Force operatives supported by Rangers from TF Sword conducted an operation outside Kandahar at a location known as Objective Gecko they missed the mission s target but killed some 30 Taliban fighters in a heavy firefight 50 51 In November 2001 the 75th Ranger Regiment carried out its second combat parachute drop into Afghanistan a platoon sized Ranger security element including the Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment Team 3 conducted the missions Objective Wolverine Raptor and Operation Relentless Strike During the Battle of Tora Bora in December 2001 a CIA Jawbreaker team a small group of CIA SAD ground branch operators requested that the 3rd Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment be inserted into the mountains to block escape routes from Tora Bora to Pakistan They would serve as an anvil while Special Forces with the Afghan Militia Forces would be the hammer With the attached Air Force Combat Controllers the Rangers could have directed airstrikes onto enemy concentrations or engaged them in ambushes but their requests to do so were denied 52 In March 2002 35 Rangers from 1st Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment had been assigned as QRF for all Task Force operations but only half of the platoon was available for the Battle of Takur Ghar In the final days of Operation Anaconda a mixed force of Rangers travelling in Blackhawk helicopters backed up operators from DEVGRU who intercepted a convoy of al Qaeda fighters traveling in three SUVs via three MH 47Es A firefight left 16 al Qaeda fighters dead and two seriously wounded and captured On 18 August Rangers and other coalition special forces joined the 82nd Airborne Division in Operation Mountain Sweep carrying out five combat air assault missions in the area around the villages of Dormat and Narizah south of Khowst and Gardez The force found an anti aircraft gun two 82mm mortars recoilless rifles rocket propelled grenade launchers machine guns small arms and ammunition for all of them they also detained 10 people Later in 2002 TF 11 was replaced by a small JSOC element manned by SEALs and Rangers 53 In 2003 after Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was arrested in a joint CIA ISI operation in Pakistan Rangers and 82nd Airborne Division troops helped transport him to a U S black site prison After the troops secured an improvised desert strip in a dry river bed near the Pakistani border an MC 130 Combat Talon plane landed and lowered its ramp whereupon SEALs from DEVGRU drove Desert Patrol Vehicles carrying the detainee up the ramp into the back of the plane which taxied and lifted off 54 In summer 2005 during Operation Red Wings a Ranger patrol retrieved HM2 Marcus Luttrell five days after he went missing 55 In July 2006 in Helmand Province two MH 47Es from 160th SOAR attempted to insert a combined strike element of DEVGRU Rangers and Afghan commandos so they could attack a compound With some troops on the ground a large insurgent force ambushed them both helicopters were struck by small arms fire One MH 47E pilot put his aircraft in the line of fire to protect the assault team disembarking from the other MH 47E but was struck by an RPG and crash landed without serious injury The Ranger commander and an attached Australian commando organized an all round defense while the other MH 47E held back the advancing insurgents until its Miniguns ran out of ammunition An AC 130 Spectre joined the battle and kept the downed crew and passengers safe until a British Immediate Response Team helicopter recovered them The AC 130 then destroyed the MH 47E wreck denying it to the Taliban 56 Also that year a six man RRD Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment team from the 75th Ranger Regiment attached to the JSOC Task Force inserted into the Hindu Kush mountain range after intelligence indicated that an insurgent chief Haqqani would be entering Afghanistan from Pakistan After establishing an OP almost 4 000 meters above sea level the RRD team waited and watched for their target Insurgents arrived and began to fire on the Ranger team whose attached JTAC called in an orbiting B 1B strategic bomber The airplane killed an estimated 100 insurgents but not Haqqani 57 A Ranger assault team assaults a compound in Nerkh district in Wardak province Afghanistan 58 on 19 November 2009 In 2007 after a CIA source reported seeing Bin Laden in Tora Bora many theater ISR assets were sent the area The initial plan based around a small helicopter assault force soon expanded to include Special Forces ODAs and a Ranger element to provide a cordon for the SEALs Eventually the operation was launched under the cover of Air Force bombing but after fruitless searching through the mountains no sign of Bin Laden was found 59 In June 2009 Army soldier Bowe Bergdahl was captured by the Taliban Over the five years that he was held by the Taliban and Haqqani Network Rangers and DEVGRU spun up operations to rescue him but each resulted in a dry hole 60 Rangers armed with M4A1 carbines in SOPMOD Block II clear a room during a night raid in Helmand Province Afghanistan 61 on 26 August 2012 On 8 October 2010 a troop from DEVGRU and two squads of Rangers tried to rescue Linda Norgrove who was being held by the Taliban in compounds in the Korangal Valley The rescue mission failed when a DEVGRU operator accidentally killed Norgrove with a grenade 62 For actions between 14 and 16 November 2010 Charlie Company 1 75th received the Valorous Unit Award for extraordinary heroism combat achievement and conspicuous gallantry 63 With ISAF s surge in Afghanistan at its peak in summer 2011 1 75th and Bravo Company in particular received the Meritorious Unit Citation for actions during Operation Enduring Freedom between 15 May 28 August 2011 These included conducting continuous combat operations including time sensitive raids and deliberate movement to contact operations in enemy held terrain beyond reach of friendly forces in places like Khost Paktika and Nangarhar Province Two Rangers from the battalion were killed during this time 63 On 20 July Delta Force supported by Rangers and Afghan SOF elements were inserted by the 160th SOAR into the mountainous region of Sar Rowzah District Paktika Province They were immediately engaged by insurgents who were heavily armed with DShK HMGs and RPGs during that night s fighting about 30 insurgents were killed As the sun rose dozens of remaining insurgents who had been hiding in bunkers and caves became visible and armed UAVs AH 6s and MH 60 DAPs flew in close air support as did ground attack aircraft Fighting continued into a second day as bunkers and fighting positions were systematically cleared some using then recently issued Mk14 Antistructural Grenades An estimated 80 to 100 Haqqani and foreign fighters were killed in the two day battle 64 On 6 August a platoon of U S Army Rangers began taking fire while trying to capture a senior Taliban leader in the Tangi Valley in Wardak province A CH 47 helicopter carrying 38 American and Afghan servicemen was dispatched to help but was shot down by the Taliban All 38 aboard died in the deadliest single incident for Americans in the Afghanistan campaign citation needed Operation Iraqi Freedom Edit During the 2003 invasion of Iraq all three Ranger Battalions were assigned to a new Task Force whose goals were to seize key locations conduct long range special reconnaissance and capture HVTs On 24 March 2003 3rd Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment conducted a combat drop onto H 1 Air Base securing the site as a staging area for operations in western Iraq A company of Rangers and Royal Marines from 45 Commando flew into Iraq from Jordan to secure H 2 and H 3 airbases after they were captured by US British and Australian SOF On 26 March B Company 2 75th supported DEVGRU operators in the Objective Beaver raid on a suspected chemical and biological weapons site north of Haditha they engaged numerous gunmen but found no chemical or biological weapons On 1 April 2003 290 Rangers from 1 75th and 2 75th helped rescue Private 1st Class Jessica Lynch also that day Delta Force and 3 75th captured the Haditha Dam and held it for five days 65 After the invasion the main 75th Ranger element deployed to Iraq carried out operations in northern Iraq and was based out of Mosul or Tikrit supported by a small element of Delta Force operators The DEVGRU squadron were supported by a reinforced Ranger platoon as was the Delta Force squadron all part of the overall effort by JSOC in Iraq 66 67 On 18 June 2003 Delta Force operators and Rangers flew from Mosul via helicopter to chase a vehicle convoy of Ba ath Party Iraqis who were fleeing over the border into Syria JSOC suspected that Saddam Hussein was part of the convoy so the convoy was destroyed by an AC 130 Spectre The operators then conducted a heliborne assault into a nearby compound that proved to be a Ba athist safe house for ferrying former regime elements across the border The operators came under fire from Syrian border guards leading to a firefight that left several Syrians dead and 17 captured Hussein was not in the convoy but several of his cousins were 67 68 Rangers conduct a security halt in Iraq 26 April 2007 On 23 July 2005 in Baghdad Rangers acted as a back up force for the British Special Boat Service during Operation Marlborough 69 On 1 January 2006 Rangers raided a remote farmhouse outside Baghdad capturing several gunmen without a fight and rescuing British freelance journalist Phillip Sands who had been kidnapped a week earlier In Ramadi the Rangers switched to riskier daylight raids after insurgents learned to move out of the city at night 70 In November 2006 a new secret directive sanctioned by President Bush allowed U S forces in Iraq to kill or capture Iranian nationals if they were targeting coalition forces The directive reflected Hezbollah s success in the 2006 Lebanon War and Iran s defiance on its nuclear issue the new mission was known by its acronym CII Counter Iranian Influence The CII missions were given to Task Force 17 a new command based around the headquarters of an Army Special Forces group 66 To support TF 17 Rangers from B Company 2 75th flew into Sadr City to hunt a Shia Special Groups leader leading to a fierce street battle the Rangers conducted a fighting withdrawal that was likened to Mogadishu Mile More than 45 insurgents were killed with no Ranger losses when the Iraqi government was made aware of the operation permission to conduct operations in Sadr City was immediately withdrawn limiting the Task Force s targeting 71 In June 2008 Rangers eliminated perhaps their highest profile target yet Abu Khalaf deputy leader of al Qaeda in Iraq A reinforced platoon of Rangers assaulted the target house codenamed Objective Crescent Lake As the Ranger assault element placed their explosive breaching charges two sentries on the roof of the house armed with AK 47 assault rifles approached them who were then killed by an attached 4 man sniper team from the Ranger battalion s sniper platoon The assault element breached the house and methodically cleared each room in one room Rangers arrested a man and a woman When the man reached under his clothing the Rangers shot him then the woman as she leapt on his body The man was found to be wearing a suicide bomb vest filled with ball bearings Meawhile Khalaf ran to the road with a pistol and was shot dead by the Ranger snipers The Rangers also discovered a plan for a chemical weapon attack on a coalition base 71 By this time the Rangers had sent an additional platoon to Iraq to help conduct a day night raiding cycle and conducted up to 100 missions in one three month deployment After January 2009 the new Status of Forces Agreement SOFA required JSOC and Ranger operations to seek Iraqi judicial permission for each mission 71 On the night of 18 April 2010 ISOF troops supported by U S troops raided a terrorist safe house near Tikrit in Iraq the ISOF killed Abu Ayyub al Masri and Abu Omar al Baghdadi the two leaders of ISI 16 others were also arrested A US UH 60 Blackhawk helicopter supporting the mission crashed killing a Ranger NCO from 3 75th and wounding the aircrew 72 73 74 War in North West Pakistan Edit In March 2006 DEVGRU operators and a Ranger element are alleged to have attacked an al Qaeda training camp in North Waziristan in Pakistan In an operation reportedly named Operation Vigilant Harvest they were flown across the Afghan Pakistani border and killed as many as 30 terrorists including the Chechen camp commandant Imam Asad The operation has been credited to the Pakistani Special Service Group 75 On 1 May 2011 a Ranger element was assigned to support Operation Neptune Spear aimed at killing or capturing Osama bin Laden The Ranger element and additional SEALs in MH 47E Chinooks served as QRF the Ranger element would also protect the FARP north of Abbottabad Following the successful completion of the operation a Ranger team transported the bin Laden s body to the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson for burial at sea 76 Operation Freedom s Sentinel Edit In November 2015 the U S military sent a company of Rangers to southeastern Afghanistan as part of the post ISAF phase of the war in Afghanistan to help Afghan counter terrorism forces destroy an al Qaeda training camp in a fierce fight that lasted for several days 77 On the evening of 26 April 2017 50 Rangers from 3 75th joined 40 Afghan commandos in a joint US Afghan raid on the headquarters of Abdul Hasib the emir of ISIS K in a village in Achin District Nangarhar Province The force was flown into Mohmand Valley and within minutes were engaged in a heavy close quarter firefight with ISIL KP militants AC 130 gunships Apache helicopters F 16 fighters and drones were called in In the 3 hour firefight two Rangers died one each from C and D Companies possibly from friendly fire and one was wounded while 35 ISIL KP militants including Abdul Hasib and an unspecified number of ISIL KP leaders were killed 78 79 80 Operation Inherent Resolve Edit In March 2017 as part of Operation Inherent Resolve CNN reported that about 100 Rangers in Strykers and armored Humvees deployed in and around Manbij Syria to protect the 11th MEU which was providing artillery and other support to U S backed forces in the battle to liberate Raqqa from ISIL rather than the typical mission of training advising and assisting local forces U S officials took the unusual step of publicly talking about the Ranger deployment and where they are located to protect against them inadvertently coming under fire from forces fighting in the region or Turkish Russian or Syrian government forces 81 Regiment Military Intelligence Battalion RMIB Edit Main article Regimental Military Intelligence Battalion On 22 May 2017 the Ranger Regiment Military Intelligence Battalion was established to specialize in intelligence surveillance reconnaissance cyber and electronic warfare operations Based at Fort Benning it consists of the Military Intelligence Company MICO Cyber Electro Magnetic Activities company CEMA and Headquarters and Headquarters Company HHC 82 It draws its lineage from Company P 75th Infantry back to Merrill s Marauders and Company B 2nd Ranger Infantry Battalion 83 Operation Kayla Mueller Edit On 26 October 2019 the Rangers Delta Force and the 160th SOAR killed ISIL leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi 84 75th Ranger Regiment A Ranger from the 2nd Ranger Battalion instructs fellow soldiers in a Jump Master course at Joint Base Lewis McChord 13 April 2004 A Ranger from the 2nd Ranger Battalion providing overwatch during combat operations in Iraq 23 November 2006 The Ranger honor platoon at the interment ceremony of General Wayne Downing at West Point New York 27 September 2007 Army Rangers from the 1st Ranger Battalion conduct a MOUT exercise at Fort Bragg North Carolina 21 April 2009 Two Rangers inspect their gear before the Ranger Rendezvous a mass tactical jump conducted by elements from the entire Regiment 3 August 2009 Retired Colonel Ralph Puckett places the Ranger Scroll on two graduates of the Ranger Assessment and Selection Program 5 January 2010 Rangers practice fast roping techniques from an MH 47 during an exercise at Fort Bragg 28 April 2010 Rangers in Puli Alam District Afghanistan 28 August 2012 Ranger snipers from 1st Ranger Battalion practice marksmanship on a range in Afghanistan prior to a night combat operation against insurgents 7 May 2013Organization EditUnit Combat Service Identification Badge a k a Ranger Scroll Beret Flash LocationRegimental Headquarters and Headquarters Company HHC Fort Benning GeorgiaRegimental Military Intelligence Battalion HHC Military Intelligence Company Cyber Electro Magnetic Activities Company Regimental Special Troops Battalion HHC Regimental Reconnaissance Company Communications Company Military Intelligence Company Selection and Training Company 1st Ranger Battalion HHC Alpha Company Rifle Bravo Company Rifle Charlie Company Rifle Delta Company Rifle Echo Company Support Hunter Army Airfield Georgia2nd Ranger Battalion HHC Alpha Company Rifle Bravo Company Rifle Charlie Company Rifle Delta Company Rifle Echo Company Support Joint Base Lewis McChord Washington3rd Ranger Battalion HHC Alpha Company Rifle Bravo Company Rifle Charlie Company Rifle Delta Company Rifle Echo Company Support Fort Benning GeorgiaLineage EditOrganized as 5307th Composite Unit Provisional on 3 October 1943Consolidated with the 475th Infantry and unit designated as 475th Infantry on 10 August 1944 Inactivated on 1 July 1945Redesignated as 75th Infantry on 21 June 1954Allotted to the Regular Army on 26 October 1954 Activated on 20 November 1954 Inactivated on 21 March 195675th Infantry Regiment Ranger reorganized as a parent regiment under the Combat Arms Regimental System on 1 January 1969Reorganized with Headquarters on 1 July 1984On 3 February 1986 the 75th Infantry Regiment then consisting of Headquarters and Headquarters Company 1st Battalion 2nd Battalion and 3rd Battalion was consolidated with the former Company A 1st Ranger Infantry Battalion then part of HHC 7th SFG Company A 2nd Infantry Battalion then part of HHC 10th SFG and the inactive units Company A 3rd Ranger Infantry Battalion last part of HHC 13th SFG inactivated in 1966 4th Ranger Infantry Battalion 5th Ranger Infantry Battalion and 6th Ranger Infantry Battalion it was concurrently designated as 75th Ranger Regiment and reorganized under the Regimental System 21 37 38 39 Modern Ranger selection and training EditQualifications Edit U S Army Rangers assigned to 2nd Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment prepare for extraction during Task Force Training at Fort Hunter Liggett California 30 January 2014 Be a U S citizen Be on active duty and volunteer for assignment Have a General Technical Score of 105 or higher No physical limitations PULHES of 111221 or better Qualify and volunteer for Airborne training A person of good character no pending UCMJ action or drug or alcohol related incidents within 24 months Must enlist into or currently hold a Military Occupational Specialty found in the 75th Ranger Regiment Able to attain at minimum a Secret clearance Pass physical requirements which include the Ranger Fitness Test 58 push ups 69 sit ups run 5 miles in 40 minutes or less 6 pull ups Water Survival Assessment and 12 mile footmarch with a 35lb rucksack and weapon in under 3 hours 85 Additionally Army officer applicants must Be an officer of grade O 1 through O 4 86 Qualify for a Top Secret Security Clearance Meet Year Group specific criteria Hold an officer Military Occupational Specialty found in the 75th Ranger Regiment 87 Selection and training Edit Main article Ranger Assessment and Selection Program Every volunteer for the Regiment from new recruit to officer and any senior leader selected to command in the Regiment will go through the Ranger Assessment and Selection Program RASP to assess their ability and provide the basic skills required to be an effective member of the 75th Ranger Regiment 88 For new soldiers RASP is conducted after applicants complete their basic Military Occupational Specialty course and graduate from the Army s Parachutists Course Airborne School For soldiers both enlisted and officer who have completed their first tour of duty and meet the recruiting qualifications a RASP date will be scheduled upon application and conditional acceptance to the 75th Ranger Regiment 88 RASP includes two levels of training RASP 1 for junior non commissioned officers and enlisted soldiers pay grades E 1 through E 5 and RASP 2 for senior non commissioned officers officers and warrant officers Candidates train in physical fitness marksmanship small unit tactics medical proficiency and mobility Training is fast paced and intense ensuring Ranger candidates can handle continued training and worldwide operations upon reaching their assigned Ranger unit Throughout the course candidates are screened to ensure that only the best soldiers are chosen for the Ranger Regiment All candidates must meet the course requirements in order to serve in the Ranger Regiment Upon completion of RASP candidates will don the tan beret and 75th Ranger Regiment Scroll 89 RASP 1 Edit Ranger Assessment amp Selection Program 1 RASP 1 is an 8 week selection course for junior non commissioned officers and enlisted soldiers pay grades E 1 through E 5 that is broken down into two phases Ranger candidates endure a grueling test of physical and mental endurance road marches with rucksacks land navigation leadership skills and weapons training performed under continuous food and sleep deprivation 90 Graduates have the advanced skills all Rangers are required to know to start their career with the 75th Ranger Regiment Phase 1 focuses more on the critical events and skill level 1 tasks and Phase 2 focuses on training in marksmanship breaching mobility and physical fitness 89 RASP 2 Edit Ranger Assessment amp Selection Program 2 RASP 2 is a 21 day selection course for senior non commissioned officers officers and warrant officers Candidates physical and mental capabilities are tested as they learn the special tactics techniques and procedures of the Regiment as well as learning the expectations of leading and developing young Rangers 89 Continued training Edit To maintain readiness Rangers train constantly Rangers focus on the Big 5 marksmanship physical training medical training small unit tactics and mobility 91 Throughout their time in the Ranger Regiment Rangers may attend many types of special schools and training Depending on occupation and job requirements members of the 75th Ranger Regiment enjoy unparalleled access to countless military schools including Jumpmaster Sniper Pathfinder Military Freefall Scuba Survival Evasion Resistance Escape SERE Special Operations Combat Medic and others Before serving as a leader in the Regiment Rangers are also expected to attend and graduate Ranger School Members of the regiment may also get joint training and non traditional military and civilian schooling 88 Rangers are trained in do it yourself emergency medicine Based on the premise that 90 of deaths from wounds are suffered before reaching medical facilities and that there are not enough medics and doctors to go around the regiment began to train Rangers to give themselves immediate preliminary treatment A 2011 study found a 3 percent death rate from potentially survivable causes in the 75th Regiment between October 2001 and April 2010 That compares with a 24 percent rate in a previously reported set of U S military deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan which included troops who didn t have Ranger style training 92 RFS RFM Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message As a U S Army Special Operations Command unit the Rangers maintain more stringent standards for their personnel If at any point a Ranger is deemed to be failing to meet these standards he may be relieved and removed from the regiment This is commonly referred to as being RFSed short for Released For Standards A Ranger can be RFS d for virtually any reason ranging from lack of motivation to disciplinary problems Similarly a Ranger physically incapable of performing his mission through prolonged illness or injury can also be removed from the regiment through a process referred to as RFM or Relieved For Medical reasons Honors mottos and creed EditMain articles List of honors and decorations of the 75th Ranger Regiment and Ranger Creed The 75th Ranger Regiment has been credited with numerous campaigns from World War II onwards In World War II they participated in 16 major campaigns spearheading the campaigns in Morocco Sicily Naples Foggia Anzio and Leyte During the Vietnam War they received campaign participation streamers for every campaign in the war The regiment received streamers with arrowheads denoting conflicts they spearheaded for Grenada and Panama To date the Rangers have earned six Presidential Unit Citations nine Valorous Unit Awards and four Meritorious Unit Commendation the most recent of which were earned in Vietnam and Haditha Iraq respectively Sua Sponte Latin for Of their own accord is the 75th Ranger Regiment s Regimental motto Contemporary rangers are triple volunteers for the U S Army for Airborne School and for service in the 75th Ranger Regiment 93 The motto Rangers lead the way dates from 6 June 1944 during the Normandy Landings on Dog White sector of Omaha Beach Then Brigadier General Norman Cota assistant CO of the 29th ID calmly walked towards Maj Max Schneider CO of the 5th Ranger Battalion while under heavy machine gun fire and asked What outfit is this Someone yelled 5th Rangers To this Cota replied Well then Goddammit Rangers Lead the way 24 15 25 The term Ranger EditOrganizations define the term Ranger in different ways For example the annual United States Army Best Ranger Competition hosted by the Ranger Training Brigade can be won by pairs of participants from the 75th Ranger Regiment or by ranger qualified entrants from other units in the U S military For an individual to be inducted into the U S Army Ranger Association s Ranger Hall of Fame they must have served in a Ranger unit in combat or be a successful graduate of the U S Army Ranger School The Ranger Association further clarifies the type of unit A Ranger unit is defined as those Army units recognized in Ranger lineage or history 94 Acceptance into the U S Army Ranger Association is limited to Rangers that have earned the U S Army Ranger tab WWII Rangers Korean War Rangers Vietnam War Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol members and Rangers and all Rangers that participated in Operations Urgent Fury Just Cause Desert Storm Restore Hope Enduring Freedom as well as those who have served honorably for at least one year in a recognized Ranger unit 94 Ranger term controversy EditThere is some dispute over the use of the word Ranger According to John Lock The problems of the Ranger Tab and indeed Ranger history is in large part caused by the lack of a clear cut definition of who is a Ranger The Ranger Department the Infantry School and Department of the Army have in the past carelessly accepted the definition of a Ranger unit to include the use of terms Ranger type and Units like Rangers and Special Mission Units In his book Raiders or Elite Infantry David Hogan of the Center of Military History writes that By the time of the formation of LRRP units Ranger had become a term of legendary connotations but no precise meaning For the want of a definition of who and what is a Ranger integrity was lost As a result of Grenada circumstances have changed Since 1983 men have had the opportunity to earn and wear an authorized Ranger unit scroll or an authorized Ranger Tab or both But there is a need for a firm definition of who and what constitutes a RANGER Without that definition we face the likelihood of future controversy 95 Beret change Edit COL Richard D Clarke wearing the Regiment s tan beret The tan beret may only be worn by those assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment or have served in the Regiment for one year and are assigned to a unit within USASOC In June 2001 Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki gave the order to issue black berets to regular soldiers At the time black berets were being worn exclusively by the Ranger Regiment This created discontent within the 75th Ranger Regiment and even led to retired Rangers going on nationwide road marches to Washington D C to protest against the decision 96 Because there was not a Presidential authorization to the regiment for exclusive wear of the black beret they switched to wearing a tan beret to preserve a unique appearance tan being reflective of the buckskin worn by the men of Robert Rogers Rangers during the French and Indian War 97 A memorandum for the purpose of changing the Ranger beret from black to tan was sent and approved in March 2002 98 Press releases were issued and articles were published all over the nation about this change in headgear after it was formally announced by the Regimental Commander Colonel P K Keen 99 In a private ceremony past and present Rangers donned the tan beret on 26 July 2002 100 The Army G 1 released a memorandum in October 2017 stating the following WEAR OF THE TAN BERET OUTSIDE OF RANGER REGIMENT The memo from the Army G 1 expands authorization for wear of the Tan Beret in the following assignments Headquarters elements of Combatant Commands The Joint Staff Department of the Army Headquarters U S Special Operations Command U S Army Special Operations Command U S Special Operations Command Joint Task Force Theater Special Operations Command and Joint Special Operations Command The Tan Beret is authorized for Ranger qualified Soldiers in the above listed assignments if they previously served in the 75th Ranger Regiment and departed on honorable terms This was formalized in DA Pam 670 1 in January 2021 101 Notable members Edit Rangers descend in an MH 6 Little Bird helicopter flown by pilots from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment during a staged demonstration John P Abizaid General former platoon leader of Company A and executive officer of Company C former commander of Company A 1st Ranger Battalion former commander Central Command 102 David Barno Lieutenant General former commander of the 2nd Ranger Battalion former commander Combined Forces Afghanistan Mat Best former team leader in 2nd Ranger Battalion best selling author music artist celebrity actor and veteran entrepreneur Richard D Clarke General spent eight years in the 75th Ranger Regiment as a company commander from 1994 to 1996 then as a battalion commander from 2004 to 2006 and regimental commander from 2007 to 2009 Jason Crow Captain member of the U S House of Representatives for Colorado s 6th congressional district 103 William O Darby Colonel established and commanded Darby s Rangers that later evolved into the 75th Ranger Regiment Ranger Hall of Fame Member Kristoffer Domeij Sergeant First Class enlisted 2001 killed in action in 2011 during his 14th deployment At the time of his death he had the most deployments for a Ranger killed in action 104 105 Wayne A Downing General third commander of the regiment from 1984 to 1985 former commander of 2nd Ranger Battalion former commander of Joint Special Operations Command JSOC former commander U S Army Special Operations Command and former commander of United States Special Operations Command SOCOM Ranger Hall of Fame Member Jason Everman Sergeant First Class American musician who played with Nirvana Soundgarden and Mind Funk Everman served with the 2nd Ranger Battalion and later the 3rd Special Forces Group with multiple tours to Iraq and Afghanistan David L Grange Major General seventh 6commander of the regiment from 1991 to 1993 former commander 1st Infantry Division and deputy commander of Delta Force Eric L Haney Command Sergeant Major Author and retired member of Delta Force Robert L Howard Colonel former company commander in the 2nd Ranger Battalion was nominated three times for the Medal of Honor for his actions in Vietnam Two were downgraded and the third was awarded Nicholas Irving former sniper in the 3rd Ranger Battalion Peter Kassig 1st Battalion 2006 2006 followed by a medical discharge then became an aid worker who was taken hostage and beheaded by The Islamic State Matt Larsen Sergeant First Class a former United States Marine who enlisted into the United States Army and served in 1st Ranger Battalion 2nd Ranger Battalion and the 75th Ranger Regiment known as the father of Modern Army Combatives and founder of the United States Army Combatives School Larsen currently serves as the Director of Combatives Training at the United States Military Academy at West Point Ryan McCarthy Captain former US Secretary of the Army Stanley A McChrystal General tenth commander of the regiment from 1997 to 1999 former commander International Security Assistance Force ISAF and U S Forces Afghanistan USFOR A former Director of the Joint Staff former Commander of Joint Special Operations Command JSOC Danny McKnight Colonel former commander of the 3rd Ranger Battalion during the Battle of Mogadishu Austin S Miller General former 2nd Ranger Battalion Platoon Leader former commander of Delta Force and former Commander of Joint Special Operations Command JSOC Glen E Morrell Sergeant Major of the Army former 1st Ranger Battalion command sergeant major and past Sergeant Major of the Army Kris Paronto Sergeant former member of Company B 2d Ranger Battalion who served at the CIA annex during the 2012 Benghazi attack Thomas Payne Sergeant Major Member of Delta Force and Medal of Honor recipient He is the first living Delta Force Medal of Honor recipient and first Medal of Honor recipient for Operation Inherent Resolve He served with MSG Joshua Wheeler in the combat operation in Iraq that saw MSG Wheeler KIA and then SFC Payne earned Distinguished Service Cross later upgraded to Medal of Honor He served with Company A 1st Ranger Battalion Leroy Petry Sergeant First Class Medal of Honor recipient for actions during a firefight in Afghanistan Marshall Plumlee 1st Lieutenant James Earl Rudder Colonel former commander of the 2nd Ranger Battalion during World War II which he led the ranger assault on Pointe du Hoc on D Day and was later the president of Texas A amp M University Randy Shughart Sergeant First Class Medal of Honor recipient who was killed in action during the Battle of Mogadishu while serving as a Delta Force sniper defending a downed helicopter started his career in 2nd Ranger Battalion Michael D Steele Colonel former commander of Company B 3rd Ranger Battalion during the Battle of Mogadishu Jeff Struecker Major served as a staff sergeant and squad leader assigned to Task Force Ranger as a part of the 75th Ranger Regiment Struecker and his partner SPC Isaac Gmazel Won the Best Ranger Competition in 1996 He became commissioned as a chaplain in 2000 Keni Thomas Staff Sergeant American country music singer who served with the 3rd Ranger Battalion as part of Task Force Ranger during the Operation Restore Hope Raymond A Thomas General led a Ranger Rifle platoon from A Company 2nd Ranger Battalion during the Invasion of Grenada in 1983 He was assigned as Assistant S 3 Plans Liaison Officer with 75th Ranger Regiment at Fort Benning Georgia until 1987 In 1989 during the Invasion of Panama Thomas was then assigned as a company commander with 3rd Ranger Battalion He was also the commander of Joint Special Operations Command from 2014 to 2016 and United States Special Operations Command from 2016 to 2019 Pat Tillman Corporal an American football player who left his National Football League career to enlist in the United States Army in May 2002 killed on 22 April 2004 by friendly fire as a member of the 2nd Ranger Battalion Alejandro Villanueva Captain an American football player in the National Football League former company Executive Officer in the 1st Ranger Battalion Joseph L Votel General twelfth commander of the regiment from 2001 to 2003 former Commander of Joint Special Operations Command JSOC former Commander of United States Special Operations Command SOCOM and former Commander of United States Central Command CENTCOM Joshua Lloyd Wheeler Master Sergeant 22 November 1975 22 October 2015 was a United States Army Special Forces Operational Detachment Delta aka Delta Force operator who was killed in Iraq during Operation Inherent Resolve He was the first American service member killed in action as a result of enemy fire while fighting ISIS militants and at the time of his death was the first American to be killed in action in Iraq since November 2011 Wheeler was a highly decorated Delta Force soldier having earned 11 Bronze Star Medals including four with Valor Devices He was posthumously awarded the Silver Star the Purple Heart and the Medal of Patriotism John Whitley Sergeant Acting US Secretary of the Army Colonels of the Regiment EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items April 2022 Sequence Name From To Comments3rd Colonel Wayne A Downing May 1984 November 1985 Commander 2 75th Ranger Battalion Commander USSOCOM4th Colonel Joseph S Stringham July 1985 August 1987 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion5th Colonel Westley B Taylor Jr June 1987 June 1989 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion6th Colonel William F Kernan June 1989 June 1991 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion Commander USJFCOM7th Colonel David L Grange June 1991 August 1993 Deputy Commander 1st SFOD D Delta Force 8th Colonel James T Jackson July 1993 July 1995 Commander 3 75th Ranger Battalion9th Colonel William J Leszczynski July 1995 June 1997 Commander JTF Bravo Honduras10th Colonel Stanley A McChrystal June 1997 August 1999 Commander 2 75th Ranger Battalion Commander US Forces Afghanistan11th Colonel Purl K Keen July 1999 July 2001 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion Deputy Commander USSOUTHCOM12th Colonel Joseph L Votel October 2001 August 2003 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion Commander USSOCOM Commander USCENTCOM13th Colonel James C Nixon June 2003 8 July 2005 Commander 3 75th Ranger Battalion14th Colonel Paul J LaCamera 8 July 2005 9 August 2007 Commander 3 75th Ranger Battalion Commander USARPAC Commander UNC CFC USFK15th Colonel Richard D Clarke Jr 9 August 2007 6 August 2009 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion Commander USSOCOM16th Colonel Michael E Kurilla 6 August 2009 28 July 2011 Commander 2 75th Ranger Battalion Commander USCENTCOM17th Colonel Mark W Odom 28 July 2011 25 July 2013 Commander 3 75th Ranger Battalion DCG S 82nd Airborne Division18th Colonel Christopher S Vanek 25 July 2013 25 June 2015 DCO 75th Ranger Regiment19th Colonel Marcus S Evans 25 June 2015 29 June 2017 Commander 3 75th Ranger Battalion Chief of Staff USSOCOM20th Colonel Brandon R Tegtmeier 29 June 2017 12 July 2019 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion DCG O 82nd Airborne Division21st Colonel Todd S Brown 12 July 2019 23 July 2021 Commander 1 75th Ranger Battalion22nd Colonel Jim JD Kiersey 23 July 2021 Incumbent Commander 3 75th Ranger BattalionNote The above list accounts for 20 Colonels missing are the first two Assignment dates are based on various biographies and may not all line up properly Specific dates are based on reports of changes of command See also EditRanger Memorial Recondo School Ranger School Black Hawk Down and the movie based on it British Commandos Company E 52nd Infantry LRP H Co 75th Infantry Ranger The most decorated and longest serving LRRP Ranger unit in continuous combat Operation Delaware 17th Special Tactics Squadron Primary USAF STS attached to the 75th Ranger Regiment 89th Oz Brigade An Israeli Defense Forces unit approximating to the 75th Ranger Regiment in role JW AGAT Polish Special Troops Command unit modelled after the 75th Ranger RegimentCitations Edit One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain History amp Heritage a b c USSOCOM Fact Book 2017 PDF USSOCOM 2017 pp 19 20 Archived PDF from the original on 27 April 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2017 SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES Opportunities Exist to Improve Transparency of Funding and Assess Potential to Lessen Some Deployments GAO 15 571 PDF Report Government Accountability Office July 2015 Archived PDF from the original on 22 March 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2016 Naylor Sean 2015 Chapter 4 Relentless Strike The Secret History of Joint Special Operations Command 1st ed New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 250 01454 2 OCLC 908554550 a b c Special Operations Forces Reference Manual Fourth ed MacDill AFB Florida Joint Special Operations University June 2015 pp 78 82 ISBN 9781933749914 Archived from the original on 28 March 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Mission 75th Ranger Regiment GoArmy 23 July 2015 Archived from the original on 12 February 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2017 Atlamazoglou Stavros 23 December 2021 ARMY RANGERS HAVE BEEN DEPLOYED TO COMBAT FOR 7 000 DAYS STRAIGHT Sandboxx Archived from the original on 1 October 2022 Biography of Captain Church Ranger Hall of Fame United States Army Archived from the original on 8 April 2005 Church commanded an independent Ranger company during King Philip s War 1675 1678 on the New England frontier where they conducted highly successful combat operations against Indians Church s men were the first Rangers successful in raiding the Indians hiding places within the forests and swamps History amp Heritage Army mil Archived from the original on 12 July 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2022 a b c Ankony Robert Summer 2015 They Saw Us First PDF Patrolling Vol 28 no 2 75th Ranger Regiment Association Inc pp 2 43 48 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2022 a b Ranger Training Brigade February 2011 Ranger Handbook SH 21 76 PDF US Army Ranger School Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2022 a b c d e Finlayson Kenneth Jones Jr Robert W 2006 Rangers in World War II Part I The Formation and Early Days PDF Veritas Vol 2 no 3 USASOC pp 64 70 ISSN 1553 9830 PB 31 05 2 Archived from the original PDF on 20 August 2021 Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b c d Zimmerman Dwight Jon 29 September 2016 Col William O Darby The Ranger Who Led the Way Defense Media Network Archived from the original on 22 September 2021 Retrieved 11 October 2022 S amp D Fall 2004 The 1st Ranger Battalion PDF Patrolling Vol 19 no 2 75th Ranger Regiment Association Inc pp 61 62 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2022 a b Bahmanyar Mir Darby s Rangers MirBahmanyar Archived from the original on 11 October 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b c d e f Hogan Jr David W 1992 US Army Special Operations In World War II CMH 70 42 PDF United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 22909690 Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Garland amp Smyth 1965 Black Robert W 2009 The Ranger Force Darby s Rangers in World War II Stackpole Books pp 146 154 ISBN 9780811743839 Garland amp Smyth 1965 p 226 230 Interview with Private Harry Perlmutter Part I Special Operations History Foundation Archived from the original on 2 July 2013 Retrieved 19 July 2013 Finlayson Kenneth Jones Jr Robert W 2007 RANGERS IN WORLD WAR II Part II Sicily and Italy Veritas Vol 3 no 1 USASOC ISSN 1553 9830 Archived from the original on 24 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b c d e f g Lineage and Honors 75th RANGER REGIMENT United States Army Center of Military History 27 April 2017 Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Lehman Milton 15 June 1946 The Rangers Fought Ahead of Everybody The Saturday Evening Post Vol 218 no 50 pp 28 29 45 48 50 52 Lomell Leonard Kuhn Jack 12 June 2006 D DAY INTERVIEW WITH TWO U S 2ND RANGER BATTALION MEMBERS WHO DESCRIBE THE ATTACK AT POINTE DU HOC Interview Interviewed by Frederick Michael Masci Joseph F Archived from the original on 7 June 2022 via History net a b Caraccilo Dominic J 2015 Forging a Special Operations Force the US Army Rangers Solihull West Midlands Helion amp Company p 28 ISBN 978 1 910777 36 7 a b 2014 Ammunition Hall of Fame Inductee MAJOR GENERAL RET JOHN C RAAEN JR PDF Joint Chiefs of Staff 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 9 August 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Jones Jr Robert W 2009 FROM OMAHA BEACH TO THE RHINE The 5th Ranger Battalion in the European Theater PDF Veritas Vol 5 no 2 USASOC ISSN 1553 9830 Archived from the original PDF on 6 June 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Krivdo Michael E 2018 RESCUE AT CABANATUAN PDF Veritas Vol 14 no 2 USASOC ISSN 1553 9830 Archived from the original PDF on 30 January 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Strausbaugh Leo V The 6th Ranger Battalion Descendants of World War II Rangers Archived from the original on 29 December 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2017 Unit History 75TH RANGER REGIMENT Army mil Archived from the original on 14 March 2021 Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b c d e f g h i 75th Ranger Regiment Heritage GoArmy com Archived from the original on 11 May 2017 Stanton Shelby L 1993 Rangers at War Combat Recon in Vietnam 1st ed New York Ivy Books pp 8 9 ISBN 978 0 8041 0875 1 OCLC 28093451 Black Robert W June July 2010 Rangers in Korea VFW magazine VFW pp 42 43 ISSN 0161 8598 Archived from the original on 11 October 2022 a b c Ankony Robert C 2009 LURPS A Ranger s Diary of Tet Khe Sanh A Shau and Quang Tri Revised ed Lanham MD Hamilton Books ISBN 978 0761843726 OCLC 266915908 a b c d Gebhardt James F 2005 Eyes Behind the Lines US Army Long Range Reconnaissance and Surveillance Units PDF Combat Studies Institute Press Army University Press pp 45 110 ISBN 978 1 4289 1633 3 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2022 Meadows Mark R 12 October 2012 Long Range Surveillance Unit Force Structure in Force XXI thesis PDF Report Fort Leavenworth KA US Army Command and General Staff College Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2022 Kolb Richard K August 2012 Last Days of the Infantry in Vietnam 1972 VFW magazine VFW pp 36 42 ISSN 0161 8598 Archived from the original on 11 October 2022 a b Lineage and Honors 1st BATTALION 75th RANGER REGIMENT United States Army Center of Military History 27 April 2017 Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b Lineage and Honors 2d BATTALION 75th RANGER REGIMENT United States Army Center of Military History 27 April 2017 Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 a b Lineage and Honors 3D BATTALION 75TH RANGER REGIMENT United States Army Center of Military History 28 January 2015 Archived from the original on 12 August 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Murphy Jack 22 June 2013 Evolution of the 75th Ranger Regiment RRD TheNewsRep Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 13 November 2018 a b 75th Ranger Regiment Special Troops Battalion USASOC Archived from the original on 1 October 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Lineage and Honors SPECIAL TROOPS BATTALION 75TH RANGER REGIMENT United States Army Center of Military History 26 March 2013 Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 75th Rangers Living the legacy USASOC 26 October 2009 Archived from the original on 11 October 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Dickstein Corey 19 March 2012 Hunter based Army Rangers awarded for actions in Afghanistan Savannah Morning News Archived from the original on 23 May 2014 Retrieved 26 March 2012 Myers Meghann 18 January 2018 This woman will be the first to join the Army s elite 75th Ranger Regiment Army Times Archived from the original on 29 August 2022 Finkel Gal Perl 21 March 2017 WIN THE CLOSE FIGHT The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Neville 2015 pp 34 36 Janofsky Michael 23 October 2001 A NATION CHALLENGED THE EARLY CASUALTIES 2 Soldiers Remembered for Their Focus and Patriotism The New York Times Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Neville 2015 p 29 Cawthorne Nigel 2008 The Mammoth Book of Inside the Elite Forces London Robinson Publishing ISBN 978 1845298210 OCLC 176894746 Neville 2015 p 36 Neville 2015 pp 42 46 47 Neville 2015 pp 64 65 67 69 83 Neville 2015 pp 231 232 Neville 2015 p 156 Neville 2015 pp 236 237 Neville 2015 pp 238 239 Neville 2015 p 238 Neville 2015 p 233 Neville 2015 p 277 Neville 2015 p 264 Neville 2015 pp 263 265 a b Bailey Tracy A 5 May 2015 1st Battalion 75th Ranger Regiment honors its heroes Army mil Archived from the original on 25 August 2016 Neville 2015 pp 274 275 Neville 2015 pp 93 96 118 128 129 131 133 134 a b Urban 2012 a b Neville 2015 pp 190 191 Lamothe Dan 1 September 2015 Six little known stories about secretive Joint Special Operations Command as told in a new book The Washington Post Archived from the original on 22 August 2016 Urban 2012 p 88 Neville 2015 pp 212 214 a b c Neville Leigh 2016 US Army Rangers 1989 2015 Panama to Afghanistan Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 1540 8 OCLC 951712359 Neville 2015 p 226 2 Most Wanted Al Qaeda Leaders in Iraq Killed by U S Iraqi Forces Fox News 19 April 2010 Archived from the original on 1 July 2015 Contribution from Associated Press Ibrahim Waleed 19 April 2010 Al Qaeda s top two leaders in Iraq have been killed Reuters Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Neville 2015 pp 232 233 Neville 2015 pp 269 272 Jaffe Greg Ryan Missy 26 January 2016 The U S was supposed to leave Afghanistan by 2017 Now it might take decades The Washington Post Archived from the original on 3 June 2016 Cooper Helene 27 April 2017 Friendly Fire May Have Killed 2 U S Soldiers in Afghanistan Raid The New York Times Archived from the original on 29 April 2017 Myers Meghann deGrandpre Andrew 28 April 2017 Army Rangers killed in Afghanistan were possible victims of friendly fire Army Times Archived from the original on 25 August 2021 Afghanistan IS head killed in raid US and Afghan officials BBC 8 May 2017 Archived from the original on 23 May 2017 Starr Barbara 8 March 2017 US Marines join local forces fighting in Raqqa CNN Archived from the original on 10 March 2017 75th Ranger Regiment About Fort Benning Archived from the original on 2 September 2022 Retrieved 23 August 2020 Lineage and Honors MILITARY INTELLIGENCE BATTALION 75st RANGER REGIMENT United States Army Center of Military History 7 October 2020 Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Keller Jared 30 October 2020 US special operations forces behind al Baghdadi raid awarded Presidential Unit Citation Task amp Purpose Archived from the original on 9 July 2022 Retrieved 21 May 2021 Join the 75th Ranger Regiment Fort Benning Archived from the original on 19 April 2022 Retrieved 7 October 2019 Army Ranger Qualifications Army com 14 March 2014 Archived from the original on 26 June 2014 Retrieved 14 July 2014 Join the Rangers GoArmy com Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 a b c Training GoArmy com Archived from the original on 27 April 2011 Retrieved 26 May 2017 a b c RASP 1 amp 2 GoArmy com Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2017 Ankony Robert C Fall 2015 H 75 E 52 LRP 1ST CAV LRRP PDF Patrolling Vol 28 no 3 75th Ranger Regiment Association Inc p 32 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2022 The Big 5 Fort Benning Archived from the original on 2 March 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2018 Tanner Lindsey 15 August 2011 Do it yourself battlefield medicine saves lives NBCNews Associated Press Archived from the original on 26 February 2022 Bowden Mark 1999 Black Hawk Down A Story of Modern War Berkeley CA Atlantic Monthly Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 87113 738 8 a b U S Army Ranger Association 2011 Ranger Hall of Fame U S Army Ranger Association Inc Archived from the original on 23 December 2010 Retrieved 19 March 2011 Lock John D 2005 The Coveted Black and Gold A Daily Journey Through the U S Army Ranger School Experience 2nd ed Tucson AZ Fenestra Books p 219 ISBN 978 1 58736 367 2 OCLC 57965974 Rangers protest black beret decision USA Today Associated Press 19 June 2001 Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Bahmanyar Mir 2011 Shadow Warriors A History of the US Army Rangers Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 78096 075 3 OCLC 1021807447 DA Approves Ranger s New Headgear Army mil Archived from the original on 1 October 2014 Retrieved 21 November 2012 Adopting the Beret Pentagram newspaper Army News Service 23 March 2001 Archived from the original on 27 December 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2012 Siter Bridgett 3 August 2001 Private Ceremony Stripe Army News Service Archived from the original on 27 December 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2012 Guide to the Wear and Appearance of Army Uniforms and Insignia PAM 670 1 PDF Department of the Army 26 January 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 25 September 2022 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Adkin Mark 1989 Urgent Fury The Battle for Grenada Lexington MA Lexington Books p 195 ISBN 9780669207170 OCLC 18836419 Congressional Veterans Caucus Jason Crow Military Times Archived from the original on 28 January 2022 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Martinez Luis Caron Christine 25 October 2011 Army Ranger Dies On 14th Deployment ABC Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2021 Sgt 1st Class Kristoffer Domeij served in Iraq and Afghanistan Dreazen Yochi J 25 October 2011 For Elite U S Troops War s End Will Only Mean More Fighting The Atlantic Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 23 January 2021 According to Lt Col Tom Bryant a spokesman for the Army Special Operations Command We re getting real close to double digit deployments across a number of different formations Those numbers are becoming increasingly common and will be even more the norm down the road General references EditNeville Leigh 2015 Special Forces in the War on Terror General Military Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1472807908 OCLC 889735079 Urban Mark 2012 Task Force Black The Explosive True Story of the Secret Special Forces War in Iraq 1st ed New York St Martin s Griffin ISBN 978 1 250 00696 7 OCLC 759914001 Retrieved 11 October 2022 Garland Albert N Smyth Howard McGaw 1965 U S Army in World War II Mediterranean Theater of Operations Sicily and the Surrender of Italy PDF Washington D C United States Government Printing Office Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2012 Further reading EditBahmanyar Mir 2003 Darby s Rangers 1942 45 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 627 0 OCLC 51481921 Bahmanyar Mir 2003 U S Army Ranger 1983 2002 sua sponte of their own accord Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 585 3 OCLC 51068676 Bowden Mark 1999 Black Hawk Down A Story of Modern War Berkeley CA Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 978 0 87113 738 8 Available at Archive org Bryant Russ 2003 To Be a U S Army Ranger St Paul MN MBI Publishing ISBN 978 0 7603 1314 5 OCLC 50478516 Bryant Russ 2005 Weapons of the U S Army Rangers St Paul MN Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 2112 6 OCLC 57751354 Bryant Russ 2005 75th Rangers St Paul MN MBI Publishing ISBN 978 0 7603 2111 9 OCLC 58422742 Grenier John 2005 The First Way of War American War Making on the Frontier 1607 1814 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84566 3 OCLC 59655870 Extensive discussion of American colonial Rangers Haney Eric L 2002 Inside Delta Force New York Delacorte Press ISBN 978 0385336031 Shanahan Bill 2003 Stealth Patrol The Making of a Vietnam ranger 1st ed New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81273 6 OCLC 53895995 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 75th Ranger Regiment 75th Ranger Regiment Home Page Official Recruiting Website Fort Benning Profile Army mil profile Goarmy com profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 75th Ranger Regiment amp oldid 1132266496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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