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Wikipedia

Ranger School

The Ranger School is a 62-day United States Army small unit tactics and leadership course that develops functional skills directly related to units whose mission is to engage the enemy in close combat and direct fire battles.[1][2] Ranger training was established in September 1950 at Fort Benning, Georgia (now called Fort Moore). The Ranger course has changed little since its inception. Until recently[when?], it was an eight-week course divided into three phases. The course is now 61 days in duration and divided into three phases as follows: Benning Phase, Mountain Phase, and Swamp Phase.[1]

Ranger School
An instructor explains abseiling to his students as part of Ranger School training, April 2009
Active1950–present
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeMilitary training
RoleSpecial skills training
Part of Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade, United States Army Infantry School
Garrison/HQFort Moore, Georgia
Motto(s)"Rangers lead the way"
Insignia
Ranger Tab awarded upon graduation
Shoulder sleeve insignia of the Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade
Unit flash of the Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade and its 4th, 5th, and 6th Ranger Training Battalions

Overview edit

The Ranger School is open to U.S. military personnel from the Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Air Force, as well as selected students from other nations allied with the United States. The course is conducted in various locations. Benning Phase occurs in and around Camp Rogers and Camp Darby at Fort Moore, Georgia. Mountain Phase is conducted at Camp Merrill, in the remote mountains near Dahlonega, Georgia. Swamp Phase is conducted in the coastal swamps at various locations near Camp Rudder, Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.[citation needed]

The school is not organizationally affiliated with the 75th Ranger Regiment. Ranger School falls under control of the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command as a school open to most members of the United States Army, but the 75th Ranger Regiment is a Special Operations warfighting unit organized under the United States Army Special Operations Command. The two share a common heritage and subordinate battalions common lineage, and Ranger School is a requirement for all officers and non-commissioned officers (NCO) of the 75th Ranger Regiment.[3]

Those graduating from Ranger School are presented with the Ranger Tab, which is worn on the upper shoulder of the left sleeve of a military uniform, according to U.S. Army regulations[4] Wearing the tab is permitted for the remainder of a soldier's military career. The cloth version of the tab is worn on the Army Combat Uniform and Army Green Service Uniform; a smaller, metal version is worn on the Army Service Uniform.[5]

"Without a doubt, Ranger School is the most physically and mentally demanding course in the U.S. Army."

Major General Scott Miller, Commander of the U.S. Maneuver Center of Excellence, July 2015.[6]

History edit

 
First graduates of Ranger School (1950)

Ranger Training had begun in September 1950 at Fort Benning Georgia "with the formation and training of 17 Airborne Companies by the Ranger Training Command".[7] The first class graduated from Ranger training in November 1950, becoming the 1st Ranger Infantry Company.[8] The United States Army's Infantry School officially established the Ranger Department in December 1951. Under the Ranger Department, the first Ranger School Class was conducted in January–March 1952, with a graduation date of 1 March 1952. Its duration was 59 days.[9] At the time, Ranger training was voluntary.

In 1966, a panel headed by General Ralph E. Haines Jr. recommended making Ranger training mandatory for all Regular Army officers upon commissioning. On 16 August 1966, the Chief of Staff of the Army, General Harold K. Johnson, directed it so. This policy was implemented in July 1967. It was rescinded on 21 June 1972 by General William Westmoreland. Once again, Ranger training was voluntary.[9]

In August 1987, the Ranger Department was split from the Infantry School and the Ranger Training Brigade was established. The Ranger Companies that made up the Ranger Department became the current training units—the 4th, 5th and 6th Ranger Training Battalions.[10]

Desert Phase was added in 1983 and the length of the Ranger course was extended to 65 days. The duration was again expanded in October 1991 to 68 days, concurrently with the reshuffling of the Desert phase from the last phase to the second. The 7th Ranger Training Battalion was added to administer this phase. The most recent duration change to Ranger School occurred in May 1995, when the Desert Phase was removed from the Ranger course. Ranger School was reduced to its current 61-day length of training, at 19.6 hours of training per day.[10]

The Ranger Assessment Phase, the first five days of Ranger School, was added in 1992.[11]

In 2015 Ranger School was permanently opened to women.[12][13]

Students edit

 
An Airman 1st Class from the 823rd Base Defense Squadron receives his Ranger Tab after completing Ranger School (April 2011).

Ranger School is open to all Military Occupational Specialties (MOSs) in the U.S. Army, although—as of April 2011—an Army combat exclusion zone still limits some from attending.[14] Ranger students come from units in the United States Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, Navy, Coast Guard, and from foreign military services. However, the two largest groups of attendees for Ranger School are from the U.S. Army's Infantry Basic Officer Leadership Course (IBOLC), and the 75th Ranger Regiment.[14] Competitions and pre-Ranger courses are typically used to determine attendance. The Marine Corps is only allotted twenty slots for Ranger school each year, while the Air Force is only allotted six.[15]

Ranger students typically range in rank from Private First Class to Captain, with lieutenants and specialists making up the largest group. The average age of a student is 23, and the average class consists of 366 students, with 11 classes conducted per year.[14] The vast majority of Ranger students have already graduated from Airborne School, and will make multiple jumps during the course. However, a small number of students have entered and completed Ranger School without being Airborne qualified. These individuals completed tasks assigned by cadre instead of taking part in the jumps alongside their classmates.

Following the graduation of Captain Kristen Marie Griest and First Lieutenant Shaye Lynne Haver in August 2015, the Army announced that Ranger School would henceforth be open to female students.[13] While acknowledging that in the past he "would have doubted a woman could pass the rigorous course",[16] Brigade Command Sergeant Major Curtis Arnold described Griest and Haver as "tough soldiers"[16] who "proved their mettle beyond a doubt"[16] and "absolutely earned the respect of every ranger instructor".[16] In October 2015, Major Lisa Jaster also graduated from Ranger School, becoming the first female Army Reserve officer to receive a Ranger tab.[17] In 2019, First Lieutenant Chelsey Hibsch became the first female Air Force officer to graduate from Ranger School.[18]

Training edit

Not for the weak or fainthearted.

Ranger Handbook.[19]

Ranger School training has a basic scenario: the flourishing drug and terrorist operations of the enemy forces, the "Aragon Liberation Front," must be stopped. To do so, the Rangers will take the fight to their territory, the rough terrain surrounding Fort Moore, the mountains of northern Georgia, and the swamps and coast of Florida. Ranger students are given a clear mission, but they determine how to best execute it.

The purpose of the course is learning to soldier as a combat leader while enduring the great mental and psychological stresses and physical fatigue of combat; the Ranger Instructors (RIs) – also known as Lane Graders – create and cultivate such a physical and mental environment. The course primarily comprises field craft instruction; students plan and execute daily patrolling, perform reconnaissance, ambushes, and raids against dispersed targets, followed by stealthy movement to a new patrol base to plan the next mission. Ranger students conduct about 20 hours of training per day, while consuming two or fewer meals daily totaling about 2,200 calories (9,200 kJ), with an average of 3.5 hours of sleep a day. Students sleep more before a parachute jump for safety considerations. Ranger students typically wear and carry some 65–90 pounds (29–41 kg) of weapons, equipment, and training ammunition while patrolling more than 200 miles (320 km) throughout the course.[14]

Darby phase edit

 
MAJ Jaster performs a fireman's carry on a simulated casualty during the first phase of Ranger School. MAJ Jaster was the first female US Army Reserve officer to graduate from the course (October 2015).

The first phase of Ranger School is conducted at Camp Rogers and Camp Darby at Fort Moore, Georgia and is conducted by the 4th Ranger Training Battalion. The "Darby Phase" is the "crawl" phase of Ranger School, where students learn the fundamentals of squad-level mission planning. It is "designed to assess a Soldier’s physical stamina, mental toughness, leadership abilities, and establishes the tactical fundamentals required for follow-on phases of Ranger School".[20] In this phase, training is separated into two parts, the Ranger Assessment Phase (RAP) and Squad Combat Operations.

The Ranger Assessment Phase is conducted at Camp Rogers. As of April 2011, it encompasses Days 1–3 of training. Historically, it accounts for 60% of students who fail to graduate Ranger School.[14] Events include:

  • Ranger Physical Fitness Test (RPFT) requiring the following minimums:
  • Push-ups: 49 (in 2 minutes, graded strictly for perfect form)
  • Sit-ups: 59 (in 2 minutes)
  • Chin-ups: 6 (performed from a dead hang with no lower body movement)
  • 5 mile individual run in 40 minutes or less over a course with gently rolling terrain
  • Combat Water Survival Test (no longer conducted as of 2010)
  • Combat Water Survival Assessment, conducted at Victory Pond (previously called the Water Confidence Test). This test consists of three events that test the Ranger student's ability to calmly overcome any fear of heights or water. Students must calmly walk across a log suspended thirty-five feet above the pond, then transition to a rope crawl before plunging into the water. Each student must then jump into the pond and ditch their rifle and load-bearing equipment while submerged. Finally, each student climbs a ladder to the top of a seventy-foot tower and traverses down to the water on a pulley attached to a suspended cable, subsequently plunging into the pond. All of these tasks must be performed calmly without any type of safety harness. If a student fails to negotiate an obstacle (through fear, hesitation or by not completing it correctly) they are dropped from the course.
  • Combination Night/Day land navigation test – This has proven to be one of the more difficult events for students, as sending units fail to teach land navigation using a map and compass. Students are given a predetermined number of MGRS locations and begin testing approximately two hours prior to dawn. Flashlights, with red lens filters, may only be used for map referencing; the use of flashlight to navigate across terrain will result in an immediate dismissal from the school. Later in the course, Ranger students will be expected to conduct, and navigate, patrols at night without violating light discipline. The land navigation test instills this skill early in each student's mind, thus making the task second nature when graded patrolling begins.
  • A 2.1 mile buddy run, followed by the Malvesti Field Obstacle Course, featuring the notorious "worm pit": a shallow, muddy, 25-meter obstacle covered by knee-high barbed wire. The obstacle must be negotiated—usually several times—on one's back and belly.
  • Demolitions training and airborne refresher training.
  • Modern Army Combatives Program (MACP) training was removed as a part of a new POI at the start of 2009; it was reinstated with Class 06–10. The Combatives Program was spread over all phases and culminated with practical application in Swamp Phase. However, MACP has been removed from Ranger again, starting with the Combatives Program in Mountains and Florida and followed by the removal of RAP week combatives in class 06–12.
  • A 12-mile forced, individual ruck march with full gear on roads and trails surrounding Camp Rogers. This is the last test during RAP and is a pass/fail event. If the Ranger student fails to finish the march in under 3 hours, they are dropped from the course. (12 miles is approximately 20,000 metres.)
 
Students conduct 360° security while another element moves ahead to secure their path (December 2009)

The emphasis at Camp Darby is on the instruction in and execution of Squad Combat Operations. The phase includes "fast paced instruction on troop leading procedures, principles of patrolling, demolitions, field craft, and basic battle drills focused towards squad ambush and reconnaissance missions".[20] The Ranger student receives instruction on airborne/air assault operations, demolitions, environmental and "field craft" training, executes the infamous "Darby Queen" obstacle course, and learns the fundamentals of patrolling, warning and operations orders, and communications. The fundamentals of combat operations include battle drills (React to Contact, Break Contact, React to Ambush, React to Indirect Fire, and Crossing a Danger Area), which are focused on providing the principles and techniques that enable the squad-level element to successfully conduct reconnaissance and ambush missions. As a result, the Ranger student gains tactical and technical proficiency and confidence in themselves, and prepares to move to the next phase of the course, the Mountain Phase.

Mountain phase edit

 
A student receives instructions on rappelling from Cadre during the Mountain Phase of Ranger School (February 2011).

The second phase of Ranger School is conducted at the remote Camp Merrill near Dahlonega, Georgia by the 5th Ranger Training Battalion. Here, "students receive instruction on military mountaineering tasks, mobility training, as well as techniques for employing a platoon for continuous combat patrol operations in a mountainous environment".[20] Adding to the physical hardships endured in the Darby phase, in this phase "the stamina and commitment of the Ranger student is stressed to the maximum. At any time, they may be selected to lead tired, hungry, physically expended students to accomplish yet another combat patrol mission".[20] The Ranger student continues learning how to sustain themselves and their subordinates in the mountains. The rugged terrain, severe weather, hunger, mental and physical fatigue, and the psychological stress the student encounters allow them to measure their capabilities and limitations and those of their fellow soldiers.

In addition to combat operations, the student receives four days of military mountaineering training. The sequence of training has changed in past decades. As of 2010, the training sequence is as follows. In the first two days students learn knots, belays, anchor points, rope management, mobility evacuation, and the fundamentals of climbing and abseiling. The training ends in a two-day Upper mountaineering exercise at Yonah Mountain, to apply the skills learned during Lower mountaineering. Each student must make all prescribed climbs at Mt. Yonah to continue in the course. During the field training exercise (FTX), students execute a mission requiring mountaineering skills.

Combat missions are against a conventionally equipped threat force in a Mid-Intensity Conflict. These missions are both day and night in a two part, four and five-day FTX, and include moving cross country over mountains, vehicle ambushes, raiding communications and mortar sites, river crossing, and scaling steeply sloped mountainous terrain.

The Ranger student reaches his objective in several ways: cross-country movement, parachuting into small drop zones, air assaults into small, mountain-side landing zones, or a 10-mile march across the Tennessee Valley Divide. The student's commitment and physical-mental stamina are tested to the maximum. At the end of the Mountain Phase, the students travel by bus to a nearby airfield and conduct an airborne operation, parachuting into Swamp Phase. Non-airborne are bused to Eglin Air Force Base for the Swamp Phase.

Swamp phase edit

 
Students paddle their Combat Rubber Raiding Craft down a river to start their waterborne training mission at Camp Rudder, Eglin Air Force Base (July 2016).

The third phase of Ranger School is conducted at Camp James E. Rudder (Auxiliary Field #6), Eglin Air Force Base, Florida by the 6th Ranger Training Battalion. According to the Ranger Training Brigade,

This phase focuses on the continued development of the Ranger student's combat arms functional skills. Students receive instruction on waterborne operations, small boat movements, and stream crossings upon arrival. Practical exercises in extended platoon level operations executed in a coastal swamp environment test the Students’ ability to operate effectively under conditions of extreme mental and physical stress. This training further develops the Students' ability to plan and lead small units during independent and coordinated airborne, air assault, small boat, and dismounted combat patrol operations in a low intensity combat environment against a well trained, sophisticated enemy.[20]

The Swamp Phase continues the progressive, realistic OPFOR (opposing forces) scenario. As the scenario develops, the students receive "in-country" technique training that assists them in accomplishing the tactical missions later in the phase. Technique training includes: small boat operations, expedient stream crossing techniques, and skills needed to survive and operate in a rainforest/swamp environment by learning how to deal with reptiles and how to determine the difference between venomous and non-venomous snakes. Camp Rudder has specially trained reptile experts who teach the students to not fear the wildlife they encounter.

The Ranger students are updated on the scenario that eventually commits the unit to combat during techniques training. The 10-day FTX comprises "fast paced, highly stressful, challenging exercises in which the Students are evaluated on their ability to apply small unit tactics and techniques during the execution of raids, ambushes, movements to contact, and urban assaults to accomplish their assigned missions".[20] The capstone of the course is the extensively planned raid of the Atropian Liberation Front's (ALF) island stronghold. This small boat operation involves each platoon in the class, all working together on separate missions to take down the simulated cartel's final point of strength.

Afterwards, students who have met graduation requirements spend several days cleaning their weapons and equipment before returning to Fort Moore. By then they have earned PX (Post Exchange) privileges, and access to a community center where they can use a telephone, eat civilian food, and watch television. In years past, the "Gator Lounge" served this purpose, but it was destroyed by a fire in late 2005. In the years since, a new "Gator Lounge" has been built, maintaining many of the features of the original. Graduation is at Fort Moore. In an elaborate ceremony at Victory Pond, the black-and-gold Ranger Tab is pinned to the graduating soldier's left shoulder (usually by a relative, a respected RI, or soldier from the student's original unit). The Ranger Tab is permanently worn above the soldier's unit patch.

Desert phase edit

The Desert Phase was designed to instruct its students in Desert Warfare operations and basic survival in the deserts of the Middle East. John Lock describes the Desert Phase as follows.

The phase commenced with an in-flight rigging and airborne assault—or an air assault landing by non-airborne personnel, onto an objective. Following the mission, the students moved into a cantonment area. Remaining in garrison for five days, they then received classes on desert-survival techniques to include water procurement and water preservation. Leadership responsibilities, standing operating procedures (SOPs), reconnaissance, and ambush techniques were also reviewed. Additional emphasis was placed on battle drills to include react to enemy contact, react to indirect fire, and react to near and far ambushes. Drills on how to breach barbed and concertina wire with wire cutters and assault ladders were taught as were techniques on how to clear a trench line and how to assault a fortified bunker.[21]

The remainder of the phase comprised patrolling during field training exercises—"reconnaissance, raid, or ambush missions". "The phase culminated with an airborne assault—with non-Airborne trucked—by the entire class on a joint objective."[22]

Ranger School's initial evaluation of a Desert Phase was a cadre-lead patrol at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico in early 1971 called Arid Fox I. In June 1971, the Ranger Training Brigade conducted Arid Fox II, the first student-led patrol. This was part of the brigade's continuing evaluation of the possibility of integrating a Desert Phase into the Ranger course. The first students to undergo the Desert Phase were selected from Ranger Class 13–71 (class 13 in 1971). When the bulk of the class went on to begin the Swamp phase, the airborne qualified members of Ranger Class 13–71 (Desert) donned MC1-1 parachutes, boarded a C-130 aircraft and parachuted into the White Sands Missile Range.

Upon formal integration into the Ranger Course, the Desert Phase was initially run by the Ranger School's 4th (Desert Ranger) Training Company stationed at Fort Bliss, Texas from 1983 to 1987. When the Desert Phase was officially introduced, the length of Ranger School was lengthened to 65 days. At the outset, the Desert Phase was the last phase of the Ranger Course—following the Benning, Mountain and Swamp Phases, respectively.[10]

In 1987, the unit was expanded into the 7th Ranger Training Battalion and moved to Dugway Proving Grounds, Utah.

In October 1991, the course was increased to sixty-eight days and the sequence was changed to Fort Benning, Desert (Fort Bliss, Texas), Mountain, and Florida. In May 1995, the school underwent its most recent course change when the Desert phase was discontinued.[10] The last Ranger School class to go through the Desert Phase was class 7–95.[citation needed]

The U.S. Army has not given up on small unit desert training. In 2015, the 1st Armored Division created the Desert Warrior Course that focuses on honing combat tracking, night land navigation, live-fire drills, and a myriad of other tasks.[23]

Leadership positions edit

A student's graduation is highly dependent on their performance in graded positions of leadership. This leadership ability is evaluated at various levels in various situations, and is observed while they are in one of typically two graded leadership roles per phase. The student can either meet the high standards and be given a "GO" by the R.I., or can fail to meet this standard and receive a "NO GO". The student must demonstrate the ability to meet the standard in order to move forward, and can thus only afford one unsuccessful patrol. The student's success will lie in his ability to essentially manipulate those directly underneath their charge of leadership. At times, this will be as few as two to three people—and at other times the student may be required to lead up to an entire 45-person platoon. The student's success can be dependent on the performance and teamwork of these individuals, whom they must motivate and lead. Missions are typically broken up into four stages: planning, movement, actions on the objective, and establishment of a patrol base. The Platoon Leader position (in Mountains and Florida) will be rotated throughout the mission, and the same is true for the platoon sergeant position. The squad leader position is on a 24-hour rotation which is the same for all of the ungraded key leadership positions: Medic, Forward Observer (FO) and Radio Telephone Operator (RTO).

Peer evaluations edit

Another part of the evaluation of the student is a peer evaluation; failing a peer evaluation (scoring less than a 60% approval rating from your squad) can result in disqualification, though usually only if it happens twice. Due to unit loyalties, certain individuals within a squad who may be "the odd one out" will sometimes be singled out by the squad arbitrarily. Because of this, someone who has been "peered out" or "peered," will be moved to another squad, sometimes within another platoon, in order to ensure that this was not the reason the student was peered. If it happens within this new squad, however, this is taken as an indication that student is being singled out because they are either lazy, incompetent, or cannot keep up. At this time the student will usually be removed from the course.

Recycling edit

If a student performs successfully, but suffers an injury that keeps them from finishing, they may be medically recycled (med recycle) at the discretion of either the battalion or the Ranger Training Brigade commander; the student will be given an opportunity to heal and finish the course with the next class. Students recycled in the first phase are temporarily assigned to Vaughn's Platoon (informally known as the "Gulag" to Ranger students). Recycled students typically receive classes on Ranger School tasks and perform a variety of general tasks for their respective Ranger Training Battalion. While marking time at Ranger School is not always pleasant, those who have been recycled typically perform well when reinserted back into the course, with pass rates well over 80%.

Students can also be recycled for a variety of other reasons, including failing their patrol evaluations, peer evaluation, collecting 3 or more bad spot reports in a phase, or receiving a Serious Observation Report (SOR). Students may receive SORs for actions including, but not limited to, negligent discharges, safety violations involving demolitions or mountaineering, not looking through their sights while firing, or throwing away ammunition to lighten their load while on patrol. If a student fails a phase twice for the same reason (patrols, peers, etc.) they will usually be dropped from the course, but may possibly be offered a "day one restart," and will restart on Day 1 of the next Ranger School class. In rare cases, those assessed of honor violations (lying, cheating, stealing) and SORs may be offered a day one restart as opposed to being dropped from the course.

Graduation rates edit

 
Ranger School graduate congratulated by his superior officer (June 2015).

Historically, the graduation rate has been around 50%, but this has fluctuated. In the period prior to 1980, the Ranger School attrition rate was over 65%. 64% of Ranger School class 10–80 graduated.[24] The graduation rate has dropped below 50% in recent years: 52% in 2005, 54% in 2006, 56% in 2007, 49% in 2008, 46% in 2009, 43% in 2010, and 42% in 2011. Recycles are included in the graduation rates. Recycles are tracked by the class they start with, and affect only that class's graduation rate.[14]

Physical effects edit

Following the completion of Ranger School, a student will usually find himself "in the worst shape of his life".[25] Military folk wisdom has it that Ranger School's physical toll is like years of natural aging; high levels of fight-or-flight stress hormones (epinephrine, norepinephrine, cortisol), along with standard sleep deprivation and continual physical strain, inhibit full physical and mental recovery throughout the course.

Common maladies during the course include weight loss, dehydration, trench foot, heatstroke, frostbite, chilblains, fractures, tissue tears (ligaments, tendons, muscles), swollen hands, feet, knees, nerve damage, loss of limb sensitivity, cellulitis, contact dermatitis, cuts, and insect, spider, bee, and other wildlife bites.

Because of the physical and psychological effect of low calorie intake over an extended period of time, it is not uncommon for many Ranger School graduates to encounter weight problems as they return to their units and their bodies and minds slowly adjust to routine again. A drastically lowered metabolic rate, combined with a nearly insatiable appetite (the result of food deprivation and the ensuing survivalist mentality) can cause quick weight gain, as the body is already in energy (fat) storing mode.

Food and sleep deprivation edit

A Ranger student's diet and sleep are strictly controlled by the Ranger Instructors. During time in garrison, students are given one to three meals a day, but forced to eat extremely quickly and without any talking. During field exercises, Ranger students are given two MREs (Meal, Ready-to-eat) per day, but not allowed to eat them until given permission. This is enforced most harshly in Darby and Mountain phases. Since food and sleep are at the bottom of the priorities of those in the infantry behind security, weapons maintenance, and personal hygiene, it is generally the last thing Ranger students are allowed to do. As such, the two MREs are generally eaten within three hours of each other, one post mission, and the other prior to the planning portion of the mission. Though the Ranger student's daily caloric intake of 2200 calories would be more than enough for the average person, Ranger students are under such physical stress that this amount is insufficient. The Ranger Training Brigade does not maintain weight information in the 21st century, but in the 1980s, Ranger students lost an average of 25–30 pounds during the Ranger course.[25]

Ranger School Class Awards edit

The awards listed below are designed to recognize outstanding achievement during the Ranger Course. Dependent on class performance, all or some of these awards may be presented upon graduation.[26]

William O. Darby Award (Distinguished Honor Graduate)

The Darby Award is awarded to the Ranger that shows the best tactical and administrative leadership performance, has the most positive spot reports and has demonstrated being a cut above the rest. They must also pass all graded leadership positions, peer reports, and may not recycle. This award is named in the honor of BG William O. Darby, who organized the 1st Ranger Battalion in 1942 with handpicked volunteers leading the way onto the beaches of North Africa. Ranger Battalions also spearheaded the campaigns in Sicily and Italy, and the D-Day landing on Omaha Beach. In the Pacific the 6th Ranger Battalion served with distinction in the Philippines.

Ralph Puckett Award (Officer Honor Graduate)

The Puckett Award is awarded to the Ranger that passes all graded leadership positions; peer reports, and may not recycle. The Ranger may not have any lost equipment due to negligence and may not have any retests on any critical tasks. This award is named in honor of Colonel Ralph Puckett. Colonel Puckett earned the Distinguished Service Cross (upgraded to the Medal of Honor in 2021) during the Korean War as company commander of the 8th Army Ranger Company, the first Ranger Company seeing active service during the war. Then-First Lieutenant Puckett, in an attack against numerically superior Chinese forces, established defensive fighting positions on the captured objective. His Rangers held off five successive Chinese counterattacks before he was severely wounded during a sixth counterattack and evacuated despite his protests.

Glenn M. Hall Award (Enlisted Honor Graduate)

The Hall is awarded to the Ranger that passes all graded leadership positions; peer reports, and may not recycle. The Ranger may not have any lost equipment due to negligence and may not have any retests on any critical tasks. This award is named in honor of Corporal Glenn M. Hall. Corporal Hall was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross while serving with the 1st Airborne Ranger Company for his gallant actions at Chipyon-Ni during the Korean War. He exposed himself to direct enemy fire to cover his platoon's movement. Once his weapon jammed he joined his platoon and volunteered to contact friendly forces on an adjacent hill. When he reached the hill, it was covered with enemy troops. Corporal Hall killed a Chinese soldier in a foxhole and used that position to drive the enemy from the hill. He was wounded during that action by a grenade.

LTC Keith Antonia Officer Leadership Award

Awarded to the highest ranked commissioned officer as selected by their peers for demonstrating outstanding leadership, initiative, and motivation.

CSM Michael Kelso Enlisted Leadership Award

Awarded to the highest ranked enlisted Ranger as selected by their peers for demonstrating outstanding leadership, initiative, and motivation.

Ranger training deaths edit

While Ranger School is designed to physically stress students to a point short of death, some fatalities have occurred during training.

In the winter of 1977, two students in class 2-77 died of hypothermia while on patrol in the Florida swamp.

In 1985, in the Swamp phase, a soldier drowned crossing a stream against a strong current.

In March 1992, a student with sickle cell trait died after exposure to high altitude and stress in the mountain phase. The Ranger Training Brigade did not know about his medical issue until after his death.[citation needed]

In March 1992, a Ranger student died from a fall on the Slide for Life.[27]

On 15 February 1995, the "worst incident in the 44-year history of the school" occurred during the Swamp Phase of class 3–95. Captain Milton Palmer, 2LT Spencer Dodge, 2LT Curt Sansoucie, and SGT Norman Tillman died from hypothermia. Investigations of the incident were conducted by the U.S. Air Force, the Ranger Training Brigade, and the U.S. Army's Safety Board. The results were determined to be a result of a combination of human errors exacerbated by "unexpected weather conditions". Nine Ranger Instructors were disciplined and the 6th Ranger Training Battalion commander was relieved. As there was no basis for criminal charges, none were court-martialed.[28] The four dead Ranger School students were posthumously awarded the Ranger Tab.[29] As a result of the 1995 deaths, 38 new safety measures were implemented in the Swamp Phase. According to John Lock,

New equipment is now on hand to assist troubled students; equipment which includes one-man inflatable rafts designed to get Rangers out of the water and to arrest hypothermia, water measuring devices, and global positioning systems. Monitoring stations have also been installed in swamp locations to provide better information on weather and water conditions. Command and control procedures now include the Ranger Battalion Commander who will make the final call as to whether waterborne operations are a Go, No Go, or modified—on-site RIs [Ranger Instructors] also have the authority to call off an operation should the situation warrant it. Additionally, training lanes will be walked by RIs prior to the exercise and there will be no deviation in the landing sites for the patrols.[30]

On Thursday, March 25, 2021, Cpl. James A. Requenez, 28, of San Antonio, Texas, died due to drowning during an unspecified training incident at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida. Officials with Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade, out of Fort Moore, Georgia, said. Requenez was transported to Eglin AFB hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to the release, which added the incident was under investigation.[31][32]

On Tuesday, August 9, 2022, Staff Sgt. George Taber and 2nd Lt. Evan Fitzgibbon were killed while conducting mountaineering training in the north Georgia mountains. Both students were both struck by a portion of a falling tree while sheltering during a weather-induced training hold. Three additional students were also injured during the event and treated at a hospital.[33][34][35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Fort Benning. Archived from the original on 24 March 2022.
  2. ^ (PDF). Fort Benning. 4 May 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 July 2022.
  3. ^ Baldor, Lolita (19 September 2014). "Army opens Ranger school to women". Associated Press. Archived from the original on 20 September 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  4. ^ (PDF). Department of the Army. 3 February 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 February 2012.
  5. ^ 32 CFR 578.98
  6. ^ Lamothe, Dan (10 July 2015). "Remaining women at Army Ranger School clear hurdle, make it to Mountain Phase". The Washington Post. from the original on 13 July 2015. Retrieved 12 July 2015.. Italics added.
  7. ^ United States Army, U.S. Army Ranger School Command Brief, United States Army. PowerPoint Presentation, n.d.
  8. ^ United States Army, 1950.
  9. ^ a b Lock 2005, pp. 28–29.
  10. ^ a b c d Lock 2005, p. 29.
  11. ^ Lock 2005, p. 46.
  12. ^ Worland, Justin (2 September 2015). "Army Ranger School Now Open to Women Permanently". Time. from the original on 2 September 2015. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  13. ^ a b Lamothe, Dan. "After historic graduation, Army removes all restrictions on women attending Ranger School". The Washington Post. from the original on 18 September 2015. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "Ranger Training Brigade Brief" (PDF). United States Army. 13 April 2011. (PDF) from the original on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  15. ^ Brantley-Sisk, Brigitte N. (9 May 2011). "Airman Ranger made the cut, now leads the way". 23rd Wing Public Affairs. Archived from the original on 8 March 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
  16. ^ a b c d "Meet the first 2 women to pass U.S. army's elite ranger school". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Associated Press. 20 August 2015. from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  17. ^ Tan, Michelle (16 October 2015). "3rd woman, and 1st female Reservist, dons Ranger tab". Army Times. Archived from the original on 29 August 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  18. ^ Correll, Diana Stancy (3 September 2019). "1st Lt. Chelsey Hibsch becomes the first female Air Force airman earns the U.S. Army's prestigious Ranger tab". Air Force Times. Archived from the original on 29 August 2022. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  19. ^ "Ranger Handbook: SH 21–76" (PDF). United States Army. February 2011. p. cover. (PDF) from the original on 29 April 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  20. ^ a b c d e f "Ranger Training Brigade – Student Information: Phases". Fort Benning. 13 April 2011. from the original on 19 April 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  21. ^ Lock 2005, pp. 91–92.
  22. ^ Lock 2005, p. 92.
  23. ^ Tan, Michelle (30 March 2015). "Army to launch new desert school". Army Times. Archived from the original on 29 August 2022. Retrieved 29 August 2022.Army to launch new desert school, ArmyTimes, by Michelle Tan, dated 30 March 2015, last accessed 28 December 2017
  24. ^ Lock 2005, pp. 22, 30.
  25. ^ a b Lock 2005, p. 30.
  26. ^ . Ranger.org. Archived from the original on 15 November 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  27. ^ Lock 2005, p. 182.
  28. ^ Lock 2005, p. 188.
  29. ^ Lock 2005, p. 186.
  30. ^ Lock 2005, pp. 182–189.
  31. ^ Winsor, Morgan (29 March 2021). . ABC News. Archived from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  32. ^ Rempfer, Kyle (16 March 2022). "Soldier tried to identify as a 'weak swimmer' before Ranger School river drowning". Army Times. Archived from the original on 15 April 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  33. ^ "Army identifies 2 soldiers killed by falling tree in Georgia". Army Times. Associated Press. 11 August 2022. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  34. ^ Nostrant, Rachel (17 August 2022). "Wind blew tree onto sheltering soldiers, killing 2, loss report says". Army Times. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  35. ^ Kheel, Rebecca (10 August 2022). "Ranger Candidates Were Killed by Falling Tree During Georgia Storm". Military.com. Retrieved 11 November 2023.

Bibliography edit

  • Lock, John (2005). The Coveted Black and Gold: A Daily Journey Through the U.S. Army Ranger School Experience. Arizona: Fenestra Books. ISBN 978-1-58736-367-2.
  • . Fort Benning. United States Army. Archived from the original on 13 March 2013. Retrieved 19 March 2010.

External links edit

  •   Media related to United States Army Ranger School at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • US Army Ranger Training Manuals

ranger, school, york, forestry, school, suny, united, states, army, small, unit, tactics, leadership, course, that, develops, functional, skills, directly, related, units, whose, mission, engage, enemy, close, combat, direct, fire, battles, ranger, training, e. For the New York forestry school see SUNY ESF Ranger School The Ranger School is a 62 day United States Army small unit tactics and leadership course that develops functional skills directly related to units whose mission is to engage the enemy in close combat and direct fire battles 1 2 Ranger training was established in September 1950 at Fort Benning Georgia now called Fort Moore The Ranger course has changed little since its inception Until recently when it was an eight week course divided into three phases The course is now 61 days in duration and divided into three phases as follows Benning Phase Mountain Phase and Swamp Phase 1 Ranger SchoolAn instructor explains abseiling to his students as part of Ranger School training April 2009Active1950 presentCountry United StatesBranch United States ArmyTypeMilitary trainingRoleSpecial skills trainingPart ofAirborne and Ranger Training Brigade United States Army Infantry SchoolGarrison HQFort Moore GeorgiaMotto s Rangers lead the way InsigniaRanger Tab awarded upon graduationShoulder sleeve insignia of the Airborne and Ranger Training BrigadeUnit flash of the Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade and its 4th 5th and 6th Ranger Training Battalions Contents 1 Overview 2 History 3 Students 4 Training 4 1 Darby phase 4 2 Mountain phase 4 3 Swamp phase 4 4 Desert phase 4 5 Leadership positions 4 6 Peer evaluations 4 7 Recycling 4 8 Graduation rates 4 9 Physical effects 4 9 1 Food and sleep deprivation 5 Ranger School Class Awards 6 Ranger training deaths 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksOverview editThe Ranger School is open to U S military personnel from the Army Marine Corps Navy and Air Force as well as selected students from other nations allied with the United States The course is conducted in various locations Benning Phase occurs in and around Camp Rogers and Camp Darby at Fort Moore Georgia Mountain Phase is conducted at Camp Merrill in the remote mountains near Dahlonega Georgia Swamp Phase is conducted in the coastal swamps at various locations near Camp Rudder Eglin Air Force Base in Florida citation needed The school is not organizationally affiliated with the 75th Ranger Regiment Ranger School falls under control of the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command as a school open to most members of the United States Army but the 75th Ranger Regiment is a Special Operations warfighting unit organized under the United States Army Special Operations Command The two share a common heritage and subordinate battalions common lineage and Ranger School is a requirement for all officers and non commissioned officers NCO of the 75th Ranger Regiment 3 Those graduating from Ranger School are presented with the Ranger Tab which is worn on the upper shoulder of the left sleeve of a military uniform according to U S Army regulations 4 Wearing the tab is permitted for the remainder of a soldier s military career The cloth version of the tab is worn on the Army Combat Uniform and Army Green Service Uniform a smaller metal version is worn on the Army Service Uniform 5 Without a doubt Ranger School is the most physically and mentally demanding course in the U S Army Major General Scott Miller Commander of the U S Maneuver Center of Excellence July 2015 6 History edit nbsp First graduates of Ranger School 1950 nbsp Army Ranger training film circa 1953 source source source source source Ranger Training had begun in September 1950 at Fort Benning Georgia with the formation and training of 17 Airborne Companies by the Ranger Training Command 7 The first class graduated from Ranger training in November 1950 becoming the 1st Ranger Infantry Company 8 The United States Army s Infantry School officially established the Ranger Department in December 1951 Under the Ranger Department the first Ranger School Class was conducted in January March 1952 with a graduation date of 1 March 1952 Its duration was 59 days 9 At the time Ranger training was voluntary In 1966 a panel headed by General Ralph E Haines Jr recommended making Ranger training mandatory for all Regular Army officers upon commissioning On 16 August 1966 the Chief of Staff of the Army General Harold K Johnson directed it so This policy was implemented in July 1967 It was rescinded on 21 June 1972 by General William Westmoreland Once again Ranger training was voluntary 9 In August 1987 the Ranger Department was split from the Infantry School and the Ranger Training Brigade was established The Ranger Companies that made up the Ranger Department became the current training units the 4th 5th and 6th Ranger Training Battalions 10 Desert Phase was added in 1983 and the length of the Ranger course was extended to 65 days The duration was again expanded in October 1991 to 68 days concurrently with the reshuffling of the Desert phase from the last phase to the second The 7th Ranger Training Battalion was added to administer this phase The most recent duration change to Ranger School occurred in May 1995 when the Desert Phase was removed from the Ranger course Ranger School was reduced to its current 61 day length of training at 19 6 hours of training per day 10 The Ranger Assessment Phase the first five days of Ranger School was added in 1992 11 In 2015 Ranger School was permanently opened to women 12 13 Students edit nbsp An Airman 1st Class from the 823rd Base Defense Squadron receives his Ranger Tab after completing Ranger School April 2011 Ranger School is open to all Military Occupational Specialties MOSs in the U S Army although as of April 2011 an Army combat exclusion zone still limits some from attending 14 Ranger students come from units in the United States Army Marine Corps Air Force Navy Coast Guard and from foreign military services However the two largest groups of attendees for Ranger School are from the U S Army s Infantry Basic Officer Leadership Course IBOLC and the 75th Ranger Regiment 14 Competitions and pre Ranger courses are typically used to determine attendance The Marine Corps is only allotted twenty slots for Ranger school each year while the Air Force is only allotted six 15 Ranger students typically range in rank from Private First Class to Captain with lieutenants and specialists making up the largest group The average age of a student is 23 and the average class consists of 366 students with 11 classes conducted per year 14 The vast majority of Ranger students have already graduated from Airborne School and will make multiple jumps during the course However a small number of students have entered and completed Ranger School without being Airborne qualified These individuals completed tasks assigned by cadre instead of taking part in the jumps alongside their classmates Following the graduation of Captain Kristen Marie Griest and First Lieutenant Shaye Lynne Haver in August 2015 the Army announced that Ranger School would henceforth be open to female students 13 While acknowledging that in the past he would have doubted a woman could pass the rigorous course 16 Brigade Command Sergeant Major Curtis Arnold described Griest and Haver as tough soldiers 16 who proved their mettle beyond a doubt 16 and absolutely earned the respect of every ranger instructor 16 In October 2015 Major Lisa Jaster also graduated from Ranger School becoming the first female Army Reserve officer to receive a Ranger tab 17 In 2019 First Lieutenant Chelsey Hibsch became the first female Air Force officer to graduate from Ranger School 18 Training editNot for the weak or fainthearted Ranger Handbook 19 Ranger School training has a basic scenario the flourishing drug and terrorist operations of the enemy forces the Aragon Liberation Front must be stopped To do so the Rangers will take the fight to their territory the rough terrain surrounding Fort Moore the mountains of northern Georgia and the swamps and coast of Florida Ranger students are given a clear mission but they determine how to best execute it The purpose of the course is learning to soldier as a combat leader while enduring the great mental and psychological stresses and physical fatigue of combat the Ranger Instructors RIs also known as Lane Graders create and cultivate such a physical and mental environment The course primarily comprises field craft instruction students plan and execute daily patrolling perform reconnaissance ambushes and raids against dispersed targets followed by stealthy movement to a new patrol base to plan the next mission Ranger students conduct about 20 hours of training per day while consuming two or fewer meals daily totaling about 2 200 calories 9 200 kJ with an average of 3 5 hours of sleep a day Students sleep more before a parachute jump for safety considerations Ranger students typically wear and carry some 65 90 pounds 29 41 kg of weapons equipment and training ammunition while patrolling more than 200 miles 320 km throughout the course 14 Darby phase edit nbsp MAJ Jaster performs a fireman s carry on a simulated casualty during the first phase of Ranger School MAJ Jaster was the first female US Army Reserve officer to graduate from the course October 2015 The first phase of Ranger School is conducted at Camp Rogers and Camp Darby at Fort Moore Georgia and is conducted by the 4th Ranger Training Battalion The Darby Phase is the crawl phase of Ranger School where students learn the fundamentals of squad level mission planning It is designed to assess a Soldier s physical stamina mental toughness leadership abilities and establishes the tactical fundamentals required for follow on phases of Ranger School 20 In this phase training is separated into two parts the Ranger Assessment Phase RAP and Squad Combat Operations The Ranger Assessment Phase is conducted at Camp Rogers As of April 2011 it encompasses Days 1 3 of training Historically it accounts for 60 of students who fail to graduate Ranger School 14 Events include Ranger Physical Fitness Test RPFT requiring the following minimums Push ups 49 in 2 minutes graded strictly for perfect form Sit ups 59 in 2 minutes Chin ups 6 performed from a dead hang with no lower body movement 5 mile individual run in 40 minutes or less over a course with gently rolling terrain Combat Water Survival Test no longer conducted as of 2010 Combat Water Survival Assessment conducted at Victory Pond previously called the Water Confidence Test This test consists of three events that test the Ranger student s ability to calmly overcome any fear of heights or water Students must calmly walk across a log suspended thirty five feet above the pond then transition to a rope crawl before plunging into the water Each student must then jump into the pond and ditch their rifle and load bearing equipment while submerged Finally each student climbs a ladder to the top of a seventy foot tower and traverses down to the water on a pulley attached to a suspended cable subsequently plunging into the pond All of these tasks must be performed calmly without any type of safety harness If a student fails to negotiate an obstacle through fear hesitation or by not completing it correctly they are dropped from the course Combination Night Day land navigation test This has proven to be one of the more difficult events for students as sending units fail to teach land navigation using a map and compass Students are given a predetermined number of MGRS locations and begin testing approximately two hours prior to dawn Flashlights with red lens filters may only be used for map referencing the use of flashlight to navigate across terrain will result in an immediate dismissal from the school Later in the course Ranger students will be expected to conduct and navigate patrols at night without violating light discipline The land navigation test instills this skill early in each student s mind thus making the task second nature when graded patrolling begins A 2 1 mile buddy run followed by the Malvesti Field Obstacle Course featuring the notorious worm pit a shallow muddy 25 meter obstacle covered by knee high barbed wire The obstacle must be negotiated usually several times on one s back and belly Demolitions training and airborne refresher training Modern Army Combatives Program MACP training was removed as a part of a new POI at the start of 2009 it was reinstated with Class 06 10 The Combatives Program was spread over all phases and culminated with practical application in Swamp Phase However MACP has been removed from Ranger again starting with the Combatives Program in Mountains and Florida and followed by the removal of RAP week combatives in class 06 12 A 12 mile forced individual ruck march with full gear on roads and trails surrounding Camp Rogers This is the last test during RAP and is a pass fail event If the Ranger student fails to finish the march in under 3 hours they are dropped from the course 12 miles is approximately 20 000 metres nbsp Students conduct 360 security while another element moves ahead to secure their path December 2009 The emphasis at Camp Darby is on the instruction in and execution of Squad Combat Operations The phase includes fast paced instruction on troop leading procedures principles of patrolling demolitions field craft and basic battle drills focused towards squad ambush and reconnaissance missions 20 The Ranger student receives instruction on airborne air assault operations demolitions environmental and field craft training executes the infamous Darby Queen obstacle course and learns the fundamentals of patrolling warning and operations orders and communications The fundamentals of combat operations include battle drills React to Contact Break Contact React to Ambush React to Indirect Fire and Crossing a Danger Area which are focused on providing the principles and techniques that enable the squad level element to successfully conduct reconnaissance and ambush missions As a result the Ranger student gains tactical and technical proficiency and confidence in themselves and prepares to move to the next phase of the course the Mountain Phase Mountain phase edit nbsp A student receives instructions on rappelling from Cadre during the Mountain Phase of Ranger School February 2011 The second phase of Ranger School is conducted at the remote Camp Merrill near Dahlonega Georgia by the 5th Ranger Training Battalion Here students receive instruction on military mountaineering tasks mobility training as well as techniques for employing a platoon for continuous combat patrol operations in a mountainous environment 20 Adding to the physical hardships endured in the Darby phase in this phase the stamina and commitment of the Ranger student is stressed to the maximum At any time they may be selected to lead tired hungry physically expended students to accomplish yet another combat patrol mission 20 The Ranger student continues learning how to sustain themselves and their subordinates in the mountains The rugged terrain severe weather hunger mental and physical fatigue and the psychological stress the student encounters allow them to measure their capabilities and limitations and those of their fellow soldiers In addition to combat operations the student receives four days of military mountaineering training The sequence of training has changed in past decades As of 2010 the training sequence is as follows In the first two days students learn knots belays anchor points rope management mobility evacuation and the fundamentals of climbing and abseiling The training ends in a two day Upper mountaineering exercise at Yonah Mountain to apply the skills learned during Lower mountaineering Each student must make all prescribed climbs at Mt Yonah to continue in the course During the field training exercise FTX students execute a mission requiring mountaineering skills Combat missions are against a conventionally equipped threat force in a Mid Intensity Conflict These missions are both day and night in a two part four and five day FTX and include moving cross country over mountains vehicle ambushes raiding communications and mortar sites river crossing and scaling steeply sloped mountainous terrain The Ranger student reaches his objective in several ways cross country movement parachuting into small drop zones air assaults into small mountain side landing zones or a 10 mile march across the Tennessee Valley Divide The student s commitment and physical mental stamina are tested to the maximum At the end of the Mountain Phase the students travel by bus to a nearby airfield and conduct an airborne operation parachuting into Swamp Phase Non airborne are bused to Eglin Air Force Base for the Swamp Phase Swamp phase edit nbsp Students paddle their Combat Rubber Raiding Craft down a river to start their waterborne training mission at Camp Rudder Eglin Air Force Base July 2016 The third phase of Ranger School is conducted at Camp James E Rudder Auxiliary Field 6 Eglin Air Force Base Florida by the 6th Ranger Training Battalion According to the Ranger Training Brigade This phase focuses on the continued development of the Ranger student s combat arms functional skills Students receive instruction on waterborne operations small boat movements and stream crossings upon arrival Practical exercises in extended platoon level operations executed in a coastal swamp environment test the Students ability to operate effectively under conditions of extreme mental and physical stress This training further develops the Students ability to plan and lead small units during independent and coordinated airborne air assault small boat and dismounted combat patrol operations in a low intensity combat environment against a well trained sophisticated enemy 20 The Swamp Phase continues the progressive realistic OPFOR opposing forces scenario As the scenario develops the students receive in country technique training that assists them in accomplishing the tactical missions later in the phase Technique training includes small boat operations expedient stream crossing techniques and skills needed to survive and operate in a rainforest swamp environment by learning how to deal with reptiles and how to determine the difference between venomous and non venomous snakes Camp Rudder has specially trained reptile experts who teach the students to not fear the wildlife they encounter The Ranger students are updated on the scenario that eventually commits the unit to combat during techniques training The 10 day FTX comprises fast paced highly stressful challenging exercises in which the Students are evaluated on their ability to apply small unit tactics and techniques during the execution of raids ambushes movements to contact and urban assaults to accomplish their assigned missions 20 The capstone of the course is the extensively planned raid of the Atropian Liberation Front s ALF island stronghold This small boat operation involves each platoon in the class all working together on separate missions to take down the simulated cartel s final point of strength Afterwards students who have met graduation requirements spend several days cleaning their weapons and equipment before returning to Fort Moore By then they have earned PX Post Exchange privileges and access to a community center where they can use a telephone eat civilian food and watch television In years past the Gator Lounge served this purpose but it was destroyed by a fire in late 2005 In the years since a new Gator Lounge has been built maintaining many of the features of the original Graduation is at Fort Moore In an elaborate ceremony at Victory Pond the black and gold Ranger Tab is pinned to the graduating soldier s left shoulder usually by a relative a respected RI or soldier from the student s original unit The Ranger Tab is permanently worn above the soldier s unit patch Desert phase editThe Desert Phase was designed to instruct its students in Desert Warfare operations and basic survival in the deserts of the Middle East John Lock describes the Desert Phase as follows The phase commenced with an in flight rigging and airborne assault or an air assault landing by non airborne personnel onto an objective Following the mission the students moved into a cantonment area Remaining in garrison for five days they then received classes on desert survival techniques to include water procurement and water preservation Leadership responsibilities standing operating procedures SOPs reconnaissance and ambush techniques were also reviewed Additional emphasis was placed on battle drills to include react to enemy contact react to indirect fire and react to near and far ambushes Drills on how to breach barbed and concertina wire with wire cutters and assault ladders were taught as were techniques on how to clear a trench line and how to assault a fortified bunker 21 The remainder of the phase comprised patrolling during field training exercises reconnaissance raid or ambush missions The phase culminated with an airborne assault with non Airborne trucked by the entire class on a joint objective 22 Ranger School s initial evaluation of a Desert Phase was a cadre lead patrol at White Sands Missile Range New Mexico in early 1971 called Arid Fox I In June 1971 the Ranger Training Brigade conducted Arid Fox II the first student led patrol This was part of the brigade s continuing evaluation of the possibility of integrating a Desert Phase into the Ranger course The first students to undergo the Desert Phase were selected from Ranger Class 13 71 class 13 in 1971 When the bulk of the class went on to begin the Swamp phase the airborne qualified members of Ranger Class 13 71 Desert donned MC1 1 parachutes boarded a C 130 aircraft and parachuted into the White Sands Missile Range Upon formal integration into the Ranger Course the Desert Phase was initially run by the Ranger School s 4th Desert Ranger Training Company stationed at Fort Bliss Texas from 1983 to 1987 When the Desert Phase was officially introduced the length of Ranger School was lengthened to 65 days At the outset the Desert Phase was the last phase of the Ranger Course following the Benning Mountain and Swamp Phases respectively 10 In 1987 the unit was expanded into the 7th Ranger Training Battalion and moved to Dugway Proving Grounds Utah In October 1991 the course was increased to sixty eight days and the sequence was changed to Fort Benning Desert Fort Bliss Texas Mountain and Florida In May 1995 the school underwent its most recent course change when the Desert phase was discontinued 10 The last Ranger School class to go through the Desert Phase was class 7 95 citation needed The U S Army has not given up on small unit desert training In 2015 the 1st Armored Division created the Desert Warrior Course that focuses on honing combat tracking night land navigation live fire drills and a myriad of other tasks 23 Leadership positions edit A student s graduation is highly dependent on their performance in graded positions of leadership This leadership ability is evaluated at various levels in various situations and is observed while they are in one of typically two graded leadership roles per phase The student can either meet the high standards and be given a GO by the R I or can fail to meet this standard and receive a NO GO The student must demonstrate the ability to meet the standard in order to move forward and can thus only afford one unsuccessful patrol The student s success will lie in his ability to essentially manipulate those directly underneath their charge of leadership At times this will be as few as two to three people and at other times the student may be required to lead up to an entire 45 person platoon The student s success can be dependent on the performance and teamwork of these individuals whom they must motivate and lead Missions are typically broken up into four stages planning movement actions on the objective and establishment of a patrol base The Platoon Leader position in Mountains and Florida will be rotated throughout the mission and the same is true for the platoon sergeant position The squad leader position is on a 24 hour rotation which is the same for all of the ungraded key leadership positions Medic Forward Observer FO and Radio Telephone Operator RTO Peer evaluations edit Another part of the evaluation of the student is a peer evaluation failing a peer evaluation scoring less than a 60 approval rating from your squad can result in disqualification though usually only if it happens twice Due to unit loyalties certain individuals within a squad who may be the odd one out will sometimes be singled out by the squad arbitrarily Because of this someone who has been peered out or peered will be moved to another squad sometimes within another platoon in order to ensure that this was not the reason the student was peered If it happens within this new squad however this is taken as an indication that student is being singled out because they are either lazy incompetent or cannot keep up At this time the student will usually be removed from the course Recycling edit If a student performs successfully but suffers an injury that keeps them from finishing they may be medically recycled med recycle at the discretion of either the battalion or the Ranger Training Brigade commander the student will be given an opportunity to heal and finish the course with the next class Students recycled in the first phase are temporarily assigned to Vaughn s Platoon informally known as the Gulag to Ranger students Recycled students typically receive classes on Ranger School tasks and perform a variety of general tasks for their respective Ranger Training Battalion While marking time at Ranger School is not always pleasant those who have been recycled typically perform well when reinserted back into the course with pass rates well over 80 Students can also be recycled for a variety of other reasons including failing their patrol evaluations peer evaluation collecting 3 or more bad spot reports in a phase or receiving a Serious Observation Report SOR Students may receive SORs for actions including but not limited to negligent discharges safety violations involving demolitions or mountaineering not looking through their sights while firing or throwing away ammunition to lighten their load while on patrol If a student fails a phase twice for the same reason patrols peers etc they will usually be dropped from the course but may possibly be offered a day one restart and will restart on Day 1 of the next Ranger School class In rare cases those assessed of honor violations lying cheating stealing and SORs may be offered a day one restart as opposed to being dropped from the course Graduation rates edit nbsp Ranger School graduate congratulated by his superior officer June 2015 Historically the graduation rate has been around 50 but this has fluctuated In the period prior to 1980 the Ranger School attrition rate was over 65 64 of Ranger School class 10 80 graduated 24 The graduation rate has dropped below 50 in recent years 52 in 2005 54 in 2006 56 in 2007 49 in 2008 46 in 2009 43 in 2010 and 42 in 2011 Recycles are included in the graduation rates Recycles are tracked by the class they start with and affect only that class s graduation rate 14 Physical effects edit Following the completion of Ranger School a student will usually find himself in the worst shape of his life 25 Military folk wisdom has it that Ranger School s physical toll is like years of natural aging high levels of fight or flight stress hormones epinephrine norepinephrine cortisol along with standard sleep deprivation and continual physical strain inhibit full physical and mental recovery throughout the course Common maladies during the course include weight loss dehydration trench foot heatstroke frostbite chilblains fractures tissue tears ligaments tendons muscles swollen hands feet knees nerve damage loss of limb sensitivity cellulitis contact dermatitis cuts and insect spider bee and other wildlife bites Because of the physical and psychological effect of low calorie intake over an extended period of time it is not uncommon for many Ranger School graduates to encounter weight problems as they return to their units and their bodies and minds slowly adjust to routine again A drastically lowered metabolic rate combined with a nearly insatiable appetite the result of food deprivation and the ensuing survivalist mentality can cause quick weight gain as the body is already in energy fat storing mode Food and sleep deprivation edit A Ranger student s diet and sleep are strictly controlled by the Ranger Instructors During time in garrison students are given one to three meals a day but forced to eat extremely quickly and without any talking During field exercises Ranger students are given two MREs Meal Ready to eat per day but not allowed to eat them until given permission This is enforced most harshly in Darby and Mountain phases Since food and sleep are at the bottom of the priorities of those in the infantry behind security weapons maintenance and personal hygiene it is generally the last thing Ranger students are allowed to do As such the two MREs are generally eaten within three hours of each other one post mission and the other prior to the planning portion of the mission Though the Ranger student s daily caloric intake of 2200 calories would be more than enough for the average person Ranger students are under such physical stress that this amount is insufficient The Ranger Training Brigade does not maintain weight information in the 21st century but in the 1980s Ranger students lost an average of 25 30 pounds during the Ranger course 25 Ranger School Class Awards editThe awards listed below are designed to recognize outstanding achievement during the Ranger Course Dependent on class performance all or some of these awards may be presented upon graduation 26 William O Darby Award Distinguished Honor Graduate The Darby Award is awarded to the Ranger that shows the best tactical and administrative leadership performance has the most positive spot reports and has demonstrated being a cut above the rest They must also pass all graded leadership positions peer reports and may not recycle This award is named in the honor of BG William O Darby who organized the 1st Ranger Battalion in 1942 with handpicked volunteers leading the way onto the beaches of North Africa Ranger Battalions also spearheaded the campaigns in Sicily and Italy and the D Day landing on Omaha Beach In the Pacific the 6th Ranger Battalion served with distinction in the Philippines Ralph Puckett Award Officer Honor Graduate The Puckett Award is awarded to the Ranger that passes all graded leadership positions peer reports and may not recycle The Ranger may not have any lost equipment due to negligence and may not have any retests on any critical tasks This award is named in honor of Colonel Ralph Puckett Colonel Puckett earned the Distinguished Service Cross upgraded to the Medal of Honor in 2021 during the Korean War as company commander of the 8th Army Ranger Company the first Ranger Company seeing active service during the war Then First Lieutenant Puckett in an attack against numerically superior Chinese forces established defensive fighting positions on the captured objective His Rangers held off five successive Chinese counterattacks before he was severely wounded during a sixth counterattack and evacuated despite his protests Glenn M Hall Award Enlisted Honor Graduate The Hall is awarded to the Ranger that passes all graded leadership positions peer reports and may not recycle The Ranger may not have any lost equipment due to negligence and may not have any retests on any critical tasks This award is named in honor of Corporal Glenn M Hall Corporal Hall was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross while serving with the 1st Airborne Ranger Company for his gallant actions at Chipyon Ni during the Korean War He exposed himself to direct enemy fire to cover his platoon s movement Once his weapon jammed he joined his platoon and volunteered to contact friendly forces on an adjacent hill When he reached the hill it was covered with enemy troops Corporal Hall killed a Chinese soldier in a foxhole and used that position to drive the enemy from the hill He was wounded during that action by a grenade LTC Keith Antonia Officer Leadership AwardAwarded to the highest ranked commissioned officer as selected by their peers for demonstrating outstanding leadership initiative and motivation CSM Michael Kelso Enlisted Leadership AwardAwarded to the highest ranked enlisted Ranger as selected by their peers for demonstrating outstanding leadership initiative and motivation Ranger training deaths editWhile Ranger School is designed to physically stress students to a point short of death some fatalities have occurred during training In the winter of 1977 two students in class 2 77 died of hypothermia while on patrol in the Florida swamp In 1985 in the Swamp phase a soldier drowned crossing a stream against a strong current In March 1992 a student with sickle cell trait died after exposure to high altitude and stress in the mountain phase The Ranger Training Brigade did not know about his medical issue until after his death citation needed In March 1992 a Ranger student died from a fall on the Slide for Life 27 On 15 February 1995 the worst incident in the 44 year history of the school occurred during the Swamp Phase of class 3 95 Captain Milton Palmer 2LT Spencer Dodge 2LT Curt Sansoucie and SGT Norman Tillman died from hypothermia Investigations of the incident were conducted by the U S Air Force the Ranger Training Brigade and the U S Army s Safety Board The results were determined to be a result of a combination of human errors exacerbated by unexpected weather conditions Nine Ranger Instructors were disciplined and the 6th Ranger Training Battalion commander was relieved As there was no basis for criminal charges none were court martialed 28 The four dead Ranger School students were posthumously awarded the Ranger Tab 29 As a result of the 1995 deaths 38 new safety measures were implemented in the Swamp Phase According to John Lock New equipment is now on hand to assist troubled students equipment which includes one man inflatable rafts designed to get Rangers out of the water and to arrest hypothermia water measuring devices and global positioning systems Monitoring stations have also been installed in swamp locations to provide better information on weather and water conditions Command and control procedures now include the Ranger Battalion Commander who will make the final call as to whether waterborne operations are a Go No Go or modified on site RIs Ranger Instructors also have the authority to call off an operation should the situation warrant it Additionally training lanes will be walked by RIs prior to the exercise and there will be no deviation in the landing sites for the patrols 30 On Thursday March 25 2021 Cpl James A Requenez 28 of San Antonio Texas died due to drowning during an unspecified training incident at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida Officials with Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade out of Fort Moore Georgia said Requenez was transported to Eglin AFB hospital where he was pronounced dead according to the release which added the incident was under investigation 31 32 On Tuesday August 9 2022 Staff Sgt George Taber and 2nd Lt Evan Fitzgibbon were killed while conducting mountaineering training in the north Georgia mountains Both students were both struck by a portion of a falling tree while sheltering during a weather induced training hold Three additional students were also injured during the event and treated at a hospital 33 34 35 See also editRanger Assessment and Selection Program Recondo School United States Army Air Assault School United States Army Airborne School United States Army Reconnaissance and Surveillance Leaders CourseReferences edit a b Fort Benning Student Information Fort Benning Archived from the original on 24 March 2022 Airborne amp Ranger Training Brigade Brief PDF Fort Benning 4 May 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 17 July 2022 Baldor Lolita 19 September 2014 Army opens Ranger school to women Associated Press Archived from the original on 20 September 2014 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Wear and Appearance of Army Uniforms and Insignia AR 670 1 PDF Department of the Army 3 February 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 6 February 2012 32 CFR 578 98 Archived Lamothe Dan 10 July 2015 Remaining women at Army Ranger School clear hurdle make it to Mountain Phase The Washington Post Archived from the original on 13 July 2015 Retrieved 12 July 2015 Italics added United States Army U S Army Ranger School Command Brief United States Army PowerPoint Presentation n d United States Army 1950 a b Lock 2005 pp 28 29 a b c d Lock 2005 p 29 Lock 2005 p 46 Worland Justin 2 September 2015 Army Ranger School Now Open to Women Permanently Time Archived from the original on 2 September 2015 Retrieved 2 September 2015 a b Lamothe Dan After historic graduation Army removes all restrictions on women attending Ranger School The Washington Post Archived from the original on 18 September 2015 Retrieved 2 September 2015 a b c d e f Ranger Training Brigade Brief PDF United States Army 13 April 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 24 April 2011 Brantley Sisk Brigitte N 9 May 2011 Airman Ranger made the cut now leads the way 23rd Wing Public Affairs Archived from the original on 8 March 2013 Retrieved 22 February 2013 a b c d Meet the first 2 women to pass U S army s elite ranger school Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Associated Press 20 August 2015 Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Tan Michelle 16 October 2015 3rd woman and 1st female Reservist dons Ranger tab Army Times Archived from the original on 29 August 2022 Retrieved 16 June 2016 Correll Diana Stancy 3 September 2019 1st Lt Chelsey Hibsch becomes the first female Air Force airman earns the U S Army s prestigious Ranger tab Air Force Times Archived from the original on 29 August 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Ranger Handbook SH 21 76 PDF United States Army February 2011 p cover Archived PDF from the original on 29 April 2011 Retrieved 24 April 2011 a b c d e f Ranger Training Brigade Student Information Phases Fort Benning 13 April 2011 Archived from the original on 19 April 2011 Retrieved 24 April 2011 Lock 2005 pp 91 92 Lock 2005 p 92 Tan Michelle 30 March 2015 Army to launch new desert school Army Times Archived from the original on 29 August 2022 Retrieved 29 August 2022 Army to launch new desert school ArmyTimes by Michelle Tan dated 30 March 2015 last accessed 28 December 2017 Lock 2005 pp 22 30 a b Lock 2005 p 30 Ranger School Class Awards Ranger org Archived from the original on 15 November 2013 Retrieved 9 May 2018 Lock 2005 p 182 Lock 2005 p 188 Lock 2005 p 186 Lock 2005 pp 182 189 Winsor Morgan 29 March 2021 Army investigating death of soldier during swamp phase of Ranger School ABC News Archived from the original on 11 May 2021 Retrieved 29 August 2022 Rempfer Kyle 16 March 2022 Soldier tried to identify as a weak swimmer before Ranger School river drowning Army Times Archived from the original on 15 April 2022 Retrieved 18 April 2022 Army identifies 2 soldiers killed by falling tree in Georgia Army Times Associated Press 11 August 2022 Retrieved 11 November 2023 Nostrant Rachel 17 August 2022 Wind blew tree onto sheltering soldiers killing 2 loss report says Army Times Retrieved 11 November 2023 Kheel Rebecca 10 August 2022 Ranger Candidates Were Killed by Falling Tree During Georgia Storm Military com Retrieved 11 November 2023 Bibliography editLock John 2005 The Coveted Black and Gold A Daily Journey Through the U S Army Ranger School Experience Arizona Fenestra Books ISBN 978 1 58736 367 2 First Graduating Class Fort Benning United States Army Archived from the original on 13 March 2013 Retrieved 19 March 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ranger School nbsp Media related to United States Army Ranger School at Wikimedia Commons Official website US Army Ranger Training Manuals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ranger School amp oldid 1185202991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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