Two women have made military history after becoming the first
female soldiers to pass the U.S. Army's grueling Ranger Course, the Army said
on Monday. The
two, along with 94 men, passed the 62-day leadership course, which teaches
students "how to overcome fatigue, hunger, and stress to lead Soldiers
during small unit combat operations," it said in a statement. In April, 19
women and 381 men began the first Army Ranger school that included women. The
course, based at Fort Benning, Georgia, includes training in woodlands,
mountainous terrain and Florida swampland. (https://www.benning.army.mil)
Army Rangers are rapidly
deployable troops trained for mountain, desert and swamp terrain and often go
after special operations targets.
Reuters report continues:
"Highlights of the
course include a physical fitness test consisting of 49 push-ups, 59 sit-ups, a
five mile run in 40 minutes, and six chin-ups; a swim test; a land navigation
test; a 12-mile foot march in three hours; several obstacle courses; four days
of military mountaineering; three parachute jumps; four air assaults on
helicopters; multiple rubber boat movements; and 27 days of mock combat
patrols," the statement said.
A graduation ceremony
will be held at Fort Benning on Friday.
The U.S. military began a
process two years ago to open thousands of frontline combat jobs to women. The
service branches have been developing gender-neutral requirements for all jobs
in the military and evaluating whether to recommend that any remain closed to
women.
The Army had faced
resistance to allowing women to serve in combat units, but since such
experience is a factor in promotions and job advancement in the military, women
have had greater difficulty than men in moving up to the top ranks, officials
have said.
About 90 percent of
senior Army infantry officers qualified as Rangers, which should allow women
graduates to better compete with their male counterparts.
Nearly 12 percent of U.S.
forces deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan were women. They represented about 2
percent of U.S. military deaths in those wars.
No comments:
Post a Comment