10-15 Ranger School Graduation
MAJ Jaster with 1LT Haver (8-15) and CPT Griest (8-15).

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Indonesia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Latvia

seen from Italy
seen from Brazil
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Germany

seen from United States
10-15 Ranger School Graduation
MAJ Jaster with 1LT Haver (8-15) and CPT Griest (8-15).
1LT Shaye Haver & CPT Kristen Griest
Two women earn Ranger Tabs in first for US Army.
U.S. Army Soldiers prepare for a static-line jump as part of an airborne exercise during the Ranger Course on Fort Benning, Georgia. Soldiers attend the Ranger Course to learn additional leadership and small unit technical and tactical skills in a physically and mentally demanding, combat simulated environment.
(U.S. Army photo by Spc. Nikayla Shodeen, 25 APR 2015. ARMY Times article by Michelle Tan, 17 AUG 2015. Source.)
The Army on Monday announced two women and 94 men met the standards of the course's third and final phase, also known as the Swamp Phase.Two women will graduate from Ranger School on Friday, becoming the first women to earn the Ranger Tab.
Their graduation ceremony will take place on Victory Pond at Fort Benning, Georgia.
The women are part of the Army's gender-integrated assessment of the grueling two-month Ranger School.
The assessment has drawn a high level of scrutiny, with many questioning whether the Army is lowering its standards for the elite school — which until now was open only to men — while many others have cheered on the female students.
Army officials insisted the standards were not changed in any way.
"Congratulations to all of our new Rangers," Army Secretary John McHugh said in a statement. "Each Ranger School graduate has shown the physical and mental toughness to successfully lead organizations at any level. This course has proven that every soldier, regardless of gender, can achieve his or her full potential."
McHugh added: "We owe soldiers the opportunity to serve successfully in any position where they are qualified and capable, and we continue to look for ways to select, train, and retain the best soldiers to meet our nation's needs."
The women, both officers, started the Swamp Phase on Aug. 1 after three tries at the school's first phase, known as the Darby Phase, at Fort Benning, Georgia, and one try at the second phase, known as the Mountain Phase, in Dahlonega, Georgia.
Swamp Phase, which takes place at Camp Rudder on Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, focuses on the continued development of the students' leadership and small unit tactics, according to the Airborne and Ranger Training Brigade website.
During the Swamp Phase, students learn waterborne operations, small boat movements and stream crossings. They also will be required to execute extended platoon-level operations in a coastal swamp environment.
On average, about 45 percent of Ranger School students will graduate from the course. Ranger School is the Army's premier combat leadership course, teaching students how to overcome fatigue, hunger and stress to lead soldiers in small-unit combat operations, according to the Army.
The women in the course are part of a one-time, integrated assessment of the storied school. The assessment is part of a wider effort to determine whether and how to open combat arms jobs to women. Army leaders have said a second such assessment likely will take place in the fall, although no final decisions have been made.
Nineteen female and 381 male soldiers started Ranger School on April 20. Eight of the women made it through RAP week.
None of the eight women made it past the Darby Phase on the first try and were recycled, along with 101 of their male classmates, on May 8.
After the second attempt at the Darby Phase, three female and two male students on May 29 were given the option of a Day One Recycle, which is a normal course procedure that's used when students struggle with one aspect of the course and excel at others, said officials at Fort Benning.
The two male students declined to recycle, officials said.
The remaining five women returned to their units and were not recycled again. A total of 29 students were dropped from the course for failing to meet the standards of the Darby Phase.
These students did not meet the standard for a number of reasons, including leading patrols, poor peer evaluations, too many negative spot reports, or a combination of all three.
The three remaining female students started the Mountain Phase of Ranger School on July 11. One female soldier was required to recycle Mountain Phase with the rotation beginning Aug. 8.
On average, more than 34 percent of Ranger School graduates recycle at least one phase of the school. About 61 percent of recycles are due to patrols.
This is how progress is made. It is a step forward, maybe not a giant leap. So far it looks like a gender neutral standard so if any woman passes it will be legit and worthy of respect.
I don't know if any will pass. It is important to remember that guys in the best shape of their life fail the course. The question isn't "can any woman pass the course" the real question is "will any woman that could pass the course volunteer?"
Good luck ladies.
The Army is looking for female soldiers who want to volunteer to attend Ranger school.
let the hate being...and how devalued it will seem.
Ranger School
Leave for it tomorrow at 0700 to pick up my bags, get two hours then meet at Camp Rogers at 0900. Hopefully you guys wont hear from me for a while, but if you hear from me before Friday I failed and probably will be pretty down. Wish me luck, going to one of the toughest schools in the Army.
Also the biggest group that goes is 2lts....mostly 11A's like myself. Then Ranger Batt boys.
Diagnostic RPFT done. Passed everything and the finished the run in 38:20...would've been faster if I hadn't ran a 1300 after two miles. I slowed way down after that.