Two female soldiers will graduate from the Army’s legendary Ranger
School this week, the first women to complete the course since it was
opened to them on an experimental basis this year, the U.S. Army said Monday evening.
The
two were part of a group of 19 female soldiers who passed a rigorous
screening process to begin the physically demanding course that had been
closed to women since it opened more than six decades ago. Their names
were not revealed.
The graduation on Friday will mark a key
milestone on the military’s ongoing efforts to open front-line combat
units to women. The military services have pledged to do so without
compromising standards.
Students in the grueling two-month course
are required to survive on little food and sleep despite demanding
physical activity, including carrying more than 100 pounds of gear
through mountains and swamps. It is considered the Army’s most
physically challenging course.
The women started the regimen in April, but like many men they were
required to retake a phase of the course if they didn’t pass on the
first go.
Graduates get to wear the coveted Ranger tab, which
signifies their completion of the Army’s premier small unit leadership
course for the infantry and other front-line troops.
"Each Ranger
School graduate has shown the physical and mental toughness to
successfully lead organizations at any level," Army Secretary John
McHugh said in a statement. "This course has proven that every soldier,
regardless of gender, can achieve his or her full potential."
But
the women will not be able to join the infantry or other so-called
ground combat jobs, including the Ranger regiment, which remain closed
to women, at least through this year.
Opening the course to women
is part of an assessment that all services have been ordered to
undertake to determine how best to open the infantry, special forces and
other ground combat jobs by next year. The Pentagon has ordered that
all occupations be open to women after this year.
The services can request a waiver from some jobs, but would need to provide an extensive justification for doing so.
The
military services have been steadily opening jobs to women over recent
years, but the infantry and special operations fields are the most
physically demanding and require that troops live close together in
often primitive field conditions.
"I promise you that the one thing we will not compromise on is standards," Gen. Martin Dempsey told a group of U.S. servicemen in Baghdad recently.
No comments:
Post a Comment