82nd- Have to do Airborne School, piss easy as anyone can go through the school.
101st- Air Assault School: this one is actually hard, a lot to learn as far as the skills for transportation and the such.
Rangers: Ranger School, very physically demanding and hard... but that doesn’t necessarily make it good. They seem to lack the initiative and do things the hard way for the sake of it... the epitome of HOOAH!
The idea is all combat arms officers go to Ranger School to spread the knowledge. Most officers go through jump school at some point too, and a few extra go to Air Assault.
As far as their SF, Green Berets, I'm sure you can join right after finishing whatever specialty school as enlisted. Quite disturbing.
BUT- there is a huge ideological difference between US SF and regular. The SF community is much closer to our line of smart thinking initiative, while the rest of their army is the gung ho HOOAH. This is why many old school general despise Special forces, it doesn’t fit their Gung Ho total war mentality, which is exactly why it took until Vietnam for the US Army to for a permanent sniper school.
I read on another forum that Ranger School was tough but doable.Robin Sage the green beret selection is a few steps up from Ranger school or so I `m told.Guessing I`d say Delta selection is probably the hardest since it`s 98% based on SAS selection. Navy SEAL BUD\s is probably up there as well,sneaky you might know something about this.
Navy SEAL and Buds is hard because it's based on physically demanding tasks and "bullying", for want of a better term. A bit like SF selection in UK at the moment. But when they have got through that they do go onto more intelligent training - and they are good.
Sneaky
This is kind of a "friend of a comrade, knew a guy who went through Delta selection" thing so take it with a grain of salt.
Part of what I heard was that the typical route to delta was Airborne-Ranger-Special Forces-Delta.
The selection process had an odd (for American Military) lack of any supervision. Recruits were assigned barracks and in them was a chalkboard. At "O-Dark thirty" the lights come on and there are instructions on the board like "load a rucksack with 90lbs. of gear (scale and weights nearby) and fall out on the parade deck". There they were put on trucks and taken out to the field where they are told to conduct individual land navigation over 26 mi. of rough terrain in a set ammount of time. Anybody over thr time limit is cut anybody caught on paved roads is cut. No yelling, hazing etc. but an eerie sense of being constantly monitored.
Last edited by tgace on Mon 23 Aug, 2004 12:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I recently read about part of Navy SEAL training called "hell week"... for a week the recruits are put through continuous physical training of the worst kind, and they are allocated 4 hours of sleep. For the whole week..
"Some day a real rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets..."
The first part of SEAL training is called "Hell week". It is designed to sort out the men from the boys. I think they might get more than 4 hours of sleep in a week but not much more.
Sneaky
sneaky beaky wrote:The first part of SEAL training is called "Hell week". It is designed to sort out the men from the boys. I think they might get more than 4 hours of sleep in a week but not much more.
Sneaky
Actually "Hell Week" is more of a graduation ceremony for BUD's...they put up with a number of weeks/months of PT and conditioning before they cap it off with hell week...then its onto tactical/weapons training.
"Hell Week" is actually week 6, I think. After that there's still ground combat and survival training. Hell week is definetely not graduation. Check out www.thesealteams.com
"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”
Mark Twain
Allways let someone else look at the paper thingy with the squiggly lines and pretty colours, Sorry at the time I was talking to someone else about the old Parachute reg Battle School Derring Lines BRECON and how it changed into the School of Infantry, talking and typing at same time, like chewing gum and walking upright can get confusing at times like when drunk anyway its not far off. Can you still use a longbow to kill em in the grounds of cathedral big curch thing? or is that another urban myth. Anyway most of my time in that part of the world was spent down the road a bit at a place called Pontralis that's supposed to be in England to but the locals sound a bit suss to me. No star yackie da.
The Brecon Becons still stand Pen-y Fan is still a pain it makes no differance jnr, snr, selection, it stays with you ............
indeed you can get the old longbow out, but its only on a particular day in April when the full moon is due, and we're all shyters on cider
Least said about pontralis the better....now that lot really are pointyheads!!!!!!!!!!!!!! When they're not busy cutting timber, they're busy doing things with sheep
I can see where the confusion with Wales came about...at least Brecon is a tad more civilised