From Military.com:
“Soldier Makes History as First
Woman to Join the Green Berets”
An Army National Guard soldier
marked a new milestone in the U.S. military Thursday by graduating from the
grueling Special Forces Qualification Course (Q Course) to become the first
woman to join the Green Berets. U.S. Army Special Operations Command would not
identify the soldier, but confirmed that she graduated from the 53-week course
in a ceremony at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, according to a USASOC release. USASOC
Commander Lt. Gen. Fran Beaudette spoke at the ceremony, congratulating the
class of approximately 400 soldiers. "Each and every one of you
demonstrated the ability to meet the baseline standards and competencies for
admission to our [Special Forces] Regiment," Beaudette said. The Q Course
is made up of six phases and includes training in small-unit operations,
advanced Special Forces tactics, language training and unconventional warfare.
After graduating, Green Berets typically are assigned to 12-member operational
detachment alpha (ODA) teams, which are made up of weapons, communications,
intelligence, engineer and medical specialists. The graduates received the
Special Forces Tab and donned the coveted Green Beret, identifying them as
experts at conducting complex unconventional warfare missions behind enemy
lines. On their berets, they wear the distinctive Special Forces unit insignia
that bears the phrase "De Oppresso Liber," which means "To Free
the Oppressed." Army Special Forces had been one of the last remaining
male-only communities after former Defense Secretary Ashton Carter officially
opened all jobs involving direct combat to women in late 2015. In 2015,
then-Capt. Kristen Griest and 1st Lt. Shaye Haver became the first two female
soldiers to break through one of the Army's toughest training courses by
successfully graduating from Army Ranger School, a physically and mentally
punishing 61-day course previously reserved for male soldiers. There has been
one woman who previously completed requirements of the Army Special Forces
Course. In 1980, Capt. Kate Wilder met requirements to graduate, but was not
permitted to do so. Though she finally got her graduation certificate, she
never ultimately served in an SF unit, and the Army moved afterward to prevent
other women from attending the course. The female soldier who graduated
Thursday "excelled throughout the course and earned the respect of both
her instructors and her peer group" a senior Army official told
Military.com. It is USASOC's policy "to not release the names of service
members in training or assigned to U.S. Army Special Operations Command due to
unique missions assigned upon graduation," according to the release. "From
here, you will go forward and join the storied formation of the Green Berets,
where you will do what you are trained to do: challenge assumptions, break down
barriers, smash through stereotypes, innovate, and achieve the
impossible," Beaudette said in the release. "Thankfully, after today,
our Green Beret men and women will forever stand in the hearts of free people
everywhere."
^ Becoming a Green Beret is a
really major accomplishment and I’m glad that now there is a female Green Beret
being added to their long and impressive history. ^
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