Expert Infantryman Badge
The Expert Infantryman Badge, or
EIB, is a special skills badge of the United States Army. Although similar in
name and appearance to the Combat Infantryman Badge (CIB), it is a completely
different award. The CIB is awarded to infantrymen for participation in ground
combat while the EIB is presented for completion of a course of testing
designed to demonstrate proficiency in infantry skills.
The EIB was created with the CIB
by executive order in November 1943 during World War II. Currently, it is
awarded to U.S. Army personnel who hold infantry or special forces military
occupational specialties with the exception of soldiers with the occupational
specialty of Special Forces Medical Sergeant (18D). To be awarded the EIB, the
soldier must complete a number of prerequisites and pass a battery of graded
tests on basic infantry skills. Personnel who have been awarded both the EIB
and the CIB are not authorized to wear both badges simultaneously. In such
cases, Army Regulations allow the recipient to choose which badge is worn. A
similar badge exists for medical personnel, known as the Expert Field Medical
Badge (EFMB). In 2017, talks about a similar badge were being discussed for
soldiers without the occupation of infantry, medical, or special forces were
put on the table and in 2019 the army established the Expert Soldier Badge for
soldiers who don't qualify for both the EIB and EFMB.
The EIB is a silver and enamel
badge, consisting of a 3-inch-wide (76 mm) rectangular bar with an
infantry-blue field upon which is superimposed a Springfield Arsenal Musket, Model
1795.
Modern requirements (2000s)
A primary Military
Occupational Specialty (MOS) in Career Management Fields (CMF) 11 (Infantry) or
18 (Special Forces) series, except 18Ds (Special Forces Medical Sergeant).
EIB Physical Fitness
Assessment: Each candidate (regardless of sex or age) is required to
complete 49 push-ups, 59 sit-ups and finish a 4 mile run in 32 minutes or less.
Land navigation: complete
a day and a night land navigation course within a specified timeframe;
Weapon qualification: earn
an "expert" qualification on their assigned weapon, typically an
M16/M4; in the case of mortarmen (MOS 11C) expert qualification on the mortar
is an additional requirement.
Forced foot march:
complete a 12-mile foot march, carrying M4 and 35 lb. load + extra gear for a
total of up to 70 lbs, within three hours.
Lane or station testing in
individual tasks, graded as pass/fail ("GO"/"NO GO").
There are approximately 30–35 stations in this phase. Candidates must pass
every station; if they receive a "NO GO" on their first attempt, they
have one chance to retest. A second "NO GO" at any station results in
a failure for the entire testing phase. In addition, if a candidate receives
three "NO GO"s (even if distributed over three stations) they have
similarly failed the phase. Generally there are multiple stations in all the
following areas (less common/defunct tasks in italics):
First Aid Chemical.
Biological, Radiological, Nuclear (CBRN) procedures. Call for Fire (indirect
fire), CAS (close air support), and Close Combat Attack. Techniques for
movement under fire, camouflage, hand-signaling, range estimation, and
reporting contact to higher headquarters
Communications: competency
with ASIP, SINCGARS, MBITR or PRC-152 field radios and procedures
Map reading: terrain
identification, topography, use of military GPS
Weapons proficiency: load,
unload, perform function checks, clear, correct malfunctions, etc. for M9,
M16/M4, M203, M249, M240B, M60, M2, Mk 19, AT4, Javelin; employ hand grenades,
Claymore, and anti-tank mines. Proficiency with night vision devices. Boresighting
proficiency
Foreign militaries are often
invited to participate in the EIB when units are overseas or in host nation
countries. Such countries to participate in the EIB are Bosnia, Korea, Poland
and more.
Terminology and Ritual While
training in basic skills is a major goal of the EIB program, the EIB
institution additionally provides an area of common experience and vocabulary
across the infantry in the US Army. This test comes around about once every 2
years to most Infantry units. Those who fail could wait over a year before they
have the opportunity to try again. Most likely they will transfer or PCS to
another Infantry unit that may or may not be testing that year. Thus, the wait
to retest could be longer. Sociologically, the testing phase especially
acts as a rite of passage for many infantrymen. The period of testing usually
stretches over several days, with the number of candidates remaining steadily
dwindling and pressure similarly increasing. Traditionally, hand grenades
(where the candidate has five grenades to hit three different targets) and call
for fire are considered the most difficult tests.
There is a specific slang
vocabulary associated with EIB testing. Graders at each station usually have
EIBs themselves; a badge protector is therefore a particularly difficult
grader, perceived to be protecting the status of the award which he holds.
Graders typically carry a blue pen to mark "GO"s and a red pen to
mark "NO GO"s; to complete the entire phase without a single NO GO is
therefore to go true blue. Similarly, if a candidate has two "NO GO"s
he is said to be blade running; any mistake will eliminate him. Usually if the
candidate makes a mistake and time has not run out, the grader will tell the
candidate "you still have time remaining", which is a clue that the
candidate may have done something wrong. On occasion, the grader will do this
to unnerve the candidate even though everything is correct, which completes the
rite of passage.
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