1st
Special Warfare Training Group (Airborne)
1st Special Warfare Training
Group (Airborne) is responsible for the six-phase Special Forces
Pipeline training. To accomplish this mission the Group divides
the responsibility into several battalions. The 1st Battalion is
responsible for all field training in the SF Pipeline. The 3rd
Battalion conducts language training and 4th Battalion conducts
all military occupational specialty (MOS) training.
The Special Forces Training
Pipeline requires a commitment of 1-2 years of intensive
coursework based on the soldier's military specialty training.
Although a soldier is authorized to wear the coveted �Green
Beret� at the end of Phase IV, he still must complete all six
phases of training before being awarded the Special Forces Tab
and is assigned to an Operational Detachment � Alpha (ODA).
The six phases include:
Phase I � Special Forces
Assessment and Selection
Phase II � Small Unit Tactics *
Phase III � Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) Specific
Training *
Phase IV � Culmination Exercise (Robin Sage) *
Phase V � Language Training
Phase VI � Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE)
* Considered the Special Forces
Qualification Course.
Special Forces Volunteer
Prerequisites:
1. Male, enlisted volunteer
2. Volunteer for airborne training & complete that training
prior to coming to the Special Forces Qualification Course
(SFQC)
3. Minimum GT score of 110; waiverable to 100
4. High School graduate or GED equivalent
5. Spc. (E-4) thru Sgt 1st Class (E-7) or a promotable 1st Lt.
or Capt.
6. Pass the Special Forces physical
7. Pass a 50 meter swim with BDU's & boots (diagnostic given
at SFAS, test upon arrival at SFQC): there is a 2-week swim
course offered just prior to SFQC if one fails the diagnostic at
SFAS...enlisted only (this 2-week prep course is not mandatory)
8. Pass the APFT with a minimum score of 229
9. Complete Primary Leadership Development Course (PLDC) prior
to attendance at SFQC (enlisted only)
Special Forces Assessment and
Selection (SFAS):
Phase I: Special Forces
Assessment and Selection (SFAS): 24 days
Company G, 1st Bn conducts SFAS
training at Camp MacKall, N.C. The SFAS cadre look at nearly
1,800 Special Forces volunteers each year to determine who is
suitable for Special Forces training and to determine who may be
unable to adapt to the Special Forces environment. Candidates
attend SFAS in a temporary duty (TDY) status. Candidates who
enter this course find themselves under constant evaluation
starting with the day they in-process until the day they
out-process.
The SFAS model focuses on student
trainability and suitability for service in Special Forces.
Teaching, coaching, training and mentoring are important aspects
of the program. Land navigation is used as a common medium to
judge student trainability. A series of 12 attributes linked to
success in the Special Forces Qualification Course (SFQC) form
the basis for evaluating candidate suitability. These attributes
include intelligence, physical fitness, motivation,
trustworthiness, accountability, maturity, stability, judgment,
decisiveness, teamwork, influence, and communications. Though
land navigation is an important evaluation tool, other training
events such as a one-mile obstacle course, runs, road marches
and rappelling are also used to evaluate students.
Special Forces Qualification
Course (SFQC):
Phase II: Small Unit Tactics:
46 days
All potential students train
together regardless of rank. The first few days of SFQC is
in-processing, which includes a swim test of 50 meters in full
uniform and a combat equipment jump.
When in-processing is completed, the soldiers are transported to
Camp MacKall to begin Phase II. Company F of 1st Battalion
teaches Phase II of SFQC. Because of the wide diversity of MOSs
who volunteer for Special Forces, Phase II trains all students
in the basics of infantry small unit tactics. All the students
complete 39 days of land navigation, field craft training, small
unit tactics training and live-fire exercises. Students must
complete an 18-kilometer land navigation course and two graded
field training exercises. The field training emphasizes
squad-size and platoon-size infantry missions. After completing
the initial phase, students move on to specific MOS training in
Phase III.
Phase III: Military
Occupational Skill (MOS) Specific Training
18A Officer Course: 65 days
Company A, 4th Bn trains and
qualifies officers in the basic skills and knowledge required to
perform duties as an SFODA commander. This training consists of
general subjects, special operations, Special Forces planning
(using the military decision-making process), engineer and
weapons training, communications and medical training, special
reconnaissance, direct action, unconventional warfare, foreign
internal defense, and counterinsurgency operations.
18B Weapons Sergeant Course:
65 days
Company B, 4th Bn trains and
qualifies NCOs in the basic skills and knowledge required to
perform duties as a weapons sergeant on an SFODA. Students
become proficient in a wide variety of small arms, antitank
weapons, air defense systems, crew-served weapons, and mortars.
The cadre focuses on training students with foreign weapons and
equipment. This phase concludes with a light infantry, live-fire
training exercise.
18C Engineer Sergeant Course:
65 days
Company B also trains and
qualifies NCOs in the basic skills and knowledge required to
perform duties as an engineer sergeant on an SFODA. These
students learn pre-engineering subjects, field construction
techniques, field fortifications, land mine warfare (U.S. and
foreign mines), bridging, engineer reconnaissance, target
analysis, and demolitions. This phase culminates with an
engineering field training exercise.
18D Special Forces Medical
Sergeants Course: 322 days
Company D, 4th Bn, is responsible
for all medical training at the USAJFKSWCS. The Special Forces
Medical Sergeants Course consists of the 24-week Special
Operations Combat Medic (SOCM) Course and an additional 22-week
training cycle that completes the 18Ds medical training.
The 24-week Special Operations Combat Medic (SOCM) course is
also taught to enlisted Army personnel from the Ranger Regiment,
Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR) and Special
Operations Support Battalion (SOSB). USN SEALs and USN personnel
supporting USMC Recon units as well as Air Force Special
Operations Command (AFSOC) ParaRescue personnel also attend the
SOCM course.
Although 19 of the 24 weeks of
SOCM training is focused on anatomy and physiology and paramedic
training, the remaining five weeks cover such military unique
subjects as sickcall medicine environmental medicine. A four-day
field training exercise in a simulated combat environment
culminates the SOCM course. During the SOCM course students
receive American Heart Association certification in Basic and
Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) as well as certification by
the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians at the
EMT-Basic and Paramedic levels. Upon graduation a SOCM is
capable of providing basic primary care for his Special
Operations team for up to seven days and is capable of
sustaining a combat casualty for up to 72 hours after injury as
required.
Special Operations Combat Medic
students receive clinical training in both emergency
pre-hospital and hospital settings. This training is conducted
during a four-week deployment to one of two major metropolitan
areas: New York City or Tampa, Fl.
U.S. Army Special Forces students
attend the 46 week Special Forces Medical Sergeants (SFMS)
course. Students in this course must successfully complete the
24-week SOCM curriculum before continuing on for an additional
22 weeks of specialized training in medical, surgical, dental,
veterinary, laboratory, pharmaceutical and preventive medicine
subjects. Upon completion of this course students are trained to
function as independent health care providers. In addition to
the four weeks of clinical training provided during the SOCM
portion of their training, SFMS students receive another four
weeks of clinical experience at selected health care facilities
throughout the United States. The focus of this training is on
honing student skills as independent, general practice, health
care providers.
18E Communications Sergeants
Course: 105 days
Company E, 4th Bn trains and
qualifies NCOs in the basic skills and knowledge required to
perform duties as a communications sergeant on an SFODA. The
training focuses on long-range communications and deals with the
most sophisticated communications equipment in the Army.
Students also train on the less sophisticated equipment they may
find in foreign countries. Each student gains proficiency in
Morse code; basic electronics; antenna theory and construction;
cryptography; installation, operation, and maintenance of
various high frequency, very high frequency, and ultrahigh
frequency outstation radio systems; basic computers; and Special
Forces communications techniques and procedures. This phase
culminates with a long-range communications exercise conducted
at Camp Gruber, Oklahoma.
Phase IV: Culmination
Exercise: 38 days
Students are again transported to
Company F, 1st Bn at Camp MacKall where they form student SFODAs
and put their knowledge and skills to use in the Robin Sage
Field Training Exercise (FTX). Robin Sage is a 19-day
problem-solving FTX. During this unconventional warfare
exercise, the students are required to apply the lessons learned
from previous months of Special Forces MOS training and field
training. This exercise involves the students, counterinsurgent
and guerrilla personnel (other service members), auxiliary
personnel, and cadre. This scenario stresses realism because the
student SFODAs must train a mock guerilla force in a hostile
environment using civilians in the surrounding community as the
auxiliary. This exercise ranges over approximately 50,000 square
miles. By the conclusion of Robin Sage, the students have been
placed in many situations where they were required to use MOS
and leadership skills, and their abilities were tested to work
in adverse and ambiguous conditions.
Specialized Training:
Phase V: Language Training:
3rd Bn, 1st SWTG (A) is
responsible for all language training at the USAJFKSWCS. The
Basic Military Language Course (BMLC) is primarily a
performance-oriented language course. Students must show
proficiency in speaking, listening and reading. The general
purpose of the course is to provide each student with the
ability to communicate in a foreign language. For successful
completion of the course, the student must achieve at least a 70
percent academic average in all four modules, a 0+ or higher on
the Defense Language Proficiency Test (DLPT) in two of the three
graded areas (speaking, listening, and reading). The languages
are divided into four categories:
Category 1:
Spanish, French, and Portuguese (18 weeks, 3 days) |
Category 2:
German, Indonesian (18 weeks, 3 days) |
Category 3:
Czech, Persian-Farsi, Polish, Russian, Serbo- Croatian,
Tagalog,
Thai and Turkish (24 weeks, 2 days) |
Category 4:
Arabic, Korean and Japanese (24 weeks, 2 days) |
Phase VI: Survival Evasion
Resistance And Escape (SERE) Course: 19 days
Company A, 1st Bn, conducts the
SERE course at Camp MacKall, NC. The goal of training in
survival, evasion, resistance and escape, or SERE, is to teach
personnel how to survive if they become separated from their
unit; to evade a hostile force and make their way back to
friendly forces; and to avoid capture. In the event that
soldiers are captured, SERE training prepares them to resist the
enemy�s attempts at exploitation, to escape from captivity and
to return home with honor.
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This page is an
unofficial document and does not represent information
endorsed by the United States Government, the United
States Special Operations Command or the United States
Army Special Operations Command. However, most
information is derived from those sources and has been
checked for accuracy. For comments, questions, and
suggestions, please go to the Communications
Center. |
Gunnery Network - SOF
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