Posted on 10/12/2006 6:37:41 PM PDT by 68skylark
FORT BENNING, Ga. (Army News Service, Sept. 7, 2006) Lt. Col. Scott Power was in the last hard Ranger School class in 1989. Lt. Col. Chris Forbes was in the last hard Officer Basic Course in 1988. And Sgt. 1st Class Joseph Gaskin, he was in the last hard basic training in 1995.
So goes it for every Soldier in the history of the Army. No matter when they came through basic training or Ranger School or whatever, they came through the last hard class, said Power, who sums up his command philosophy to all the drill sergeants under his command at 3rd Battalion, 47th Infantry Regiment, with this message to naysayers and those who believe basic training has gone soft:
Im not impressed with leaders who think they have to abuse their Soldiers to train them to standard. Im not impressed with leaders who think the lack of abuse makes basic training soft, he said. We were all in the last hard class get over it. We do things differently now, and were producing Soldiers every bit as good as we ever have.
A recent spate of letters to the Army Times from Soldiers lamenting the weakening of training, particulary basic and one station unit training, has those in the know like Power, Gaskin and Forbes mad as the word they no longer use when addressing new Soldiers.
Ive had it up to here with people who say basic training isnt what it used to be, as if thats a bad thing, Power said. We dont need to use profanity. We dont need to demoralize these guys who have volunteered to be here, knowing full well theyre joining an Army at war.
Were graduating Soldiers who meet all the standards. We stand behind what we put on Pomeroy Field, he said, referring to the Sand Hill parade field where nearly 9,000 Soldiers graduate from the Basic Combat Training Brigade each year.
Another 20,000 graduate annually from the Infantry Training Brigade.
Power, Forbes, the commander of the BCTBs 2nd Battalion, 54th Infantry Regiment, Gaskin and his fellow drill sergeants from 3 Bn., 47th Inf., Regt., addressed the frustrating accusations of a dumbed-down basic training last week.
Forbes insists its a misconception based on widespread misunderstanding about changes during the past few years. Take the issue of fitness standards, for example. Its common knowledge, he said, that Soldiers are now only required to pass the PT test with a 50-50-50, or 50 percent of the push-ups, sit-ups and 2-mile run on an age-based scale, to graduate from basic training.
But what they dont say, those who complain about it, is that these Soldiers must pass (advanced individual training) 60-60-60. They have to meet Army standard, he said. And the reason for that is we finally recognized that it didnt make sense to break a Soldier trying to get him to standard in nine weeks rather than build him up in 13. Were thinking smarter and producing Soldiers more fundamentally fit.
Power elaborated on the subject of fitness. Hes repeatedly heard complaints about Soldiers doing push-ups on their knees. Its a particular sore point with Power, because the media has hyped the misconception by printing photos of Soldiers in this position with no explanation.
And there is an explanation.
We used to push them till they dropped, he said. We know better now. Now, when they reach muscle failure, they go to their knees instead of going to the ground. Using the modified technique is actually tougher than the old method; they cant quit at muscle failure, they have to modify and keep going. Were building a more physically fit Soldier.
Power said claims of being among the last old-school basic trainees has traditionally been a matter of pride, a matter of jest, among Soldiers. But when they take it seriously, or the media takes it out of context, the facts get distorted or simply ignored.
Standards change, they always have, he said. When I took my first PT test in 1984, we used the old three-event standard; push-ups 68, sit-ups 69 and the 2-mile run, 13.07. Two years later, the standards increased. It got tougher. So you want to talk about back in the day? How far back do you really want to go?
Gaskin, a 29-year-old combat veteran, said its the new Soldiers who ultimately pay for the spread of misinformation.
They come here expecting summer camp, because thats what theyve heard. The first couple of weeks are a culture shock, he said. I say to anybody who thinks basic training is soft, raise your right hand, come on out and check it out for yourself.
Gaskin insists basic training is actually 150 percent tougher than it was when he attended 11 years ago. Back then, he said, training included a form of hazing Soldiers commonly call smoking. Gaskin called it unnecessary.
Now were producing fit Soldiers who are ready for combat, he said, because theyve trained with body armor, theyre geared up constantly, constantly doing battle drills and urban operations training and the kind of first-aid training that will actually save lives on the battle field, not the band-aid approach I learned in basic.
Soldiers today will graduate knowing the kinds of things I didnt learn till I got to my first duty station, and then some of it, I didnt know a year later, said Gaskin, who has been a drill sergeant for nearly a year. I told myself it would never be that way if I was responsible for training. The worst thing that could happen to me is to know I had a Soldier here for nine weeks and he goes off to combat and something happens to him because of lack of training.
Gaskin believes the year he spent in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division makes him a better drill sergeant. Sgt. 1st Class McKinley Parker agrees. The 37-year-old Parker spent a year in Iraq with the 82nd Airborne Division.
Gaskin and Parker said new Soldiers want to know what to expect in Iraq.
The most common question they ask is about Iraq whats it like. They want to know, and since we were there, we can tell them and drive home the point that they better pay attention to their training, because we were there and we know its relevant, Parker said.
We do something now that they didnt do when I was in basic training, he said. We have a question and answer time at the end of the day. When I was in basic, you didnt talk to drill sergeants. Thats changed. We have to be approachable, because you dont want these guys to have to ask questions when they get to Iraq. Then its too late.
Pvt. David Robertson is in a unique position to speak about the evolution of basic training. The 39-year-old retired firefighter reenlisted in the Army after an 18-year break in service. During an interview six weeks before his Sept. 28 graduation from 1st Battalion, 50th Infantry Regiment, Robertson spoke about the differences in basic training then and now.
Drill sergeants are a lot more caring now, he said. You can tell they really care about their Soldiers and theyre genuinely concerned about preparing us for combat.
They dont carry on like they did when I went (to basic training) the first time, Robertson said, but I think Im getting a lot better training with weapons and drills and all.
One thing hasnt changed, Robertson said. Drill sergeants are still sticklers for detail. Its a phenomenon Soldiers refer to as dress-right-dress.
Power said thats because Soldiers must prove themselves capable of paying attention to the strictest details.
If you cant do the little things well tuck in your shoe laces every day youre not going to handle the big things well, Power said. Thats not abuse, thats common sense training. We didnt throw out the practices that proved successful and start basic training from the ground up.
Take for instance, the traditional challenge new Soldiers face first day in basic; theyre given three minutes to make every bunk in the bay.
Thats an impossible task and an impossible time limit, Gaskin said. But it builds teamwork. If youre that Soldier, you feel real stress and you come together as a team with a bunch of complete strangers to accomplish the mission. Were building smarter, better trained Soldiers, but everything is still based on teamwork.
You wont find teamwork, as such, listed in the Army values, but its there, Parker said. The majority of recruits value self above everything else, he said, but within 72 hours of basic training, the relatively new values-based training starts to make an impact.
Everything they do, good or bad, we teach values, Parker said. They came here because they want to be a part of this. They want to fit in, and they start living those values.
To teach values affectively, drill instructors have to model them, Power said. Gone are the days of issuing orders from the sidelines.
Leaders must be role models first, he said. We have to lead by example. We cant say, Take a lap, and stand there and watch. A leader says, Follow me, and he trains out in front of his Soldiers. He shows the younger Soldiers that fitness isnt a basic training value its an Army value, something we value for life.
Power believes the increase in the number of Soldiers graduating basic training is a testimony to the success of his drill sergeants and the Armys new way of doing business. Its not, as some would say, the result of softer training.
Sgt. 1st Class Frank Meals believes it also. The 33-year-old combat veteran, a drill sergeant of nine months, said todays Soldiers leave basic training better equipped to fight than he did in 1992.
I left basic training prepared to run. I could do push-ups and sit-ups and run, he said. Todays graduates can run, but theyre prepared to stand and fight.
They know how to defend this country, how to fight and survive and make it back to fight again, he said. Thats the difference between then and now.
A few of you have been reading the Associated Press and wondering if their crap is true -- you know who you are.
Even though this story is a few weeks old, I think it's a nice antidote to that nonsense from the MSM.
on this subject, can anyone tell me where I can find out what the workout program is for the new recruits are in their 40's, now that the age has been raised to 42?
Go here:
http://www.goarmy.com
Wore a pork-pie hat out on pass.
You don't forget these guys, and it's not because they were "nice".
These men have a terrible responsibility. They are not just there to help train you to defend your country, neighborhood and family ~ they are there to train you to stay alive in a very dangerous environment. If they succeed, you may live. if they don't, you may die.
My father, now in his 80s, remembers their PT instructor down in Mississippi ~ fellow named Jack LaLane who went on to exercise fame. One does suppose Jack did a good job. His trainees won the war.
Thank you for posting this. My son went to Ft. Benning for basic in July of 2003, it wasn't easy. At all! Get down to it, these drill sergeants build men, God bless 'em! I know full well that what these men taught my son at Ft. Benning sure as heck helped to keep him alive in Iraq. May they all keep up the good work.
Hooah4Health is a good website that has a 3-month plan if you want to prepare for the APFT:
http://www.hooah4health.com/4You/apft.htm
I believe you just said it all. Thanks.
Good article. Thanks for posting.
If you want specific suggestions, I can tell you what's worked for me.
That's what it's all about!
Don't worry, you sound way far off from elderly!
I enlisted in 1973,when the Army was taking anyone and everyone who had a pulse. Alot of guys washed out, but those I served with at permanent party duty stations
were damned good soldiers. Maybe this is accurate, maybe
not, but the volunteers I served with, during the introduction of the all volunteer force, were most definently better soldiers than the holdover draftees.
Of course, as our senior drill sergeant said at our first formation, " You turd birds, I know you've heard
the Army is a all-volunteer force now, that its like living a college dorm. Turdbirds, let me assure you that's just a rumor, and I have never received official notification of that." Then, he kicked our ass for nine straight weeks.....
Thanks. I see they have the "Framingham Calculator," which just happens to be where I was born!
Everybody was in the last tough training unit....good summation.
When I went to Fort Jackson for basic, we were told the recruits at Fort Leonard Wood were given "stress cards" to give their drill instructors if they felt stressed out. We all got a good laugh out of that. Turns out the recruits from Fort Leonard Wood had heard the same thing about us.
When I was in AIT at Ft. Leonard Wood, I was surprised at how out of shape the Ft. Jackson AIT soldiers were.
Of course, I was in a 20-week MOS (51-T, Surveyor-CADD draftsman-Soil Sampler), and by the time I completed AIT I could do 85 pushups, 85 situps and run 14:25 2 mile (and I was 33 years old at the time). Guess I was in good enough shape by the 10th or 12th week to laugh at and mock the ones who couldn't keep up.:)
Thanks for posting this. I kinda thought some of the grumping going on was done out of misunderstanding.
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