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    Sixty-five Paratroopers earn Expert Infantry Badge

    Sixty-five paratroopers earn Expert Infantry Badge

    Photo By Sgt. Mike MacLeod | U.S. Army 1st Lt. Walter Haynes, a platoon leader with the 82nd Airborne Division’s...... read more read more

    FORT BRAGG, N.C. – Warfighters with the 82nd Airborne Division bestowed the title “expert” on 65 infantrymen here Feb. 4.

    From a field of 544 candidates, 65 Paratroopers with 1st Brigade Combat Team passed a weeklong series of tests required for the Expert Infantry Badge, a silver musket on a sky-blue rectangle worn only by the best of the infantry.

    “For the combat soldier, the modern battlefield is both lethal and unforgiving,” said brigade commander, Col. Mark L. Stock, to an audience of several hundred infantrymen at the awards ceremony on post Friday. “That’s especially true for infantrymen. Because of that, the Army recognized we have to award and recognize excellence and expertise.”

    Established in 1943 during the height of infantry training for World War II, the EIB today includes tests of physical fitness, land navigation, scenario-based tasks and a 12-mile foot march, all with time limits.

    Stock said that the badge not only attested to the wearers’ expert skills, but should also serve as a reminder to them of their duty to pass along those skills to all the soldiers with whom they work, seniors, peers and subordinates alike.

    Sgt. Maj. LaMarquis Knowles, the top non-commissioned officer with the Devil Brigade, implemented the EIB testing. The U.S. Army Infantry School picks 15 tasks that infantry of all units must test on, he said, and allows each unit to select an additional 15 tasks that corresponds with its mission essential task list.

    “The EIB training and testing are relevant to today’s fight,” said Knowles. “As part of a unit recently returned from combat, our soldiers will tell you that the tasks they were tested on mirrored what they had to do on the battlefield. he selection of tasks made the testing both relevant and challenging.”

    Master Sgt. Joseph Andrade, a visiting advisor with the U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga., said that 1st Brigade’s planning and command-and-control was the best he had seen all year.

    “Command Sgt. Maj. Knowles is a real perfectionist, and he obviously put a very squared-away operations sergeant major, Sgt. Maj. [Juan] Villarreal, in as his [non-commissioned officer in charge],” said Andrade.

    “Sgt. Maj. Villarreal had already been in contact with the last unit that tested here to learn from them,” he said.

    Knowles attributed the high attrition rate to soldiers taking the Army Physical Fitness Test for granted and to challenging day and night land navigation courses. Paratroopers were also challenged by the scenario-based skills tests, he said.

    Candidates completed one scenario per day for three days. In each scenario, they had to execute eight of 10 tasks correctly in the allotted time. Scenarios included an entry-control point, a patrol and an urban environment, for a total of 30 tasks.

    All 65 paratroopers who began the final event, a 12-mile muddy ruck march through a downpour, completed the event in the allotted 3-hour time limit and were subsequently awarded the EIB, he said.

    Only one soldier, a Ranger-qualified platoon leader with Company B, 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, passed every test without deficiency, what infantrymen call “true blue” in reference to the infantry’s adopted color.

    That soldier, 1st Lt. Walter Haynes from Atlanta, attributed his success to good training, a bit of luck and determination. His advice to future candidates was, “Do the training and don’t quit. Anything is achievable in the Army.”

    Haynes was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for his achievement.

    Testament to that advice were the youngest and the newest soldiers of 1-504th PIR to win the EIB, Pfc. Christopher Irick of Elizabethton, Tenn., and Pfc. Timothy Deberry of Roanoke Rapids, N.C.

    In addition to the EIB, each was awarded the Army Achievement Medal.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.04.2011
    Date Posted: 02.15.2011 18:43
    Story ID: 65496
    Location: FORT BRAGG, NC, US

    Web Views: 349
    Downloads: 0

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