Way back in January, long before the first women attended the Army’s 
elite Ranger School – one of the most grueling military courses in the 
world – officials at the highest levels of the Army had already decided 
failure was not an option, sources tell PEOPLE.
 “A woman will graduate Ranger School,” a 
general told shocked subordinates this year while preparing for the 
first females to attend a “gender integrated assessment” of the grueling
 combat leadership course starting April 20, sources tell PEOPLE. “At 
least one will get through.”
 That directive set the tone for what was to follow, sources say.
 “It had a ripple effect” at Fort Benning, 
where Ranger School is based, says a source with knowledge of events at 
the sprawling Georgia Army post. “Even though this was supposed to be 
just an assessment, everyone knew. The results were planned in advance.”
 On Tuesday, PEOPLE revealed
 that Oklahoma Republican Rep. Steve Russell had asked the Department of
 Defense for documents about the women who attended Ranger School after 
becoming concerned that “the women got special treatment and played by 
different rules,” sources say.
 Ranger School consists of three phases: 
Benning, which lasts 21 days and includes water survival, land 
navigation, a 12-mile march, patrols, and an obstacle course; Mountain 
Phase, which lasts 20 days, and includes assaults, ambushes, 
mountaineering and patrols; and Swamp Phase, which lasts 17 days and 
covers waterborne operations.
 But whereas men consistently were held to 
the strict standards outlined in the Ranger School’s Standing Operating 
Procedures handbook sources say, the women were allowed lighter duties 
and exceptions to policy.
 Multiple sources told PEOPLE:
 • Women were first sent to a special 
two-week training in January to get them ready for the school, which 
didn’t start until April 20. Once there they were allowed to repeat the 
program until they passed – while men were held to a strict pass/fail 
standard.
 • Afterward they spent months in a special 
platoon at Fort Benning getting, among other things, nutritional 
counseling and full-time training with a Ranger.
 • While in the special platoon they were 
taken out to the land navigation course – a very tough part of the 
course that is timed – on a regular basis. The men had to see it for the
 first time when they went to the school.
 • Once in the school they were allowed to 
repeat key parts – like patrols – while special consideration was not 
given to the men.
 • A two-star general made personal 
appearances to cheer them along during one of the most challenging parts
 of the school, multiple sources tell PEOPLE.
 The end result? Two women – First Lts. 
Kristen Griest and Shaye Haver – graduated August 21 (along with 381 
men) and are wearing the prestigious Ranger Tab. Griest was surprised 
they made it.
 “I thought we were going to be dropped after we failed Darby [part of Benning] the second time,” Griest said at a press conference before graduation. “We were offered a Day One Recycle.”
 At their graduation, Maj Gen. Scott Miller, 
who oversees Ranger School, denied the Army eased its standards or was 
pressured to ensure at least one woman graduated.
 “Standards remain the same, Miller said, according to The Army Times. “The five-mile run is still five miles. The 12-mile march is still 12 miles.
 “There was no pressure from anyone above me to change standards,” said Miller, who declined to speak to PEOPLE.
 Instructors say otherwise.
 “We were under huge pressure to comply,” one Ranger instructor says. “It was very much politicized.”
 The women didn’t want or ask for special treatment, says one who attempted the program.
 “All of us wanted the same standards for 
males and females,” Billi Blaschke, who badly injured her ankle only six
 days into a required pre-assessment program, tells PEOPLE. “We wanted 
to do it on our own.”
 On September 2, the Army announced that Ranger School is now open both to men and women.
 Women are not currently allowed to perform 
Ranger duties, even Lts. Griest and Haver who passed the course. 
However, the Army will be forced to open Ranger positions to females on 
January 1, unless the Secretary of Defense grants an exception.
 If the exemption isn’t granted, the Army may
 send women into combat – which is why so many former and current 
Rangers are concerned about women being held to the same standards as 
men.
 “Combat is brutal and unforgiving,” says Jim
 Lechner, a retired Army officer and Ranger who was wounded in combat in
 Mogadishu, Somalia, during the famed “Black Hawk Down” incident. 
“Fighters must be prepared and capable. If they are not, people will 
die.”
 Ranger School teaches students how to overcome fatigue, hunger and stress to lead soldiers in small-unit combat operations.
 “I remain unconvinced that the recent 
graduation of two female soldiers was a proper test of females’ ability 
to perform in combat,” Lechner tells PEOPLE.
 While Griest and Haver could not be reached 
for comment, the Army insists the two women who graduated August 21 did 
so under their own steam.
 “In order to successfully graduate Ranger 
School, all students, male and female, are required to meet all course 
standards,” Army spokesman LTC Jennifer Johnson tells PEOPLE.
 “The course standards for Ranger Class 08-15
 are the exact same standards that have been used for all other Ranger 
classes,” she says.
  Claims of Special Treatment  
 The women got special treatment from the start, sources tell PEOPLE.
 Though the course didn’t begin until April 
20, the first female Ranger candidates arrived at Fort Benning in 
January to attend the National Guard’s rigorous Ranger Training and 
Assessment Course (RTAC), a two-week program designed to assess whether a
 student could attempt the 62-day Ranger School.
 Previously, only the National Guard’s Ranger
 hopefuls were required to attend RTAC, while non-Guard candidates had 
the elective option to attend. Now, all females – no matter whether they
 were Guard, Reserve or Regular Army – were required to attend.
 There they were given another edge, sources 
say: While men were held to a stark pass-fail standard, women were 
allowed to redo the special training repeatedly.
 “That was the first special concession,” 
says an Army source with knowledge of what transpired. “Males do not 
recycle RTAC. They either cut it or not.”
 Neither Gen. Miller nor Fort Benning responded to questions asking about allegations of altered standards.
 Approximately 140 women went through various
 cycles of the 14-day long RTAC. Many left of their own volition. Others
 dropped out, sources say.
 By the end of January, many were slated to begin Ranger school.
 Then came the second round of special treatment, sources tell PEOPLE.
 The males proceeded to Ranger School without
 further ado. The women got special training. They were placed into 
their own platoon and spent the next several weeks preparing for Ranger 
School, sources say.
 They were given nutritional counseling and a soldier to train them full time. The soldier, Sergeant First Class Robert Hoffnagle,
 previously had competed in Fort Benning’s annual Best Ranger 
competition, touted as the “ultimate test of fitness, endurance and grit
 for the Army’s most elite soldiers.
 The women “lived and breathed nothing but 
Ranger School 24/7,” a source tells PEOPLE. “He taught [them] 
everything, including how to do patrols.”
 There they were also allowed to train and rehearse on Land Navigation.
 “That right there was a special 
consideration that only was given to the women,” says a source with 
knowledge of events. “It’s not fair, on a lot of levels.”
 In a response to questions that included a 
request for confirmation that the women were placed in the special 
platoon, Army spokesman Lt. Col. Ben Garrett said “the allegations are 
not true.”
 However, other sources confirmed its existence to PEOPLE.
 “Hoffnagle got us ready for Ranger School,” says a woman who attended the special platoon.
 And other sources at Fort Benning tell 
PEOPLE they were present at meetings to discuss the platoon’s budget and
 how it would operate.
 By April 20, 19 women and 381 men reported for Ranger School.
 Within days, 11 women were dropped from the
 course because they failed either the physical training, land 
navigation, or road march portions, sources say.
 “They were decimated on road march,” an instructor tells PEOPLE.
 On May 7, less than three weeks into the 
course, a highly placed Army source told PEOPLE that no women remained 
in Ranger School.
 Then something changed.
 “The women were called in to see the general,” said the source, referencing Miller, who oversees Ranger School.
 “He told them they could not quit – too much time and money had been devoted to bringing them here,” the source said.
 Miller himself acknowledged he’d met with the women in a statement to The Washington Post,
 though he did not say what he told them, just that he was “impressed” 
that they wanted to continue, according to the newspaper.
 On May 8, eight women were allowed to repeat the first phase.
 Once again, the women failed, sources said. They stumbled on patrols.
 “They were not aggressive enough,” a source with knowledge of events tells PEOPLE. “They made poor combat decisions.”
 Patrols are a crucial element in Ranger School.
 “If you fail patrols, it’s significant, 
because you don’t have what it takes,” says Bubba Moore, a former Ranger
 Instructor with close ties to the Ranger and Fort Benning communities. 
“People will get killed.”
 In late May, with more failed events, 
commanders reassessed what to do with the women. Five women were sent 
back to their home units. Three were offered the chance to start Ranger 
School all over again, from the first day. They accepted the offer.
 The three women again failed patrols during the first phase, sources say.
 That’s when Gen. Miller himself arrived on the course, according to sources.
 Fort Benning later acknowledged to PEOPLE 
that Miller had gone to the training grounds while the women were on the
 course. A Fort Benning spokesman said Miller went there to commemorate 
his 30th anniversary of attending Ranger School, and did not go to 
pressure instructors into passing the women.
 Nevertheless, with Miller on scene, the women passed and progressed to the next phase.
 “Was it undue command influence?” a source 
with knowledge of events tells PEOPLE. “No matter what the general 
intended to convey, the instructors had no choice but to take this to 
mean, ‘Play along.’ ”
 “The instructors knew what they were expected to do,” the source says. “They did it.”
 After the women continue to struggle, 
Miller showed up again, sources say. Two women passed and ultimately 
graduated on August 21.
 Meanwhile, one woman from that same class, 
who has redone other phases repeatedly, just failed the Swamp Phase and 
is going to try it again, sources say.
 Another group of women is set to begin Ranger School in November.
 Late on the evening of Sept. 25, the Army 
released a statement from Brig. Gen. Malcom B. Frost, who is chief of 
the Army’s public affairs office, about the PEOPLE story and the 
allegations uncovered by PEOPLE reporter Susan Keating.
 [Ms. Keating] claimed that women were 
allowed to repeat a Ranger training class until they passed, while men 
were held to a strict pass/fail standard,” the statement said. “That is 
false.
 “She charged that women regularly practiced
 on Ranger School’s land navigation course while men saw it for the 
first time when they went to the school,” the statement said. “Again, 
false.
 “She accused an Army general of calling 
female candidates together to tell them they could not quit the course. 
Yet again, false.
 
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