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The '''United States Army [[Pathfinder (military)|Pathfinder]] Course''' trains military personnel in the [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] and its sister services to set up parachute drop zones and helicopter landing zones for [[Airborne forces|airborne]] and [[air assault]] missions.
The '''United States Army [[Pathfinder (military)|Pathfinder]] Course''' trains military personnel in the [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] and its sister services to set up parachute drop zones and helicopter landing zones for [[Airborne forces|airborne]] and [[air assault]] missions.<ref>{{cite web |title=Pathfinder |url=https://home.army.mil/campbell/tsaas/pathfinder |website=US Army |publisher=US Army}}</ref>


The two-week course trains pathfinder candidates to navigate on foot; conduct [[Cargo hook (helicopter)|sling load]] operations; establish and operate a helicopter landing zone; provide [[air traffic control]] (ATC) and navigational assistance to rotary-wing and fixed-wing aircraft; and establish and operate parachute drop zones (DZs), including computed air release point (CARP) DZs, ground marked release system (GMRS) DZs and Army verbally initiated release system (VIRS) DZs.
The two-week course trains pathfinder candidates to navigate on foot; conduct [[Cargo hook (helicopter)|sling load]] operations; establish and operate a helicopter landing zone; provide [[air traffic control]] (ATC) and navigational assistance to rotary-wing and fixed-wing aircraft; and establish and operate parachute drop zones (DZs), including computed air release point (CARP) DZs, ground marked release system (GMRS) DZs and Army verbally initiated release system (VIRS) DZs.
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The [[Korean War]] saw limited use of the Pathfinders by the [[187th Infantry Regiment (United States)|187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team]] during two combat jumps and operations. The [[Vietnam War]] saw the largest use of Pathfinders due to the developments of helicopter insertion and resupply which were pioneered by the [[11th Airborne Division (United States)|11th Air Assault Division]] (Test). Nearly every Army aviation battalion had a Pathfinder detachment and deployed them on nearly every mission.
The [[Korean War]] saw limited use of the Pathfinders by the [[187th Infantry Regiment (United States)|187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team]] during two combat jumps and operations. The [[Vietnam War]] saw the largest use of Pathfinders due to the developments of helicopter insertion and resupply which were pioneered by the [[11th Airborne Division (United States)|11th Air Assault Division]] (Test). Nearly every Army aviation battalion had a Pathfinder detachment and deployed them on nearly every mission.


After the Vietnam War, Pathfinders were embedded in the major Airborne units and various combat aviation battalions/groups. The [[Army National Guard]] and [[United States Army Reserve|Army Reserve]] added Pathfinder platoons during the 1970s and 1980s. Many conducted joint task force missions in Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East.
After the Vietnam War, Pathfinders were embedded in the major Airborne units and various combat aviation battalions/groups. The [[Army National Guard]] and [[United States Army Reserve|Army Reserve]] added Pathfinder platoons during the 1970s and 1980s.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Heft |first1=Aaron |title=28th Pathfinder Detachment - The Pa. National Guard’s first airborne unit |url=https://www.dvidshub.net/news/451470/28th-pathfinder-detachment-pa-national-guards-first-airborne-unit |agency=DVIDS |publisher=Joint Force Headquarters - Pennsylvania National Guard |date=16 August 2023}}</ref> Many conducted joint task force missions in Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East.


In the late 1980s through 1990, the Army began closing Pathfinder units, believing their skills could be taught to regular troops at [[United States Army Air Assault School|Air Assault School]] and by people within the unit who were Pathfinder-qualified. Operations during the [[United States invasion of Panama|Panama invasion]] and the [[Gulf War]] showed that Pathfinders were important to airborne success and that the Army needed more of them. The [[101st Airborne Division]] (Air Assault), which had retained a Pathfinder unit during and after the Vietnam War, expanded its existing company and raised a second in 2005 by converting its long range surveillance detachment (LRSD) into another pathfinder company, giving each of its two aviation brigades a company. The [[82nd Airborne Division]] followed suit by converted its LRSD to a pathfinder company under the 2d Battalion, 82nd Aviation Regiment. Additionally, the [[10th Mountain Division (United States)|10th Mountain Division]] (Light Infantry) at Fort Drum, New York, and the [[25th Infantry Division (United States)|25th Infantry Division]] in Hawaii have formed provisional pathfinder companies (e.g., they are not reflected in the units' tables of organization and equipment) and conduct combat operations in [[Operation Iraqi Freedom|Iraq]] and [[Operation Enduring Freedom|Afghanistan]]. The Pathfinder units today still live by the motto of "First In-Last Out" and wear the Pathfinder Torch.{{Cn|date=June 2023}}
In the late 1980s through 1990, the Army began closing Pathfinder units, believing their skills could be taught to regular troops at [[United States Army Air Assault School|Air Assault School]] and by people within the unit who were Pathfinder-qualified. Operations during the [[United States invasion of Panama|Panama invasion]] and the [[Gulf War]] showed that Pathfinders were important to airborne success and that the Army needed more of them. The [[101st Airborne Division]] (Air Assault), which had retained a Pathfinder unit during and after the Vietnam War, expanded its existing company and raised a second in 2005 by converting its long range surveillance detachment (LRSD) into another pathfinder company, giving each of its two aviation brigades a company. The [[82nd Airborne Division]] followed suit by converted its LRSD to a pathfinder company under the 2d Battalion, 82nd Aviation Regiment. Additionally, the [[10th Mountain Division (United States)|10th Mountain Division]] (Light Infantry) at Fort Drum, New York, and the [[25th Infantry Division (United States)|25th Infantry Division]] in Hawaii have formed provisional pathfinder companies (e.g., they are not reflected in the units' tables of organization and equipment) and conduct combat operations in [[Operation Iraqi Freedom|Iraq]] and [[Operation Enduring Freedom|Afghanistan]].


The Army had five pathfinder companies in 2015. On May 15, the 101st Airborne Division inactivated its 159th Combat Aviation Brigade, including the brigade's pathfinder company. The 101st CAB was redesignated the CAB, 101st Airborne Division, bringing it in line with other non-numbered divisional CABs, and the division assumed the same organizational structure as the 10th Mountain Division, a light infantry unit.
The Army had five pathfinder companies in 2015. On May 15, the 101st Airborne Division inactivated its 159th Combat Aviation Brigade, including the brigade's pathfinder company.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Barrouquere |first1=Brett |title=Fort Campbell will lose 159th CAB, 2,400 soldiers |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/2014/11/20/fort-campbell-will-lose-th-cab-soldiers/70036606/ |publisher=The Tennessean |date=20 Nov 2014}}</ref> The 101st CAB was redesignated the CAB, 101st Airborne Division, bringing it in line with other non-numbered divisional CABs, and the division assumed the same organizational structure as the 10th Mountain Division, a light infantry unit.


In summer 2016, the provisional pathfinder company in the 25th Infantry Division was inactivated, followed by the inactivation on 2 August 2016 of the remaining pathfinder company in the 101st Airborne Division in a ceremony at Fort Campbell, and then the provisional company in the 10th Mountain Division by October 2016. The last pathfinder unit in the Army, a company authorized by MTOE in the 82d Airborne Division, was inactivated in a ceremony on 24 February 2017 at Simmons Army Airfield at Fort Bragg.
In summer 2016, the provisional pathfinder company in the 25th Infantry Division was inactivated, followed by the inactivation on 2 August 2016 of the remaining pathfinder company in the 101st Airborne Division in a ceremony at Fort Campbell<ref>{{cite news |title=101st Airborne to deactivate Pathfinder company |url=https://www.theleafchronicle.com/story/news/local/fort-campbell/2016/07/28/101st-airborne-deactivate-pathfinder-company/87663792/ |publisher=The Leaf Chronicle |date=28 July 2016}}</ref>, and then the provisional company in the 10th Mountain Division by October 2016. The last pathfinder unit in the Army, a company authorized by MTOE in the 82d Airborne Division, was inactivated in a ceremony on 24 February 2017 at Simmons Army Airfield at Fort Bragg.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Brooks |first1=Drew |title=Army’s Last Pathfinder Company Deactivates At Fort Bragg |url=https://taskandpurpose.com/news/armys-last-pathfinder-company-deactivates-fort-bragg/#:~:text=Officials%20have%20said%20that%20while,dating%20to%20World%20War%20II. |agency=Task & Purpose |publisher=The Fayetteville Observer |date=26 Feb 2017}}</ref>

Training at the Pathfinder School continues, but there are no more pathfinder units.


==Course prerequisites==
==Course prerequisites==
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==Graduation==
==Graduation==
Graduates from the U.S. Army Pathfinder School are awarded the [[Pathfinder Badge (United States)|Pathfinder Badge]].
Graduates from the U.S. Army Pathfinder School are awarded the [[Pathfinder Badge (United States)|Pathfinder Badge]].<ref>{{cite web |title=AR 600-8-22 Military Awards |url=https://armypubs.army.mil/epubs/DR_pubs/DR_a/pdf/web/ARN18147_R600_8_22_admin2_FINAL.pdf |publisher=US Army}}</ref>


===Special recognition===
===Special recognition===

Revision as of 21:52, 19 January 2024

United States Army Pathfinder School
A pathfinder directs an inbound aircraft onto a drop zone at Fort Liberty, North Carolina.
Active1943–Present
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeMilitary training
RoleSpecial skills training
Part of Army National Guard Warrior Training Center
Garrison/HQFort Moore, Georgia
Motto(s)"First In, Last Out"
Insignia
Headgear worn by special skills instructors, known as "Black Hats"
US Army Pathfinder Badge, awarded upon graduation

The United States Army Pathfinder Course trains military personnel in the U.S. Army and its sister services to set up parachute drop zones and helicopter landing zones for airborne and air assault missions.[1]

The two-week course trains pathfinder candidates to navigate on foot; conduct sling load operations; establish and operate a helicopter landing zone; provide air traffic control (ATC) and navigational assistance to rotary-wing and fixed-wing aircraft; and establish and operate parachute drop zones (DZs), including computed air release point (CARP) DZs, ground marked release system (GMRS) DZs and Army verbally initiated release system (VIRS) DZs.

All training and airborne operations are conducted in accordance with FM 3-21.220 (Static Line Parachuting Techniques and Training) and FM 3-21.38 (Pathfinder Operations).

For decades, the Army trained Pathfinders at the Pathfinder School at Fort Benning (renamed Fort Moore in 2023). The school was closed after an October 2020 decision to shutter more than 30 schools and courses.[2] A spokesman from the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) said the school was closing to save money and help the Army shift to large-scale combat operations.[3] As of 2023, the Pathfinder Course is conducted by the 101st Airborne Division's Air Assault School at Fort Campbell[4] and by the Army National Guard Warrior Training Center Mobile Training Team at Fort Moore.[5]

Development of the modern U.S. Army pathfinder

U.S. Army pathfinders pose in front of a C-47 before boarding the aircraft in order to parachute into France in support of the Normandy landings.

Pathfinders make up less than .01% of the Army. Their primary mission is to set up parachute drop zones and helicopter landing zones for airborne and air assault missions.

The Pathfinders were created in World War II after early airborne operations found it too difficult to find drop zones at night and in bad weather, resulting in scattered drops up to seven miles from the target. An idea from the British inspired the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion and 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, to create an elite force to go in before the main assault with visual and electronic signaling devices to guide aircraft to the drop zone and gliders to their landing zones. Their first use in combat was 13 September 1943 during combat jumps into Italy.

WWII-era Pathfinders are most remembered for their jump into Normandy during the invasion of June 6, 1944, when they led Allied forces into Europe. They were employed throughout southern France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany, in the course of Allied airborne operations until the end of the war in Europe. They were also used in the Pacific theater with the 11th Airborne Division during the liberation of the Philippines.

The Korean War saw limited use of the Pathfinders by the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team during two combat jumps and operations. The Vietnam War saw the largest use of Pathfinders due to the developments of helicopter insertion and resupply which were pioneered by the 11th Air Assault Division (Test). Nearly every Army aviation battalion had a Pathfinder detachment and deployed them on nearly every mission.

After the Vietnam War, Pathfinders were embedded in the major Airborne units and various combat aviation battalions/groups. The Army National Guard and Army Reserve added Pathfinder platoons during the 1970s and 1980s.[6] Many conducted joint task force missions in Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East.

In the late 1980s through 1990, the Army began closing Pathfinder units, believing their skills could be taught to regular troops at Air Assault School and by people within the unit who were Pathfinder-qualified. Operations during the Panama invasion and the Gulf War showed that Pathfinders were important to airborne success and that the Army needed more of them. The 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), which had retained a Pathfinder unit during and after the Vietnam War, expanded its existing company and raised a second in 2005 by converting its long range surveillance detachment (LRSD) into another pathfinder company, giving each of its two aviation brigades a company. The 82nd Airborne Division followed suit by converted its LRSD to a pathfinder company under the 2d Battalion, 82nd Aviation Regiment. Additionally, the 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry) at Fort Drum, New York, and the 25th Infantry Division in Hawaii have formed provisional pathfinder companies (e.g., they are not reflected in the units' tables of organization and equipment) and conduct combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Army had five pathfinder companies in 2015. On May 15, the 101st Airborne Division inactivated its 159th Combat Aviation Brigade, including the brigade's pathfinder company.[7] The 101st CAB was redesignated the CAB, 101st Airborne Division, bringing it in line with other non-numbered divisional CABs, and the division assumed the same organizational structure as the 10th Mountain Division, a light infantry unit.

In summer 2016, the provisional pathfinder company in the 25th Infantry Division was inactivated, followed by the inactivation on 2 August 2016 of the remaining pathfinder company in the 101st Airborne Division in a ceremony at Fort Campbell[8], and then the provisional company in the 10th Mountain Division by October 2016. The last pathfinder unit in the Army, a company authorized by MTOE in the 82d Airborne Division, was inactivated in a ceremony on 24 February 2017 at Simmons Army Airfield at Fort Bragg.[9]

Course prerequisites

All applicants must have passed a physical examination within five years, have a minimum profile of 111121, have no speech impediment, have passed the APFT within the last six months and meet the Army height and weight standards in accordance with AR 600-9.

Physicals for airborne qualified personnel must indicate "cleared to participate in airborne operations".

Applicants must have six months of service remaining on active duty upon completion of the course.

Officers: Active Army, reserve, or national guard officers (O–1 through O-3) assigned to a billet documented with the skill identifier "5Q" indicating a requirement to possess pathfinder skills in the most recent personnel management authorization document or updated authorization document. Attendance is restricted to officers in the following branches:

Enlisted: Active Army, reserve or national guard soldiers at the grades of E–3 through E–7, that have an Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery–General Technical score of 110 or above, and are from the following military occupational specialties can attend Pathfinder School:

Other services: Active and reserve U.S. Marine Corps officers in the grades of O–1 through O–3 and enlisted personnel in the grades of E–4 through E–7 in logistics and combat arms may attend. Active and reserve U.S. Air Force enlisted personnel serving as combat control team/forward air controllers in the grades of E–5 thought E–7 may attend.

Foreign students: Applicants must have a signed letter of intent, a waiver from HQDA, and U.S. government release for training. Units that sponsor foreign students must ensure they meet all course prerequisites prior to reporting for pathfinder training.

Pathfinder Course schedule

"Black Hats" release colored smoke to show their students the wind drift on a parachute drop zones they have established.
A pathfinder student inspects the readiness of a U.S. Army HMMWV for sling loading.
"Black Hats" instruct pathfinder students how to line up a flight path for rotary-wing aircraft.

Pathfinder School is divided into 3 phases, each lasting 3-4 days and culminating in a written and/or hands-on exam. Students must achieve a 70% or higher to pass each exam. After completing all 3 phases, students will participate in a field training exercise where they put their skills to the test. Formerly a 3 week long course, the course has been condensed into just 2 weeks long.

Phase 1 - Sling Loads

Students receive pathfinder orientation. Students begin learning sling load nomenclature, aircraft capabilities and sling load theory. Pathfinder students identify nomenclature, air capabilities and deficiencies. A written nomenclature test and a written sling load test will be given. A hands-on inspection of four different sling loads will be conducted where each Pathfinder student will clearly define each deficiency within the time limit.

Phase 2 - Helicopter Landing Zones (HLZs)

Students will be taught how to establish and operate HLZ/PZs, how to plan and execute an air movement, and general air traffic control procedures. This phase concludes with a written exam.

Phase 3 - Drop Zones (DZs)

Students will be taught to establish day/night DZs (CARP, GMRP, and VIRS) for the insertion of personnel and equipment. Students will understand the 8 selection factors for selecting a drop zone and the duties and responsibilities of the drop zone support team leader (DZSTL). Students will complete the Basic Airborne Refresher (if applicable) and will be taught how to perform the duties of the GTA during a VIRS drop. Students will also receive basic instruction on drop zone survey techniques. This phase concludes with a written exam.

Field Training Exercise (FTX)

Students will demonstrate the knowledge they have been taught during the course during the FTX, during which they are evaluated as a team leader/assistant team leader and ground to air/internal net recorder. Students will demonstrate proficiency in all areas of pathfinder operations and meet all graduation requirements.

Graduation

Graduates from the U.S. Army Pathfinder School are awarded the Pathfinder Badge.[10]

Special recognition

Col. Robert L. Howard Award

The Col. Robert L. Howard Award is awarded to the Distinguished Honor Graduate of the Pathfinder class, with the highest overall grade point average with first-time "gos" in every event.

Instructor of the Cycle

The title of Instructor of the Cycle is awarded to the instructor whom the students and Instructors vote had the greatest positive impact throughout the course of training.

Personnel

Instructors

A special skills instructor, known as a "Black Hat", demonstrates a quick method to determine the height of an obstacle on a landing zone.

Instructors at the U.S. Army Pathfinder School are the famed and feared "Black Hats", named for the black baseball caps they wear as a part of their garrison uniform. The Black Hat is a symbol of expertise, awarded to Airborne, Jumpmaster, and Pathfinder instructors who are certified to teach others how to conduct airborne operations.

Students

Pathfinders students are drawn primarily from the Army, but its sister services send students as well. For all prospective students, an assignment in a billet requiring pathfinder skills is generally required. In the Army, prospective students would most likely be assigned to pathfinder units, like those found in the 101st, 10th Mountain, and 82nd Airborne divisions. In the U.S. Navy, U.S. Air Force, and U.S. Marine Corps, prospective students would most likely be assigned to a unit conducting drop-zone operations, helicopter operations, or special operations units.

See also

References

  • FM 3-21.38 (Pathfinder Operations)
  • FM 3-21.220 (Static Line Parachuting Techniques and Training)
  • Basic Airborne Companies Standard Operating Procedures (BACSOP)
  • HHC, 1st Battalion (Airborne), 507th Infantry Regiment SOP (HHCSOP), dated October 2011

Notes

  1. ^ "Pathfinder". US Army. US Army.
  2. ^ "FY22 Functional Course Deletions" (PDF). U.S. Army. October 23, 2020. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  3. ^ Pathfinder School at Fort Benning slated to officially get the ax, Army Times, by Kyle Rempfer, dated 12 November 2020, last accessed 21 November 2020
  4. ^ "101st ABN DIV (AASLT) Pathfinder School Prerequisite Requirements" (PDF). U.S. Army. 25 January 2023.
  5. ^ "Fort Moore | ARNG Warrior Training Center". www.benning.army.mil. Retrieved 2023-06-05.
  6. ^ Heft, Aaron (16 August 2023). "28th Pathfinder Detachment - The Pa. National Guard's first airborne unit". Joint Force Headquarters - Pennsylvania National Guard. DVIDS.
  7. ^ Barrouquere, Brett (20 Nov 2014). "Fort Campbell will lose 159th CAB, 2,400 soldiers". The Tennessean.
  8. ^ "101st Airborne to deactivate Pathfinder company". The Leaf Chronicle. 28 July 2016.
  9. ^ Brooks, Drew (26 Feb 2017). "Army's Last Pathfinder Company Deactivates At Fort Bragg". The Fayetteville Observer. Task & Purpose.
  10. ^ "AR 600-8-22 Military Awards" (PDF). US Army.