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{{Short description|U.S. Army Rangers selection and training course}}
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{{more citations needed|date=April 2011}}
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[[File:75RangerRegtSSI.jpg|right|75th Ranger Regiment insignia]]
'''Ranger Assessment and Selection Program (RASP)''' is an 8-week course held at [[Fort
RASP is designed to prepare soldiers, many of whom have just graduated [[Recruit training|Basic Training]] and [[Advanced Individual Training]] and are still considered "fresh" recruits, for assignment to the [[75th Ranger Regiment]]. Soldiers from other units attempting to transfer to the 75th Ranger Regiment also attend the course, but are less common than new soldiers.
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==History==
After [[1st Ranger Battalion]] was reformed in 1974, selections were held directly by them. When [[2nd Ranger Battalion]] was formed shortly thereafter, they began hosting their own selection as well. The RIP program was first started by three hand-selected NCOs in the 1st Battalion in 1975 while that Battalion was still located at [[Fort Stewart|Fort Stewart, Georgia]]. It was then adopted by the 2nd Battalion. In 1986, when the Regimental Headquarters was fully formed, a new consolidated RIP was started at [[Fort Benning]], beginning in February 1985{{clarify|date=June 2023}}, where it was held until 2009 when it was changed to RASP.
In 2017 it was reported in ''[[Army Times]]'' that an unidentified woman was the first to pass the 21-day Ranger Assessment & Selection Program II (RASP II). This woman became the first to graduate from the selection program of a special operations unit. Previously in June 2016, a female noncommissioned officer had attempted to pass the test, but dropped out.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Myers |first=Meghann |date=2017-01-18 |title=This woman will be the first to join the Army's elite 75th Ranger Regiment |url=https://www.armytimes.com/news/your-army/2017/01/18/this-woman-will-be-the-first-to-join-the-army-s-elite-75th-ranger-regiment |archive-url=https://archive.today/
==Course==
The training curriculum was specifically designed to "smoke" the trainees through endless punishment via constant physical training{{citation needed|date=July 2021}}. In the second and fourth week of RASP, the class is sent to "Cole Range"; a remote training area of Fort Benning. It is designed to test the individual to their breaking point both physically and mentally; trainees sleep on average 4 hours total throughout Cole Range as they spend their nights doing tedious tasks such as the "hitting the wood line" for being incapable of meeting the given time standards. Although training such as [[patrolling]] and [[land navigation]] is taught at Cole Range, the main focus is to mentally and physically break down the individual. For classes held in the winter; it is not uncommon for 30–49% of the starting class to quit during the first night of Cole Range.{{Citation needed|date=June 2024}}
RASP is broken down into two levels of training: RASP 1 for
As of January 2010, the 4-week '''Ranger Indoctrination Program''' (RIP) became RASP (Ranger Assessment and Selection Program) and extended to 8 weeks long. There are two separate phases in the RASP program.
Phase 1 primarily consists of day
==Graduation==
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