Military Freefall Parachutist Badge

Award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Military Freefall Parachutist Badge

The Military Freefall Parachutist Badge is a military badge of the United States Army and United States Air Force awarded to qualified U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force personnel as high-altitude military parachute specialists.[2][3]

Quick Facts Type, Awarded for ...
Military Freefall Parachutist Badge
Thumb
Military Freefall Parachutist Badge
TypeBadge
Awarded forQualification as a high-altitude parachutist
Presented byU.S. Army and U.S. Air Force
StatusCurrently awarded
First award1 October 1994[1]
Final awardOn going
Thumb
Master Military Freefall Parachutist Badge
Army Precedence
Next (higher)Parachute Rigger Badge[2]
Next (lower)Army Aviator Badges[2]
Close

Qualifications

Summarize
Perspective

To earn the Military Freefall Parachutist Badge, the military member first must receive all necessary ground training, already have earned the Military Parachutist Badge (jump-qualified), and must have completed the requisite freefall (night, combat equipment, oxygen) jumps and graduate from the Military Free-Fall Parachutist Course.[4]

A star and laurel wreath, centered above the badge, called the Master Military Freefall Parachutist Badge, is authorized for U.S. Army Soldiers and U.S. Air Force Airmen qualified as a Master Military Freefall Parachutist (Jumpmaster). Such qualification requires completing the Military Free-Fall Jumpmaster Course, wherein the student learns how to be a jumpmaster in military freefall operations.[1][5]

As with the U.S. Army's Military Parachutist Badge, small bronze and gold stars are placed on the badge to represent participation in combat jumps, known as Combat Jump Devices, and can be awarded with either the basic and master versions of the badge. To earn the device, a Military Freefall Parachutist must have conducted a High-altitude/low-opening (HALO) or high-altitude/high-opening (HAHO) jump in a war zone. The stars are awarded as follows:[6]

One combat jumpA bronze star centered on the dagger
Two combat jumpsA bronze star on each wing
Three combat jumpsA bronze star on each wing and one centered on the dagger
Four combat jumpsTwo bronze stars on each wing
Five + combat jumpsA large gold star centered on the dagger
More information Date, Unit ...
List of published U.S. high-altitude parachute jumps of the U.S. Army[7][8][9][10][11]
Date Unit Operation Troopers Country Dropzone
28 November 1970 Recon Team Florida, CCN, MACV-SOG (HALO) Vietnam Conflict 3 Americans, 1 ARVN officer and 2 Montagnards Laos NVA road inside Laos
7 May 1971 Captain Larry Manes' Recon Team, CCN, MACV-SOG (HALO) Vietnam Conflict 4 South Vietnam Between Ashau Valley and Khe Sanh, NVA trail extension of Laotian Highway 921
22 June 1971 Sergeant Major Billy Waugh's Recon Team, CCN, MACV-SOG (HALO) Vietnam Conflict 4 South Vietnam 60 miles SW of Danang
22 Sep. 1971 Captain Jim Storter's Recon Team, CCC, MACV-SOG (HALO) Vietnam Conflict 4 South Vietnam Plei Trap Valley, NW of Pleiku
11 October 1971 Sergeant First Class Dick Gross' Recon Team, CCC, MACV-SOG (HALO) Vietnam Conflict 5 South Vietnam 25 miles, SW of Pleiku in the Ia Drang Valley
15 January 1991 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta (HAHO) Operation Desert Shield 12 Iraq Northwest desert
3 July 2004 75th Ranger Regiment, Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment, Team 3 (HALO) Operation Enduring Freedom Afghanistan Southeastern region
30 May 2007 10th Special Forces Group, 3rd Battalion, ODA 074 (HALO) Operation Iraqi Freedom 11 Iraq Ninewah Province
11 July 2009 75th Ranger Regiment, Regimental Reconnaissance Company, Team 1 Operation Enduring Freedom Afghanistan
Close

History of the badge's design

The original design of the Military Freefall Parachutists Badge was submitted in March 1983 by Sergeant First Class Gregory A. Dailey of Special Forces ODA-552, Company B, 2nd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group. Updates on the design, adding a Master Military Freefall Parachutist Badge, were submitted by General Wayne A. Downing of U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) and James Phillips of the Special Forces Association. The badges were approved for wear by U.S. Army soldiers assigned to U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) on 1 October 1994. Unrestricted wear was approved on 7 July 1997 by General Dennis Reimer.[1]

Symbolism of the badge's design:[1]

Free-fall training

Summarize
Perspective

The U.S. Military Free-Fall School (MFFS) is operated by the USASOC's John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School (SWCS), 2nd Special Warfare Training Group (Airborne), 2nd Battalion, Company B at the U.S. Army's Yuma Proving Ground (YPG) in Arizona, which is the USSOCOM proponent for military freefall.[12][13][14] The MFFS conducts four primary training courses, the Military Free-Fall Parachutist Course, the Military Free-Fall Jumpmaster Course, the Military Free-Fall Advanced Tactical Infiltration Course, and the Military Free-Fall Instructor Course.[14][15] The U.S. Air Force also conducts the Military Free-Fall Jumpmaster Course—certified by the MFFS—at Davis–Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona for airman that are not able to attend the MFFS's jumpmaster course.[16] Alternatively, detachments from the MFFS conduct the Military Free-Fall Jumpmaster Course via a Mobile Training Team (MTT) for military free-fall units that have difficulty attending the course at the Yuma Proving Ground.[17]

Thumb
A Parachute Rigger from SWCS demonstrates the proper packing procedure for the RA-1 main parachute
Thumb
An instructor and a MFFS student fall from a C-27J practicing free-fall techniques over YPG

The Military Free-Fall Parachutist Course (MFFPC) is open to special operations forces assigned to military free-fall coded positions, parachute riggers, and select DoD civilian personnel or allied personnel assigned to military free-fall positions. To attend MFFPC, students must have graduated from the U.S. Army Airborne School and must meet specific medical requirements. Week one of the four-week course focuses on vertical wind tunnel body stabilization training at the MSG George A Bannar Wind Tunnel as well as parachute packing and an introduction to military free-fall operations. The remaining weeks focuses training on varying jump profiles using three airborne operations per training iteration, totaling 30 military free-fall operations per course encompassing various conditions and equipment loads. At the end of the course, students will have learned how to:[4]

  • Pack the RA-1 Military Free-Fall Advanced Ram-Air Parachute System main parachute[18][19] and don the system
  • Rigging/jumping procedures for weapons, combat equipment, night vision goggles and portable oxygen equipment
  • Aircraft procedures
  • Exit an aircraft from the door and ramp using dive and poised exit positions
  • Emergency procedures and body stabilization
  • HALO and HAHO parachute jumps from altitudes of 10,000 ft (3,048 m) to 25,000 ft (7,620 m)

Upon completion of the MFFPC, graduates are awarded the Military Freefall Parachutist Badge.

Thumb
A MFFJMC student conducts HAHO operations planning at YPG
Thumb
U.S. Air Force MFFJMC students practice conducting the jumpmaster personnel inspection on each other at Davis–Monthan Air Force Base
Thumb
A U.S. Marine MFFJMC student gives jump commands during the MTT's first overseas course at Kadena Air Base, Japan (2017)

To attend the Military Free-Fall JumpMaster Course (MFFJMC), students must have graduated from the U.S. Army Airborne School, the MFFPC, the U.S. Army Jumpmaster School, be a current military free-fall parachutist, served as a military free-fall parachutist for a minimum of one year, and must have completed at least 50 military free-fall jumps. The three-week MFFJMC focuses on training students on jumpmaster duties and responsibilities, such as:[5]

  • Nomenclature
  • Jumpmaster personnel inspection
  • Emergency procedures
  • Oxygen equipment
  • Wind drift calculations
  • Altimeter calculations
  • Emergency automatic activation device calculations
  • Jump commands
  • Aircraft procedures
  • Techniques of spotting
  • HAHO techniques
  • Various ram-air parachute systems packing and rigging

Upon completion of the MFFJMC, graduates are awarded the Master Military Freefall Parachutist Badge.

Thumb
A MFFATIC student practices freefall techniques with various equipment in the MSG George A Bannar Wind Tunnel, YPG
Thumb
MFFATIC instructors and students conduct a HAHO water insertion operation from a C-23 off the coast of Key West, Florida

To attend the Military Free-Fall Advanced Tactical Infiltration Course (MFFATIC), students must have the same qualifications and completed the same prerequisites required of the MFFJMC. The three-week MFFATIC focuses on educating and training joint special operations forces and other selected personnel in the planning and conduct of night military free-fall tactical infiltrations as a group onto unknown and unmarked drop zones. Training includes:[20]

  • Following GPS guided bundles
  • Carrying various combat equipment
  • Various communications
  • Wearing various night vision devices
  • Jumping with non-standard weapons while using oxygen equipment
  • Utilization of various parachutist navigational devices

Upon completion of the MFFATIC, graduates are awarded a certificate of completion; there is no badge or badge device awarded for completion of the MFFATIC.

Thumb
A MFFS instructor and a student-instructor assist a student as he free-falls over YPG

To attend the Military Free-Fall Instructor Course (MFFIC), students must be a commissioned officer, warrant officer, or non-commissioned officer and must have the same qualifications and completed the same prerequisites required of the MFFJMC and MFFATIC. Additionally, these students must be qualified military free-fall jumpmasters, must have completed a minimum of 100 free-fall parachute jumps, and must have nine months remaining in service upon graduation. The initial nine-week MFFIC focuses on the following over 150-200 free-fall jumps:[15][21]

  • Learn how to conduct military free-fall jumps from the instructor's perspective
  • Jump as an instructor evaluating and coaching a current MFF instructor who plays the role of a new MFF student
  • Learn how to deal with multiple instructor-induced problems during free-fall commonly encountered with new MFF students

After nine weeks of fundamentals, student-instructors are placed as shadows at the MFFPC for three to six months.[21]

Upon completion of the shadow program, graduates are awarded the Military Free-Fall Instructor Rating; there is no badge or badge device awarded for completion of the MFFIC.[21]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.