Sunday 2 June 2013

Selection process

Haneys book Inside Delta Force described the selection course and its inception in detail. Haney writes the selection course began with standard tests including push-ups, sit-ups, and a 2-mile (3.2 km) run, an inverted crawl and a 100 meter swim fully dressed. The selection candidates were then put through a series of land navigation courses to include an 18-mile (29 km), all-night land navigation course while carrying a 40-pound (18 kg) rucksack. The rucksack's weight and the distance of the courses are increased and the time standards to complete the task are shortened with every march. The physical testing ended with a 40-mile (64 km) march with a 45-pound (20 kg) rucksack over very rough terrain which had to be completed in an unknown amount of time. Haney wrote that only the senior officer and NCO in charge of selection are allowed to see the set time limits, but all assessment and selection tasks and conditions were set by Delta training cadre.[14][15] The mental portion of the testing began with numerous psychological exams. The men then went in front of a board of Delta instructors, unit psychologists and the Delta commander, who each ask the candidate a barrage of questions and then dissect every response and mannerism of the candidate with the purpose to mentally exhaust the candidate. The unit commander then approaches the candidate and tells him if he has been selected. If an individual is selected for Delta, he undergoes an intense 6-month Operator Training Course (OTC), to learn counter-terrorism and counter-intelligence techniques, in which the individual maintains very little contact with friends and family for the duration. Training includes firearm accuracy and various other munitions training.[15]

Recruitment


Most recruits come from the Special Forces Groups and the 75th Ranger Regiment, but some operators have come from other units of the army.[10] Since the 1990s, the Army has posted recruitment notices for the 1st SFOD-D.[11] The Army, however, has never released an official fact sheet for the force. The recruitment notices placed in Fort Bragg's newspaper, Paraglide, refer to Delta Force by name, and label it "...the U.S. Army's special operations unit organized for the conduct of missions requiring rapid response with surgical application of a wide variety of unique special operations skills..."[12] The notice states that all applicants must be male, in the ranks of E-4 through E-8, have at least two and a half years of service time remaining in their enlistment, be 21 years or older and score high enough on the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery test to attend a briefing to be considered for admission.

Sunday 19 May 2013

uniform

Uniform The Pentagon tightly controls information about Delta Force and publicly refuses to comment on the highly secretive unit and its activities. Delta operators are granted an enormous amount of flexibility and autonomy. To conceal their identities, they rarely wear a uniform and usually wear civilian clothing both on and off duty.[15] When military uniforms are worn, they lack markings, surnames, or branch names.[15] Civilian hair styles and facial hair are allowed to enable the members to blend in and avoid recognition as military personnel.[

Sunday 12 May 2013

delta force use weapons such as some of these

 

  M4A1

ubiquitous US Army carbine available with a selection of accessories













M249 SAW

A 5.56mm light machine gun in wide use throughout the US military with variants developed for special ops forces


M240 machine gun

Versatile 7.62mm belt-fed medium machine gun that can be carried or mounted on tripods, vehicles, boats and helicopters.


 

M2 heavy machine gun

.50 caliber gun fired often mounted on SOF boats, vehicles and helicopers

minigun

multi-barrelled 7.62mm electrically-operated gatling gun mounted on boats, helicopters and vehicles.
 

M82a1 / M107 Barrett

devastating .50 caliber long range sniper rifle used by SEALs, Delta etc.


MK 47 Striker Grenade Launcher

advanced, computer-assisted 40mm automatic grenade launcher
 

FGM-148 Javelin

fire-and-forget anti-tank missile system

m203 is normally mounted on m4 or m16 under the barrel

delta force use weapons such as some of these

 

  M4A1

ubiquitous US Army carbine available with a selection of accessories













M249 SAW

A 5.56mm light machine gun in wide use throughout the US military with variants developed for special ops forces


M240 machine gun

Versatile 7.62mm belt-fed medium machine gun that can be carried or mounted on tripods, vehicles, boats and helicopters.


 

M2 heavy machine gun

.50 caliber gun fired often mounted on SOF boats, vehicles and helicopers

minigun

multi-barrelled 7.62mm electrically-operated gatling gun mounted on boats, helicopters and vehicles.
 

M82a1 / M107 Barrett

devastating .50 caliber long range sniper rifle used by SEALs, Delta etc.


MK 47 Striker Grenade Launcher

advanced, computer-assisted 40mm automatic grenade launcher
 

FGM-148 Javelin

fire-and-forget anti-tank missile system

m203 on normally mounted on m4s and m16s