Yes, but only if you've actually earned them.
Irelands special forces is Fianoglach or Army Ranger Wing.
A ranger regiment is unit of the armed forces which is usually classified as a "special forces" unit, i.e. one that requires additional training and/or rigorous requirements to join.
Yes they have patches like a Ranger tab and other identifyable marks
Shoulder.
The 4th Ranger Battalion was de-activated at Camp Butner, North Carolina, October 24, 1944. The 1st Special Service Force was de-activated in France, December 5, 1944.
No. The Green Berets are a special forces unit, who recruits form all branches of the military and even accepts civilian volunteers.
Four:Green: Worn only by qualified Special Forces personnel serving in Special Forces groups. Personnel assigned to SF groups who are not Special Forces wear the maroon beret.Tan: Worn by the Army Rangers. Replaced the black beret in 2001, when Gen. Shinseki made black berets standard for the entire Army. Worn by ALL personnel assigned to Ranger units, whether they are Rangers or not.Maroon: Worn by Airborne units on active jump status.Black: a.k.a., the "leg beret" or the "Shinseki Special". Formerly exclusive to the Rangers, the black beret was made standard headgear for the entire Army in 2001 (causing the Rangers to switch to a tan beret). It was recently announced that the black beret would no longer be worn with the ACU uniform, but would remain standard headgear for the Class A uniform.
Most Army rangers have an average PT score of above 270. Special forces must have above 280
The US Army's 75th Ranger Regiment and US Army Special Forces are both part of the US Army Special Operations Command. Though their organizations are different, reflecting the different types of missions that they are expected to execute.
is there a "special tool" to put torsion keys on a ranger
You can go to the Army Ranger Course and recieve the tab but it is not authorized to wear on any AF uniform.
As actual operators? None. The 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment is open to females, but Special Forces groups, Ranger Battalions, SEAL teams, etc. are not. The unit may have female personnel assigned to in, but in non-operational roles - for instance, you may see females assigned to Special Forces, but they'll wear the maroon beret, rather than green, and won't wear the Special Forces tab above their patch, because they're not actually SF operators.