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Yes. US Army infantry attend One Station Unit Training (essentially, Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training, rolled into one package) at Fort Benning, Georgia.
It is 4 months long it is broken up into three phases
I believe he had an Infantry MOS, in which case, he would've done One Station Unit Training (Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training, rolled into one package) at Fort Benning, Georgia.
At the Christian Counseling Centre we offer a two-year Lay Christian Counselor Training Programmed. The training consists of three phases: Basic, Intermediate
After you complete Basic Training you will proceed on to you MOS training, listed in you enlistment contract, once you complete you MOS training you will proceed to you first duty station.
Albert Elkin has written: 'The development of a list of minimal training goals for basic combat training' -- subject(s): Basic training (Military education), Combat, Drill and tactics, United States, United States. Army. Infantry
alot more, its the transition from basic to your job. there is three phases you have to earn the third being the most freedom but it depends on the tech school.
Every single person in the British Armed Forces does basic training. Learning how to be a solider. It is not however as long or strenuous as infantry training in the army. The RAF basic training for an airman lasts 9 weeks and is conducted at RAF Halton.
Depends on your MOS. In you're in an MOS which has One Station Unit Training (such as Army infantry), you would simply continue on as you had before, since you do your Basic and AIT in one package. If you had to go to another post for your AIT, then you'd do that.
The 54th Infantry Regiment of the United States Army currently only has one active battalion, which is a Basic Combat Training battalion at Fort Benning. It may or not still be an infantry One Station Unit Training outfit - infantry OSUT used to be exclusive to Fort Benning, but some units since have reverted to non-infantry Basic Combat Training. A friend of mine who went through infantry OSUT in 2/54 in the late 90s tells me the battalion used to be nicknamed "Hell's Kitchen". As for lineage and honours they carry, its respectable, but nothing which would gain the regiment the fame of more 'prominent' units, such as the 506th PIR. See the related link section for the Wikipedia article on the 54th Infantry Regiment.
It would probably be the French Foreign Legion. Other elite units typically have a selection process which the applicant goes through after they've completed their basic training, whereas the selection process for the Foreign Legion is conducted as part of their basic training.
9 weeks of Basic Training followed by 5 weeks of AIT Infantry School. This will be done simultaneously non-stop. So a total of 14 weeks all together.