Army rolls out fitness test for combat troops

Summary

Army said a new annual, pass-fail fitness test for combat roles will begin this month.

Why this matters

The change sets a new annual physical standard for soldiers in combat specialties and could affect job eligibility for those roles. It also signals how the Army is aligning fitness testing with tasks it says reflect battlefield demands.

The U.S. Army said Wednesday it was introducing a new physical assessment for soldiers in combat roles.

The Combat Field Test is intended to measure performance in conditions that more closely reflect modern battlefield demands, with an emphasis on strength, endurance, and movement under load. The Army said the test will be age- and sex-neutral and scored on a pass-fail basis.

The assessment begins with a 1-mile run, followed by 30 dead-stop pushups, a 100-meter sprint, 16 lifts of a 40-pound sandbag onto a 65-inch platform, and a 50-meter carry of two Army water cans weighing 40 pounds each. Soldiers then complete a 50-meter movement drill with a high crawl and a 25-meter three- to five-second rush before a final 1-mile run.

Soldiers will have 30 minutes to finish the test, with the clock running continuously, while wearing the Army Combat Uniform and boots. The Army said the Combat Field Test will not replace the Army Fitness Test.

Soldiers in infantry, combat engineering, field artillery, armor, explosive ordnance disposal, and other combat specialties will take the new test, the Army said.

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