Army Barrier Falls in Best Ranger Competition

New administration policy suggests no official celebration of 1st Lt. Gabrielle White's milestone
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 14, 2025 7:30 PM CDT
Army Has a First in Best Ranger Competition
This image provided by the Army shows Capt. Seth Deltenre, left, and 1st Lt. Gabrielle White from the Maneuver Center of Excellence in Fort Benning, Ga., as they compete during the Malvesti obstacle course in the 2025 Best Ranger Competition on April 11 at Camp Rogers in Fort Benning.   (Patrick A. Albright/U.S. Army via AP)

The Army's Best Ranger Competition had a female entrant for the first time this year. Her two-soldier team finished the grueling three-day event over the weekend and came in 14th overall, the AP reports. First Lt. Gabrielle White, and her teammate, Capt. Seth Deltenre, were among the 16 teams that made it through the final events, where Ranger teams compete for accolades as the best of the elite military force. All together, 52 teams competed, and all of the others were made up of only male soldiers.

The two Rangers on the winning team were 1st Lt. Griff Hokanson and 1st Lt. Kevin Moore, both members of the 75th Ranger Regiment. White and Deltenre are based at the Army Center of Excellence at Fort Benning, Georgia. Female soldiers were not allowed to be Rangers until 2015, when the Army opened Ranger school to women. In August 2015, two female soldiers completed the Ranger course for the first time. Later that year, the Defense Department opened all combat jobs to women. Until this year, no female soldiers had entered the Best Ranger Competition at Fort Benning. Soldiers participating must all be Army Rangers, and they compete in more than 30 events.

According to the competition, soldiers must move more than 60 miles during the three days, with little rest. Helicopter missions, physical fitness tests, land navigation, weapons qualification, obstacle course, and other tests are involved. While in previous years the Army would likely have noted the historic first in an announcement, that won't happen this time. Under the Trump administration, the department has prohibited anything that touts diversity, equity, and inclusion, per the AP. In the recent purge of the military's online websites and social media postings, mentions of historic firsts by women and minorities were largely eliminated. White, 25, is a Black infantry officer assigned to the maneuver captains career course. She graduated from the Military Academy at West Point in May 2021, then completed Ranger School, according to Christopher Surridge, an Army spokesman.

(More Army Rangers stories.)

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