Editor’s Note: Welcome back to our weekly column with former Green Beret Curtis Fox. This week, Fox argues that language proficiency should be required for promotion and calls for reforms to keep top Non-Commissioned Officers (NCOs) on teams longer while reserving Q-Course instructor roles for only the most qualified.

 

Language Proficiency

Many of the men of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Operations Group (OG) teams and Special Operations Branch were selected based on their existing language proficiency. In fact, in the early Special Forces team rooms in Bad Tolz, Germany, it was rare to hear men having casual conversation in English. There is no more important skill for the men of the Special Forces Regiment to master. People will not trust you in their communities if you can only communicate with them through a translator. Green Berets not only have to win goodwill, but also blend in and participate in the local customs and norms.

Every Green Beret will undergo six months of language training after finishing the Q-Course (Special Forces Qualification Course). This is an area where the American education system does not perform well. With the notable exceptions of immigrants and Hispanics, most Americans don’t speak anything other than English. The instructors at the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School (JFKSWCS) do a fantastic job helping young Green Berets get up to a basic level of proficiency, and it is a mission-critical skill that allows Special Forces to conduct its unique mission.

Despite all Group Commanding Officers (COs) maintaining standing orders that all Special Forces Operational Detachment Alphas (SFOD-As) will undergo one month of uninterrupted language training each year, administrative requirements frequently necessitate Team Sergeants (18Zs) and officers (18As) to fractionally participate in order to ensure the SFOD-A can hit training hard when their language re-qualifications are over.

Unfortunately, universal foreign language proficiency is only a top priority on paper. The only Special Forces Group that can really operate in their assigned language is 7th Group. This is due to the existing fluency of 7th Group’s many Hispanic Green Berets and the relative ease of learning Spanish in comparison to other languages like Korean or Mandarin.

There are also many young Green Berets who simply don’t take it as seriously as they should. 2/2 language proficiency must be a requirement for promotion to Sergeant First Class (E-7). For the record, this author initially struggled with his assigned language of Russian—so much so that he was reassigned to a separate class for more focused instruction. After spending 2-3 hours a night studying Russian during my first two years in Group, I was rated at 2+/2 proficiency.