The US Army consists of Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and has existed for many years. If someone participates in military life, the first step is basic training. As the name suggests, it is here that recruits learn the first skill as a warrior and how to fight it. In the past men and women did not train together during basic training. Some Americans believe that men and women should be trained together, others think that they should be separated.
Male and female soldiers should not carry out basic fighting training together. Training them can lead to men's physical peaks, women's injuries, and bad social interactions. All of these problems will divert the learning skills of soldiers and learn these skills only with basic training.
Basic battle training changes civilians to soldiers by teaching basic soldier skills. These skills teach you how to survive, not teaching how to fight soldiers. All soldiers need these skills, as any soldier may join the battle as indicated by recent Iraq confrontation. Men and women should not receive basic training together as men and women distract from the basic skills they need to survive in combat situations. In the summer of 2002, I received basic military training in the army of Fort Jackson. So they trained male and female recruits. I have learned the direct information about what happened during the basic training process. In basic training, ordinary citizens are taught basic soldier skills including physical and training skills. In the Army, they teach you some acclaimed skills through the acronym LDRSHIP. It represents loyalty, responsibility, respect, selfless service, honor, honesty, and personal courage
The common argument about common gender-specific training is that "combatants fighting together should be trained together." Training is male and female integration. When soldiers complete all the training they need to work, they eventually will enter their new troops, including men and women. If their troops are activated, then men will work side by side with women and, if necessary, side by side fight for their lives. When asked why men and women soldiers like to train together, they say they like to train together so that they can become more social. They want to train for social reasons