Four years in basic field, two years in evacuation procedures, another two years for language courses, and five to seven years in actual simulated combat. You're gonna learn how to stitch your buddy's arm back on for real. No shooting galleries, because those aren't actually combat.
Many skilled Operatives who mastered those specific classes, UO does language, Reddit Cam does evacuation procedures, the commander himself does basic field, and 185, being the maniac he is, does the combat.
Guaranteed. Everyone who does go into training will always find a spot that they Excel in. If they don't favor combat, they're with the Special Force Recovery Unit and they skip the actual combat training, if they want to do evacuations, there's extra courses for that. Police and peacekeeping work sees less training than basic Operatives.
We've got files spanning all the way from the start of operation, dated specifically 1963, July 9th, 17:39. All of our files consist of every single Operative's progress on training, from training to retirement. How about that?
As of right now, we've got all Operatives in squads, with squad leaders who know what they are doing. Some are protecting civilian cities, some are liberating civilian cities, some are evacuating civilians and other soldiers, and some are busy going out and infiltrating enemy bases.
Josh: "The length of training hardly matters, its the kind of training and quality of training that matters. You could have done training for 10 years, but if that training is shit, you've wasted your go***mn time."
CVPA sweeps: Must be done with high coordination, every single corner could have a hostile or civilian or even a trap, communication is absolute key to making sure nothing goes wrong, even the smallest mistake could jeopardize everything.
Josh's Sweeps: