At just 19, Army Private First Class Mace Veit has achieved what many seasoned warfighters spend entire careers chasing down.
In less than six months, the Nevada National Guard cavalry scout powered through four of the toughest training pipelines in the Army: Ranger School, Airborne, Air Assault, and Pathfinder.
It’s a feat that speaks to raw determination, unrelenting work ethic, and a mindset steeped in the kind of grit America used to celebrate.
Most soldiers spend years clawing their way to even one of those badges, let alone all four.
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Veit didn’t just finish them; he knocked out Ranger School, the Army’s most brutal leadership crucible, on his first attempt. That accomplishment alone places him among the top 20 percent of trainees who make it through on a single go.
After graduating high school barely a year ago, Veit enlisted in the Nevada National Guard and shipped off to basic and advanced individual training as a cavalry scout.
He left AIT as an honor graduate and immediately launched into a relentless series of schools that would test his endurance and mental strength.
What makes his story remarkable isn’t just the speed, it’s the consistency in performance and composure at an age when most young Americans can barely handle a part-time job.
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As Veit pushed from one course to the next, he said he often drew stares from fellow soldiers wondering how he managed to “stack” such a string of prestigious schools.
“It’s pretty crazy,” he admitted, laughing at the unusual path. “A lot of people are like, ‘How’d you get all these schools? I’ve been trying ten years to get just one.’”

The key factor behind his rapid ascent was the Ranger Team Leader Initiative, a new training initiative run out of Fort Benning’s National Guard programs.
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The RTLI identifies top-performing junior soldiers early in their careers and preps them for the Army’s most elite schools right out of basic.
It’s part of a growing strategy inside the War Department to identify and develop exceptional talent sooner, before they get lost in bureaucracy.
Staff Sergeant Garrett Streeks, who leads the RTLI, described it as a “pre-pre-Ranger” course that helps young recruits transition smoothly from basic into Ranger standards.
The RTLI serves as a 30-day powerhouse program combining physical punishment, tactical fundamentals, and leadership development. It’s not about breaking soldiers down, it’s about teaching them to thrive under extreme pressure.
Streeks called the program “demanding but focused,” featuring weekly Ranger fitness tests, navigation drills, and daily ruck marches meant to push soldiers right to the edge.
But he emphasized that the instructors aren’t there to weed people out. Instead, they guide recruits to success. “They’ve just finished OSUT,” he said. “We don’t need to destroy them — we need to shape them.”
For Veit, that approach made all the difference. “I was really scared at first,” he said.

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“I thought it was just survival of the fittest. Then I realized they were actually trying to help us.” That mindset carried him all the way through to graduation.
Once the RTLI participants graduate, they move to the formal 15-day pre-Ranger course before heading into the main Ranger program.
There, they’re tested not only by the intensity of the training but by the experience gap between them and senior service members.
Most candidates are lieutenants, captains, and sergeants, soldiers with years in the field.
Streeks said the young RTLI grads are coached hard to compete confidently in that environment.
When Veit finished Ranger School, the RTLI team kept stacking his plate, Airborne, Air Assault, and finally Pathfinder. He took them all in stride.
“Most soldiers are ready to go home after Ranger,” Streeks said. “He just wanted to keep going.” That relentless attitude impressed everyone around him.
Veit’s final stop, Pathfinder School, capped the training marathon. It’s a detailed, mentally demanding course that teaches soldiers to coordinate helicopter landings and aerial operations.
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Earning that badge at 19 — wearing it alongside an Airborne badge, Air Assault wings, and the Ranger tab, is almost unheard of.
Streeks described him as “the quiet type — humble, hungry, always doing the right thing.” That steady humility, paired with perseverance, is a reminder of the kind of warriors this country still produces when given the chance.
It’s a stark contrast to a culture focused on instant gratification and excuses.

Veit is already being noticed as part of a new wave of young, high-performing Guard soldiers who embody toughness, discipline, and a sense of mission.
For a War Department working to rebuild readiness after years of politicized distractions, this kind of success story shines a light on what actually works.
Men like Veit carry the torch of American military excellence forward, not through political speeches or social engineering, but through sweat, courage, and quiet competence.
At 19, he’s done more for his country than most people do in a lifetime, and he did it with an attitude that commands respect across the ranks.
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