After US Army soldiers finish their roughly year-long training to become Special Forces-qualified, they don the distinctive green beret for the first time.
Their counterparts in Russia do much the same, though their head gear is crimson. Russia's Spetsnaz unit modeled their competition for the crimson beret from the US, after a former commander read a book by a former US special forces soldier.
The resemblance between the two nations' special forces don't stop there. This US Special Forces soldier looks pretty similar ...
... To his Russian counterpart, right down to the helmet, tactical gear, and camouflage uniform pattern. The two nations do, however, use different weapons systems, with the US favoring the M4 rifle, and Russia going with its AK-style.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad“From the helmets to the kit, they look almost identical,” a US military official told the Wall Street Journal recently, of Russia's special forces.
Here are US Special Forces soldiers doing a room-clearing exercise.
And here are Russian special forces soldiers doing the same thing.
Here's US Special Forces securing the area after a helicopter insertion ...
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad... Which Russian special forces know how to do as well.
Both train for what's called "high-altitude, high-opening" parachute jumps ...
... Where soldiers jump from a plane from miles above the Earth so they can basically fly into and parachute to their objective without an enemy knowing.
The US gives some of its special forces soldiers advanced training as snipers.
Russia does the same, teaching its soldiers the art of stalking and shooting.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThey also learn how to rappel down a wall ...
... And jump through a window to surprise an adversary.
It's worth pointing out that US Special Forces trains with allied nations' own special ops, who wear similar uniforms and learn similar tactics.
But it seems that Russia has, in some ways, made its special forces indistinguishable from its American counterparts.