A woman is on track to becoming the U.S. Army’s first female Green Beret — after she successfully completed the initial Special Forces Assessment and Selection process, according to a new report.

While several women have attempted the 24-day program — part of the Special Forces Qualification Course — this soldier was the first to make it onto the next round, a spokesman for the Army Special Operations Command told the Army Times.

”We’re proud of all the candidates who attended and were selected to continue into the qualification course in hopes of earning their Green Beret,” Lt. Col. Loren Bymer told the outlet.

The command declined to provide the soldier’s rank or current military specialty — “because Special Forces soldiers perform discrete missions upon graduation,” Bymer said.

Generally, after completing the initial process, Special Forces candidates take a break from training before moving onto the next step of the qualification course.

The entire course is made up of four phases and typically lasts at least a year — but depending on a soldier’s specialty and assigned foreign language, it could take nearly two years.

The Green Berets are one of the last Army communities to not have women on board, according to the report.