Resilience, Rucks, and Rappels
Bloomsburg
Posted
In four short years, Tanner Donahue went from having his military dream seemingly end before it even began to landing one of the most coveted and selective commissions in the Army.
The senior 麻豆社区鈥揃loomsburg digital forensics and cybersecurity major and ROTC cadet turned that closed door into a successful mission of transforming a medically disqualified recruit into a cyber-focused Army officer.
Donahue鈥檚 plan was simple. Enlist right after high school graduation and serve. Allergy-induced asthma ended that dream, leaving him certain the Army wouldn鈥檛 take him.
鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 medically accepting me,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚鈥檝e always had a drive to serve and do my part, then suddenly that door felt closed.鈥
It reopened in an unexpected place, in a campus weight room.
Through Bloomsburg鈥檚 Strength and Fitness Club, Donahue met an ROTC cadet, who told him about new medical waivers and invited him to check out the program. Donahue didn鈥檛 yet know the difference between enlisting and commissioning through ROTC. He just knew after that first meeting, he鈥檇 found a path to serve and a community that would shape him into the leader he wanted to become.
鈥淚 wanted to learn as much as I possibly could and be the best version of myself,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淭his was absolutely the way to go.鈥
The Cyber Mindset
ROTC might have transformed Donahue鈥檚 leadership. It was digital forensics and cybersecurity that drew him to Bloomsburg for the nationally recognized bachelor鈥檚 program that鈥檚 designated a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Education because of its specialized labs and professional grade tools for investigating cybercrime and securing networks.
In high school, Donahue loved taking computers apart, experimenting with code and digging into how systems worked. When a career search turned up 鈥渄igital forensic analyst,鈥 he saw a way to serve through law enforcement or a federal agency if the military remained off limits.
Weighing other college options like Penn State and Alvernia, he determined Bloomsburg鈥檚 program stood out for its focus on digital forensics and cyber defense rather than general computer science, and for a close-knit campus that immediately felt like home.
鈥淚 went on a tour, and it felt like where I was supposed to be,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淏loomsburg had everything I wanted in a college experience.鈥
Once on campus, Donahue realized he could take on more. Through ROTC he met upperclass cadets successfully double majoring, which pushed him to add criminal justice to his digital forensics and cybersecurity degree. In the classroom, courses like Security Fundamentals and Penetration Testing showed him how hackers think, how attacks unfold and how to harden systems against intrusions.
He still uses the tools and techniques from those classes to protect his own devices and to help friends and classmates avoid digital pitfalls.
鈥淚 thought my drive for cyber was already maxed out,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淭hen I took Penetration Testing, and somehow I want it even more now.鈥
Criminal justice courses, especially criminology and a seminar on gangs, add a human dimension to his technical skills. They help him imagine how people behave behind the keyboard, giving him ideas about where to look for digital evidence and how to read between the lines of a hard drive.
Tested in Training
Donahue officially joined Army ROTC late in his sophomore year. In less than three years, he rose to battalion executive officer for the Bison Battalion, which includes cadets at Bucknell, Bloomsburg, and other regional campuses. Along the way, he completed both Basic and Advanced Camp at Fort Knox, earned a highly competitive slot at Air Assault School and balanced that training with his demanding double major.
ROTC changed how he approached college 鈥 and adulthood.
鈥淟ike most college kids, when you get to campus you鈥檙e out partying and meeting people,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淩OTC taught me accountability and responsibility 鈥 owning my mistakes, learning from them, and not letting them define me.鈥 Field exercises, leadership labs and high-stress events like the Army 10 Miler, the Norwegian Foot March, and Ranger Challenge forced him to develop as a communicator who can keep teams focused when the pressure spikes.
As battalion executive officer, he leads through relationships. Donahue works across the battalion鈥檚 staff sections to coordinate training, logistics and administration for cadets on multiple campuses, relying on the trust they鈥檝e built to solve problems quickly.
10 Hardest Days
Because he joined ROTC late, Donahue packed years of training into a tight timeframe. He went through Fort Knox twice. First for Basic Camp, a month-long immersion in soldier skills and Army values. Later for Advanced Camp, which is the capstone evaluation that feeds into the national Order of Merit List for branch selection.
When his platoon lost several cadets at Advanced Camp, more leadership opportunities opened; Donahue stepped into four different roles, including platoon leader and platoon sergeant, learning to adapt and perform under constant scrutiny.
Air Assault School 鈥 often called 鈥渢he 10 hardest days in the Army鈥 鈥 pushed him even further. Donahue spent two weeks mastering helicopter operations, sling load rigging and high-tower rappelling. The second phase, focused on sling loads, drove home just how critical precision is when lives and aircraft are on the line. The final test, rappelling from a helicopter at roughly 100 feet, brought everything together.
鈥淥nce they tell you you鈥檙e good to go, you leave all that stress on the helicopter,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淵ou jump, let the rope take control, and you can see the entire course you鈥檝e just spent three phases working through.鈥
Those experiences changed how he looks at time, discipline and balance. At Air Assault he once had to learn roughly 25 pages of material in three nights. Now, a week for a class assignment feels generous. That perspective makes it possible to juggle a full slate as battalion executive officer, president of the Student Veterans Association, campus employment, two majors, and a personal life.
鈥淎fter going, I realized every minute is important,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淚f you plan it out and use what you鈥檝e learned, you can do far more than you think.鈥
A New Front Line
As graduation approaches, Donahue鈥檚 sights are set on the Army鈥檚 digital battlefield. His top branch choice is Cyber, one of the most competitive and selective branches for new officers, where a small number of lieutenants are chosen to conduct offensive and defensive operations in cyberspace, protect critical networks, and shape the information environment for commanders.
Cyber is where his academic and ROTC experiences intersect most directly. The same skills he uses in Bloomsburg鈥檚 cyber labs 鈥 analyzing digital evidence, probing networks for vulnerabilities, designing and securing systems 鈥 map onto the missions of Army cyber units tasked with defending U.S. networks and disrupting adversaries in the digital domain.
鈥淲ith digital forensics and cybersecurity as one of my majors, I love the game,鈥 Donahue said. 鈥淭aking that into the military, conducting cyber warfare possibly against a foreign adversary, feels like the best way with my skill set to give back to a nation that鈥檚 given me so much.鈥
The branching process includes an asynchronous interview and a specialized Cyber interview, and Donahue knows slots are limited. But he also knows he鈥檚 done everything he can with strong Advanced Camp scores, a physically demanding resume capped by Air Assault, deep involvement on campus and a degree from a nationally recognized cyber program.
Looking back through his time navigating Bloomsburg鈥檚 computer labs and ROTC exercises to the Fort Knox training ranges and the rappel towers of Air Assault, Donahue is proud of how far he鈥檚 come.
鈥淚鈥檓 definitely not the same person I was when I first came here 鈥 in the best way possible,鈥 says Donahue, adding his transformation will continue on a new front line 鈥 inside some of the most critical networks in the world.