Why the Army Brought Back WWII 'Pinks and Greens': The Full Story Behind the AGSU
TL;DR: The Army Greens Service Uniform (AGSU) revives the iconic WWII "Pinks and Greens" look — including the AGSU leather jacket — to restore Army identity, heritage, and dress pride after decades of Blue dominance.
Introduction: A Uniform That Tells a Story
When the United States Army announced it was bringing back a uniform last worn by the soldiers who stormed Normandy and crossed the Rhine, the reaction was immediate. Veterans who remembered the old "Pinks and Greens" felt a rush of recognition. Younger soldiers who had never seen anything but the Army Blue Service Uniform (ASU) found themselves suddenly curious about the history they were about to wear.
The Army Greens Service Uniform — the AGSU — is not simply a new dress uniform. It is a deliberate act of institutional memory, a choice by Army leadership to reach back eighty years and reclaim an aesthetic that once made the American soldier one of the most visually distinguished military figures in the world. And sitting at the heart of that revival, as both a practical garment and a powerful symbol, is the AGSU leather jacket.
This is the complete story of why the Army brought back the Pinks and Greens, what went into that decision, what the AGSU actually looks like and requires, and why the AGSU leather jacket has become one of the most talked-about pieces of military outerwear in a generation.
What Were the Original "Pinks and Greens"?
To understand why the Army brought them back, you have to understand what made the original uniform so distinctive — and why it disappeared in the first place.
The Distinctive Color Palette That Defined an Era
The "Pinks and Greens" nickname came from the two dominant colors of the WWII-era Army service uniform: an olive drab green coat and trousers that appeared, under certain lighting and fabric conditions, to have a distinct pinkish-tan hue. The informal name stuck among soldiers and became the affectionate shorthand for the most iconic American military dress uniform of the twentieth century.
The technical colors were Army Green (shade 44) for the service coat and either matching or contrasting "pink" trousers (officially designated "elastique pink" for officers, a lighter warm-toned beige-tan that visually popped against the darker coat). This two-tone effect was actually an intended feature, not a quirk — it gave the officer's version of the uniform a tailored, almost civilian-professional elegance that stood apart from the purely utilitarian look of most wartime military dress.
Officers wore the green coat with pink trousers. Enlisted soldiers wore matching olive drab. The result was a uniform system that communicated both military bearing and something close to sartorial confidence.
Who Wore It and When
The Pinks and Greens was the standard service uniform for the U.S. Army from roughly 1941 through the early 1950s. It was worn by every major figure of the American WWII effort — Eisenhower, Patton, Bradley, MacArthur — in nearly every photograph taken during the European and Pacific campaigns. It appeared at the liberation of Paris, at the Japanese surrender ceremony on the USS Missouri, in the press conferences of generals who shaped the course of history.
For the American public, the image of the soldier in green and pink was the image of American military victory. It carried enormous symbolic weight that went far beyond fabric and buttons.
Why It Disappeared
The Pinks and Greens was phased out in the 1950s when the Army transitioned to the Army Green uniform (AG-44), a simpler, all-green service coat that remained in use through 2015. When Army leadership decided in 2010 to move toward the Army Service Uniform in blue — modeled on the historic Army Blue dress uniform with branch-specific piping — the all-green era officially ended.
The Army Blue transition created something of an identity crisis, however. The Blue uniform was sharply elegant for formal occasions but struck many soldiers as feeling removed from the fighting branch's heritage. It looked more like a formal dress uniform — something to wear at balls and parades — than the everyday service garment worn by soldiers who had changed world history.
The desire to return to something more grounded in the Army's warfighting culture began building almost immediately.
The Decision to Revive: How the AGSU Was Born
Sergeant Major of the Army Daniel Dailey's Vision
The push to revive the Pinks and Greens is most directly attributed to Sergeant Major of the Army Daniel Dailey, who championed the return of the Army Greens Service Uniform beginning around 2014–2015 during his tenure as the senior enlisted advisor to the Chief of Staff of the Army.
Dailey's argument was direct: the Army had lost a piece of its visual identity when it abandoned the green uniform. Soldiers didn't look like soldiers. They looked like they were dressed for a formal Navy occasion. The Army has a history, a tradition, and an aesthetic that stretches back through two World Wars, and the uniform should reflect that history rather than erase it.
His advocacy brought the concept into serious institutional discussion. By 2015, the Army was formally studying the feasibility and cost of transitioning back to a green-based service uniform.
The Army Heritage and Education Center's Role
The Army Heritage and Education Center (AHEC) at Carlisle Barracks in Pennsylvania played a significant role in the design and historical accuracy effort. Researchers at AHEC worked to ensure the revived uniform would accurately reflect the colors, construction details, and silhouette of the original WWII-era garment while accommodating modern manufacturing standards and contemporary military uniform policy requirements.
This wasn't just a cosmetic exercise. The AHEC effort produced detailed documentation on the exact shade of green, the cut of the service coat, the proportions of the lapel, and the positioning of insignia that would make the AGSU both historically faithful and regulation-compliant.
Chief of Staff General Mark Milley's Approval
General Mark Milley, serving as Army Chief of Staff from 2015 to 2019, gave the AGSU concept his formal backing. Under Milley's leadership, the Army committed to a phased fielding plan that would begin with newly commissioned officers and graduating NCOs, with full fielding extending through the mid-2020s.
The symbolism was intentional. By having the AGSU first worn by officers receiving their commission and NCOs graduating from their leadership courses, the Army connected the return of the historic uniform to the moments of greatest institutional significance — the moments when soldiers formally enter the officer and noncommissioned officer corps.
Timeline of the AGSU Rollout
The AGSU's path from concept to fielding covered approximately a decade:
2014–2015: SMA Dailey begins formal advocacy for green uniform revival
2015–2017: Army conducts feasibility studies, design development, and historical research
2018: Prototype AGSU uniforms unveiled and worn at key Army events
2019: AR 670-1 updated to include AGSU specifications and fielding guidance
2020: Official AGSU phased fielding begins; newly commissioned officers receive AGSU at commissioning
2021–2022: Expanded fielding to additional soldier populations
2025: Continued transition; AGSU now fully authorized and increasingly worn across Army formations
What the AGSU Actually Looks Like: A Complete Breakdown
The Service Coat
The AGSU service coat is a dark Army Green (shade 469) four-button coat with a notched lapel and a tailored military silhouette. It draws directly from the WWII-era service coat in its cut and color while incorporating modern uniform construction standards.
Key visual elements of the AGSU service coat:
Four-button front closure — matching the WWII original's button configuration
Notched lapel — more civilian-adjacent than the ASU's mandarin collar, reinforcing the professional service look
Branch insignia on the lapel
U.S. Army" insignia and grade insignia in standard placement
Shoulder loops for rank display
Two lower patch pockets on the coat front
Grosgrain backing on decorations and badges
The "Pinks" Trousers
The AGSU trouser returns the signature "pink" element to the Army's service dress. The official color is Army Green shade 428, a warm beige-tan that contrasts with the darker shade 469 coat in exactly the way the original WWII officer uniform did.
This two-tone combination — dark green coat, warm tan-pink trouser — is the definitive visual signature of the AGSU and the primary reason the "Pinks and Greens" nickname has transferred from the WWII original to the modern revival.
The AGSU Service Cap
The AGSU is worn with the Army Green service cap, which matches the shade 469 coat color. The cap features a gold-and-black visor for officers and a plain black visor for warrant officers and enlisted soldiers. The Army emblem is centered on the front of the cap.
The Army Green Dress Shirt
The AGSU dress shirt is an Army Green shade 428 shirt worn tucked under the service coat. It features:
Long sleeves with barrel cuffs
Collar worn open under the coat lapel or with a black four-in-hand necktie or black bow tie
Standard Army dress shirt construction
Available in both male and female cuts
The AGSU Leather Jacket: The Statement Outerwear Piece
The AGSU leather jacket — officially designated the Army Green Service Uniform leather jacket — is the most visually striking and historically resonant outerwear option authorized for wear with the AGSU. It directly references the iconic WWII officer's "Ike jacket" and the aviator's A-2 leather flight jacket that became the signature outerwear of the American soldier in the 1940s.
The AGSU leather jacket represents a deliberate decision to restore a piece of military outerwear that had been absent from authorized Army uniform wear for decades. Its authorization alongside the AGSU is a statement about the Army's commitment to reclaiming its WWII-era visual identity in full.
The AGSU Leather Jacket: Complete Specifications and History
Historical Origins: The A-2 and Ike Jacket Heritage
The AGSU leather jacket draws from two distinct WWII-era leather outerwear traditions.
The first is the A-2 flight jacket — the brown horsehide or goatskin leather bomber jacket issued to Army Air Forces pilots beginning in 1931 and worn throughout WWII. The A-2 became synonymous with American airpower and American military style, arguably the most imitated piece of military outerwear in the history of fashion. Its silhouette — fitted body, knit cuffs and waistband, ribbed collar, slash pockets — became a universal signifier of aviator heritage that persists in civilian fashion to this day.
The second reference is the "Ike jacket," officially the M-1944 field jacket, named for General Dwight D. Eisenhower who was photographed wearing the garment extensively during the European campaign. The Ike jacket was a shortened, fitted waist-length field jacket designed to be worn tucked over the uniform trousers, replacing the bulkier M-1941 field jacket. Eisenhower popularized the style by wearing it constantly, and it became one of the defining visual elements of the American military presence in Europe.
The AGSU leather jacket synthesizes these two heritage references into an authorized military outerwear garment that is simultaneously historically grounded and distinctly modern.
Official AGSU Leather Jacket Specifications
The AGSU leather jacket authorized under AR 670-1 meets the following specifications:
Color: Dark brown (consistent with the original WWII aviator leather jacket heritage) Material: Genuine leather (cowhide or approved equivalent) or high-quality approved synthetic leather for authorized variations Cut: Waist-length, fitted silhouette consistent with the WWII A-2/Ike jacket proportions Closure: Zipper front with snap-close wind flap Cuffs: Knit or ribbed cuffs at wrists Waistband: Knit or ribbed waistband at hem Collar: Shirt-style collar with snap closure or convertible collar design Pockets: Two front slash or zippered pockets Lining: Fully lined interior Insignia: Nameplate and rank insignia displayed per AR 670-1 guidance
Wearing occasions: The AGSU leather jacket is authorized for wear in garrison, in the field, during official functions where outerwear is appropriate, and during inclement weather situations when the service coat alone is insufficient. It is not worn in lieu of the service coat for formal indoor ceremonies.
Care requirements: Leather upper requires conditioning with approved leather care products quarterly. Interior lining machine washable per manufacturer guidance. Store on padded hanger to maintain shoulder shape. Avoid prolonged exposure to direct sunlight, which fades the leather color and degrades material integrity.
Why the AGSU Leather Jacket Matters Beyond Uniform Regulation
The AGSU leather jacket is not just a cold-weather layer. In the context of the AGSU revival, it carries specific symbolic weight.
The decision to authorize a leather jacket as part of the AGSU system was a deliberate choice to restore a visual element that had been completely absent from Army dress wear for decades. The Army Blue Service Uniform has no leather jacket equivalent. The Army Green uniform that preceded the Blue had no leather jacket equivalent. By authorizing the AGSU leather jacket, the Army reconnected its dress uniform tradition to the WWII-era visual vocabulary that remains the most culturally recognized image of American military identity.
For veterans who wore the original Pinks and Greens, the leather jacket is one of the most emotionally significant elements of the revival. For younger soldiers encountering it for the first time, it provides a tactile connection to a generation of soldiers whose accomplishments defined the American military's global standing.
The AGSU vs. Army Service Uniform (ASU Blue): What Changed
Understanding the AGSU requires understanding what it replaces and why that replacement was necessary.
Visual and Cultural Differences
Feature AGSU (Pinks and Greens) ASU (Army Blue) Primary color Army Green (shade 469) Army Blue Trouser color Army Green (shade 428 / "pink") Army Blue with branch piping Heritage reference WWII service uniform (1941–1954) Historic Army Blue dress uniform Coat cut Notched lapel, four-button Standing collar, formal cut Leather jacket Authorized (AGSU leather jacket) Not authorized Perceived formality Service/professional Formal/ceremonial Everyday wearability High — designed for daily service Lower — perceived as dress occasion only
What Soldiers Said About the Transition
The response to the AGSU among the soldier population has been notably positive, particularly in contrast to the mixed reception the ASU Blue received when it was introduced. Common themes in soldier feedback include:
Heritage connection: Soldiers report that wearing the AGSU produces a distinct feeling of connection to Army history that the Blue uniform did not create. The physical act of putting on a uniform that looks like the one worn by the Greatest Generation carries emotional weight that purely contemporary designs cannot replicate.
Professional identity: Many soldiers describe the AGSU as better communicating their identity as members of a professional warfighting institution — distinct from the Navy and Air Force, grounded in Army-specific tradition.
Pride in appearance: The AGSU's two-tone color palette and tailored cut produce an appearance that soldiers consistently describe as more distinctive and pride-inducing than the Blue's more generic formal dress aesthetic.
The leather jacket effect: The AGSU leather jacket specifically has received outsized positive attention. Soldiers who have received and worn the leather jacket frequently describe it as the single piece of the AGSU system that most powerfully communicates connection to WWII heritage.
AR 670-1 Guidance: What You Need to Know About Wearing the AGSU
Who Wears the AGSU and When
The AGSU is authorized for wear by all soldiers — officer, warrant officer, and enlisted — as a service uniform. It is appropriate for:
Business and professional settings where a service uniform is required
Official functions and meetings
Travel in uniform
Ceremonies and official events where Class A equivalent dress is specified
Garrison daily wear as directed by the commander
The AGSU is not intended to replace the ASU Blue for formal evening or black-tie equivalent military occasions, though the Army's uniform transition plan continues to evolve.
AGSU Leather Jacket Wearing Rules
Per AR 670-1, the AGSU leather jacket is worn:
Over the AGSU service coat when outerwear is required
With collar up or down as weather conditions dictate
Zipped or unzipped depending on temperature
With rank and nameplate displayed per current AR 670-1 insignia guidance
Not as a standalone service garment — the service coat is still required underneath for official functions
Grooming and Appearance Standards With AGSU
The AGSU does not modify Army grooming standards. All AR 670-1 requirements for hair, facial hair, jewelry, and personal appearance remain in effect when wearing the AGSU. The tailored cut of the AGSU service coat does place the following standard in sharper relief: the coat must fit properly. Army uniform fitting standards require the coat to be neither too tight across the chest and shoulders nor excessively loose. An improperly fitted AGSU service coat is both a regulation violation and a visual disservice to a uniform whose design depends on a tailored silhouette.
Common AGSU Wearing Mistakes to Avoid
Several AGSU wearing errors appear consistently at unit inspections and during formal wear:
Wrong trouser shade: Using ASU Blue trousers or civilian trousers with the AGSU service coat is a fundamental error. The AGSU trouser (shade 428) is a specific uniform component — it cannot be substituted.
Incorrect insignia placement: The AGSU uses different insignia mounting systems in some cases than the ASU. Confirm placement against current AR 670-1 AGSU-specific guidance rather than assuming ASU rules transfer directly.
Wearing the leather jacket as primary service garment: The AGSU leather jacket is outerwear, not a replacement for the service coat in formal or official settings. The service coat is still required underneath.
Neglecting the leather jacket's care: The AGSU leather jacket's appearance degrades faster than fabric uniform components if not regularly conditioned and properly stored. A cracked, faded, or scuffed leather jacket at a formal event is a uniform violation and a disservice to the uniform's heritage.
The AGSU Leather Jacket in Context: Caring for and Maintaining Your Investment
Why the AGSU Leather Jacket Deserves Special Attention
Leather is a living material in a way that fabric uniform components are not. It responds to moisture, temperature, use, and neglect in ways that are immediately visible and difficult to reverse once damage has set in. An AGSU leather jacket that receives regular care will maintain its appearance and structural integrity for a decade or more of active service. One that is neglected can begin showing visible wear — cracking at flex points, fading at sun-exposed areas, loss of finish on high-contact zones — within a single season of use.
This is not a theoretical concern. The AGSU leather jacket is a significant investment for any soldier, and its condition directly reflects on uniform standards during inspections and formal events.
AGSU Leather Jacket Care: Complete Protocol
Conditioning (quarterly minimum, monthly for heavy use): Apply a leather conditioner specifically formulated for smooth finished leather. Products containing lanolin or neatsfoot oil are appropriate for most AGSU leather jacket constructions. Apply a thin, even coat with a clean soft cloth in circular motions. Allow to absorb for 30 minutes, then buff with a separate clean cloth to remove excess. Do not over-condition — excess conditioner softens the leather structure over time.
Cleaning: Spot-clean with a slightly damp cloth for surface marks. For more significant cleaning, use a leather-specific cleaner rather than soap, which strips the leather's natural oils. Never submerge an AGSU leather jacket in water or machine wash the leather upper.
Protection: Apply a water-repellent leather protector spray before first wear and seasonally thereafter. This creates a protective layer against moisture, salt, and environmental exposure without affecting the leather's breathability or finish.
Storage: Store the AGSU leather jacket on a padded or wide-shoulder hanger that maintains the garment's shoulder shape. Avoid wire hangers, which create shoulder deformation over time. Store in a cool, ventilated environment away from direct sunlight and heat sources. Use a breathable cotton garment bag for long-term storage — never a sealed plastic bag, which traps moisture and accelerates material degradation.
Addressing scuffs and scratches: Minor surface scuffs can often be addressed with a leather conditioner worked gently into the affected area and buffed smooth. Deeper scratches may require a leather repair product matched to the jacket's color. Significant damage should be evaluated by a professional leather repair service rather than attempted with consumer products.
The Knit Components: Cuffs, Waistband, and Collar
The AGSU leather jacket's knit cuffs, waistband, and collar band (where applicable) are the components most likely to show wear first, as they are subject to repeated stretching and compression during wear. Inspect these components regularly for:
Pilling or surface abrasion
Loss of elasticity
Discoloration or staining
Separation from the leather body at the attachment seam
The knit components cannot be reconditioned like the leather — replace the garment when the knit shows significant deterioration, as this affects both appearance and functionality.
The AGSU Leather Jacket and Military Fashion Heritage: A Broader Perspective
The A-2's Influence on American Fashion
It is impossible to discuss the AGSU leather jacket without acknowledging the A-2 flight jacket's outsized influence on American fashion history. The A-2 — issued to Army Air Forces aviators from 1931 — was never intended to become a cultural icon. It was a functional garment designed to keep pilots warm at altitude while allowing freedom of movement.
What happened instead was that the A-2 became one of the most influential silhouettes in twentieth century fashion. Its combination of fitted body, ribbed trim, and front zipper has been reproduced, reimagined, and reinterpreted by virtually every major fashion house and every casualwear brand of the last eighty years. The leather bomber jacket as a cultural object — in everything from Steve McQueen films to contemporary streetwear — traces its lineage directly back to the military specification that created the A-2.
The AGSU leather jacket steps into this heritage consciously. When Army leadership authorized a leather jacket as AGSU outerwear, they were not just solving a cold-weather problem. They were reattaching the modern Army to one of the most powerful visual traditions in American military and cultural history.
Why the Timing of the Revival Matters
The AGSU revival did not happen in a vacuum. It coincided with a broader cultural moment in which American military heritage — particularly WWII-era heritage — was experiencing renewed popular interest. The Greatest Generation designation, the centenaries of WWI and WWII anniversaries, the HBO and streaming-era prestige dramatizations of WWII military service (Band of Brothers, The Pacific, Masters of the Air), and the growing body of scholarship on the American military's role in the mid-twentieth century all contributed to a cultural context in which the visual language of WWII-era American military identity carried significant resonance.
The Army's decision to bring back the Pinks and Greens was strategically timed to tap into this cultural moment while also addressing a genuine institutional need for a more heritage-grounded uniform identity.
Frequently Asked Questions About the AGSU and AGSU Leather Jacket
What does AGSU stand for?
AGSU stands for Army Greens Service Uniform. It is the official designation for the revived "Pinks and Greens" service uniform introduced in the 2020s as a replacement for the Army Service Uniform (ASU) in Army Blue.
Why is it called "Pinks and Greens" if the trousers are tan?
The "pink" in Pinks and Greens refers to the warm pinkish-tan tone of the AGSU trouser (officially Army Green shade 428). Under certain lighting conditions, particularly the warm incandescent lighting common indoors in the WWII era, the fabric's beige-tan color appeared distinctly pink against the darker green coat. The nickname emerged organically from soldiers who noticed this visual effect and has persisted for 80-plus years.
Is the AGSU mandatory or optional?
The AGSU is the Army's primary service uniform and replaces the ASU Blue as the standard service dress. The Army's phased transition plan requires all soldiers to possess the AGSU by specific target dates outlined in Army uniform policy. Commanders retain discretion to authorize the ASU Blue during the transition period, but the AGSU is the long-term institutional standard.
Can I wear an AGSU leather jacket that is not Army-issued?
AR 670-1 specifies the construction and appearance standards for the AGSU leather jacket. Commercially procured leather jackets may be worn if they meet all specifications outlined in the regulation, including color, cut, closure type, and insignia placement. Soldiers are responsible for ensuring any commercially procured jacket meets current AR 670-1 standards before purchasing.
What is the difference between the AGSU leather jacket and a standard A-2 flight jacket?
The A-2 flight jacket is an aviator-specific garment with its own distinct specification (including the A-2's specific collar design, hardware, and color requirements) that carries its own uniform authorization for aviation branch personnel. The AGSU leather jacket is a separate garment authorized for general Army wear with the AGSU — it shares heritage references with the A-2 but is a distinct uniform component with its own specification.
How much does an AGSU leather jacket cost?
AGSU leather jackets from approved manufacturers and military clothing sales stores typically range from $250 to $450 for genuine leather versions. Premium handcrafted leather versions can exceed $600. Approved synthetic leather alternatives may be available at lower price points. Soldiers purchasing commercially should verify compliance with AR 670-1 before spending significant amounts.
When did soldiers first start receiving the AGSU?
Phased AGSU fielding began in 2020. The first soldiers to receive AGSU were newly commissioned officers at their commissioning ceremonies and NCOs graduating from key leadership courses. Broader fielding to the general soldier population followed in subsequent years, with the transition continuing through the mid-2020s.
Will the AGSU eventually replace the ASU Blue entirely?
The Army's stated intent is for the AGSU to serve as the primary service uniform, with the ASU Blue transitioning to a more formal/ceremonial role similar to the Army's Dress Mess uniform. The exact timeline and final uniform policy are subject to Army leadership decisions and may evolve. As of 2025, both uniforms remain in authorized use, with the AGSU increasingly becoming the standard for daily service wear.
Conclusion: Why the Story of the AGSU Matters Beyond Uniform Policy
The return of the Pinks and Greens is, on the surface, a story about uniform policy. On a deeper level, it is a story about institutional identity, historical memory, and the way organizations use visual symbols to communicate who they are and what they value.
The Army made a deliberate choice to look backward in order to move forward — to reconnect with the visual language of its greatest historical achievement as a means of building pride, cohesion, and professional identity in the present. The AGSU leather jacket is the most visible expression of that choice. It is a piece of functional outerwear, a regulation uniform component, and a direct material link to the soldiers who wore leather jackets over the English Channel, across North Africa, and through the liberation of Western Europe.
For soldiers who wear it, that is not a minor point. The AGSU leather jacket is not just protection against the weather. It is a piece of history worn on the body — a daily reminder of what the Army has been and what it aspires to remain.
This article reflects AGSU specifications and AR 670-1 guidance as of 2025. Uniform regulations are subject to revision. Always verify current standards with your unit's uniform officer or the latest published version of AR 670-1.













