The Army's current camouflage is a universal pattern that has sage green, desert tan, and medium gray in it. It also has a "digital" pattern, which means that instead of big blobs all over the uniform, it's a series of small squares.
The Marine Corps currently uses two patterns of camouflage, woodland and desert. The woodland pattern has light brown, dark green, and black, all in a digital pattern like the Army. The desert pattern has desert tan, coyote brown, and dark brown, also in digital pattern. While in garrison, Marines wear the desert camo during the hotter months of the year with sleeves rolled up, and the woodland camo during the cooler months with sleeves down. Obviously, while deployed, they wear whatever pattern is best suited for the landscape.
Army Combat Uniform. The actual camouflage pattern which appears on the ACU is known as the Universal Camouflage Pattern or ACU Digital Camouflage.
DCPU (Disruptive Camouflage Pattern Unit)
An Army installation is called a post. Base is used by the Air Force and Marine Corps.
The difference is the place that they operate. An army is usually during land and terrain missions while a marine is usually sea missions.
All depends on whether the pattern matches up to the environment. The fractal pattern camouflage is more difficult for the human eye to recognised, but, if the digital pattern sticks out from the terrain, it still sticks out, digital or not. This has been a major problem with the Universal Camouflage Pattern used in the Army Combat Uniform... it's proven to be too light for woodland environments, and too dark for desert environments.
the marines are the best snipers hand down
Most military vehicles have Army Green or Olive Green as their primary color; there are some that have a gray and white pattern that is considered a digital camouflage design. Standard green camouflage is made up of three to six colors of green and light brown.
The U.S. Army started issuing the Multicam Army Combat Uniform (ACU) to soldiers deploying to Afghanistan in July 2010. The Multicam pattern was chosen as it provides better camouflage effectiveness in the Afghan terrain compared to the prior Universal Camouflage Pattern (UCP). The use of Multicam ACU aimed to enhance the soldiers' combat effectiveness in the specific environment.
They're either woodland camouflage, solid tan or desert camouflage.
probably the army
Of the list that you have provide, the marine corps infantry is the best.
marine