BLACK RAPIDS TRAINING SITE, Alaska (Sept. 9, 2009) -- Members of the Marine Corps Special Operations Command are preparing for Afghanistan's rugged terrain by training in the wilds of Alaska.
Amid snow-dusted mountains and fog-shrouded peaks, military
mountaineers of the Northern Warfare Training Center and the United
States Marine Corps are conducting military alpine operations on the
Black Rapids Training Site and surrounding Alaska Range.
The Marines are students in the training center's Assault Climbers
Course, which will arm them with the knowledge to train, lead and win
in unforgiving terrain and altitudes of more than 8,000 feet.
The Marines and Sailors are a part of the Marine Corps Special
Operations Command, and are a relatively new addition to the U.S.
Special Operations Command. MARSOC consists of three battalions, with
teams from the 3rd Marine Special Operations Battalion.
The 13 Marines and two Navy Corpsmen are being taught to negotiate
vertical terrain, various forms of rappelling, casualty evacuation,
glacial travel and crevasse rescue, along with several classes on
subjects such as weather forecasting and avalanche awareness.
"This training is an absolute necessity to applicable units going into
theatre," said Lt. Col. Matthew Trollinger, commander of the 3rd Marine
Special Operations Battalion. "Opportunities such as this allow us the
operational environment that we don't normally see in Camp Lejeune in
North Carolina. It's critical to experience weather and climate along
with other changing factors that may occur while conducting missions in
this type of terrain."
The course, from Aug. 24 to Sept. 13, will culminate in several
student-led alpine operations, including glacier travel, a 14-mile
alpine movement and summiting several local peaks. All of the exercises
will incorporate skills learned throughout the course; such as fixed
lines, rope bridges, and mountain land navigation.
"I would recommend this course to other teams," said Capt. Jonathan
Hayes of the 3rd Marine Special Operations Battalion. "The Basic
Mountaineering Course gives you a base of working knowledge, and the
Assault Climber Course brings us to more of an instructor role to train
others, so whether it is internal or external, we are all the same
across the board."
The NWTC conducts cold weather and mountaineering training for
individuals and small units. The Basic Mountaineering Course provides
the fundamental skills required for mountain operations. Seven of the
Marines took part in the two-week BMC before attending ACC.
The Northern Warfare Training Center's remote Black Rapids Training
Site, about 120 miles from Fort Wainwright, Alaska, also offers The
Cold Weather Leadership Course, in which servicemembers learn basics of
operating in environments of -30 degrees Fahrenheit or below. The
center can also train units to operate in cold weather and
mountaineering at altitudes of 10,000 feet or higher.
Source and credits: http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/09/09/27127-army-trains-marines-in-alaska-wilderness/
Photo credit Karl Slingerland (Northern Warfare Training Center)
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