Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) Training
In the northern jungles of Okinawa there’s a group of individuals stranded, without the aid of food, water, shelter, and the basic necessities required to survive. They are tired, hungry and looking forward to going home at the end of their ordeal.
This may sound like an episode of “Survivor,” and in a sense it is. But instead of contestants, the individuals participating are U.S. Marines and there isn’t a million dollar prize at the end.
Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape training (SERE) is held monthly at the Jungle Warfare Training Center at Camp Gonsalves.
According to Staff Sgt. Clinton J. Thomas, chief instructor at JWTC, the purpose of the course is to teach Marines the skills they need in case they are separated from their units in a combat zone and must survive off the land while evading the enemy.
“We focus more on the survival and evasion portions of the course more so than we do with resistance and escape,” the Grand Rapids, Mich. native said. “We teach them enough to survive on their own in the Okinawan jungle. If you can do that, you can survive just about anywhere.”
The 12-day course is broken down into three phases: classroom instruction, survival and evasion.
During the first three days, Marines are put in a classroom environment where the instructors teach them the basics of survival. They are taught how to identify and catch food, build tools, start fires and construct shelter.
The survival phase takes place on a beach where the Marines put the training they received to use by surviving on their own with nothing but a knife, a canteen and the camouflage utility uniforms on their backs for five days.
The last phase of the course is four days long and the Marines are broken into teams of four to five men. The teams must stay on the move through the muddy and tangled jungle to avoid being captured by students from the man-tracking course.
“We’ve built our own POW (prisoner of war) camp where we stick the students if they are captured,” Thomas said. “They’re forced to wear the POW uniforms we made and the instructors interrogate and attempt to pry information from them to test their resistance level. We set them loose after several hours so they don’t spend the entire evasion period in the POW camp.”
During their time in the POW camp, Marines are subjected to forced labor such as digging trenches, filling sandbags and cutting wood. They are also put in a small three-foot squared cube-like cell where they are tempted with food to give up information.
While evading capture, the Marines are given free range to move anywhere they like within JWTC’s 20,000-acre training grounds. When evening draws near, they are instructed to find a “safe zone” where the captors are not allowed to enter. If able to reach the safe zone, the students can get five to six hours of sleep per night. If they do not find the zone, they are still subject to capture and may only receive a few hours of sleep if any at all.
The average student losses between 12-15 pounds while going through the course. During their time in the field they must rely on the nutrition given to them through natural food sources in the jungle such as snakes, insects, fish and plant roots.
Students participating learn to get through the torment of starvation and weariness by staying motivated and appreciating what they are going through.
“I thought the survival portion was very interesting. I’m not used to catching my own food and finding or building my own shelter,” said Lance Cpl. Daniel L. Pendergast, rifleman with 1st battalion, 25th Marine Regiment now assigned to 4th Marine Regiment. “The course has shown me where my limits are as far as how long I can go without food. Learning how to deal with that is the only tough part.”
August 4th, 2010 on 7:56 am
Dear Staff Sgt.J Thomas,
According to the web site statement, you focus more on survivor skills more than you do on resistance and evading. When in fact the resistance and evading part of the program is very essential to the vital importance of the safety and security of the mission at hand. Being a Volunteer of the S.E.R.E. School instruction somewhere in the Monterrey Mountains in Califronia, my time spent in harsh conditions leads me to believe that your school needs to take notice of the type of school instruction given at Coronado Island. And maybe you can learn a thing or two about survival against enemy torture and survival.
April 2nd, 2011 on 12:54 am
To george, I’m a graduate of this course…back in 2001…And I can tell you with firsthand experience that although they emphasize survival and evasion they do hammer home the resistance and escape portions. I was locked in a dog crate and had hamburgers placed just outside the cage while screaming babies were played on a loud speaker. This after 6 days in the field with very little sleep food and water. The instructors did unlock my cage for me but only to let me out to do pushups with a 25 lbs bag of rice on my back, I had to escape to get out. Even after escape I was caught again and had to resist the temptation to give in. The only piece of information they wanted from me was my hometown…easy, no Marines get hurt or killed, not a risk to national security, no family gets hurt. I wouldn’t talk, they are allowed to physically hurt you, and they do. no broken bones or life threatening types of harm but they do slap ya around. Don’t ever make it sound like SERE isn’t a tough place. it is and as long as i’m in this gun club it will be. Volunteer and glad participant.
-SSgt of Marines.
June 20th, 2011 on 4:16 am
I went thru the school in 1997 and we had to turn ourselves in at the very end. To say there was no physical harm done would be untrue. I was torn up pretty badly and we had two Marines loose their lives in Maine in January of that year. I was thrown against concrete block walls, put in very small boxes,drowning techniques and other torterous events occurred. I have to say I loved the overall experience because I learned alot about myself.
June 27th, 2011 on 8:04 pm
to ssgt and former student, you said no Marines get hurt or killed but then you say they are allowed to physically hurt you. after that you said no broken bones or life threatening types of harm but they do slap ya around which i think is a lie because your story doesnt match up with what you just said…FAIL!
July 12th, 2011 on 11:10 pm
I am also an active marine, and I would volunteer any day for that kind of training!!
January 30th, 2012 on 1:53 am
I’m an enlisted poole and i’m going down to basic this april. I’m wondering is there a difference between the air forces sere training and this one? The air force one looked a lot more tougher and more extreme, being a 5 month training program. Just curious.