Perspective changing experiences in the Pacific
By Staff Sgt. Samuel Northrup
Two goats were slowly led up the hill for the
sacrifice. I looked on as one of the locals brought the first goat to
be sacrificed near to him. In one movement he cut the animal’s throat open and
the blood began to spill out. He prayed as he held the animal and moved ceremoniously around the
construction site to ensure the animals blood was properly placed at the right
locations for the blessing. Other U.S. Soldiers, most of whom are not
accustomed to animal sacrifice, watched in awe. This blessing, a local Filipino custom, was done to help protect the new medical center we were constructing.
Now Balikatan is part of a larger training
deployment known as Pacific Pathways that encompasses other countries in the
Pacific. Soldiers from selected units (for 2017 it includes 1-2 Stryker
Brigade Combat Team) are deployed from one country to the next to train with
that country’s military force.
These types of exercises are nothing new for the
U.S. Army, but what they have to offer is invaluable for every new group of
Soldiers that get to experience them.
Breaking out of the routine
A major benefit of traveling overseas to train
with an ally is breaking out of the same training routine. Soldiers back in the
U.S. begin to get used to going to the range, live fire exercises, morning PT,
etc. They know what to expect, which is not always a good thing.
Now throw Soldiers in a training environment
with a foreign military they never trained with and you get some interesting
results. Militaries around the world do much of the same training, but the
finer details can be different. Some countries may use tactics we don’t
use, forgotten, or just never considered. Seeing it played out gives us the
opportunity to learn from them and vice versa.
Going back to Balikatan 2010, the Filipino Army
Engineers used rustic, some would consider archaic, construction techniques.
One example is a water level (plastic tube filled with water) to determine if
two points were the same height. Some of
these methods, such as the water level, turned out to be more efficient the ones we used.
This year for Pacific Pathways, our “Ghost Brigade” Soldiers got an
opportunity to train with the Royal Thai Army during a Jungle Survival Course. They started fires without modern
tools, searched for water and cooked food with barest of essentials.
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Spc. James Gersler, Company C, 1-23 Infantry, drinks chicken blood as a substitute for water during the jungle survival course with the Royal Thai Army at Korat, Thailand, Feb. 20, 2017. (U.S. Army photo by Maj. Kelly Haux) |
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A Royal Thai Army Soldier from the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Infantry, demonstrates how to make an emergency fire using bamboo during jungle survival training at Camp Surathampitak, Thailand, Feb. 17, 2017. (U.S. Army photo by Maj. Kelly Haux) |
For a young U.S. Soldier, this experience can be an eyeopener. Since 1987, there has been less and less people venturing out to visit nature, according to a study submitted to PNAS. Soldiers do conduct field training exercises, but getting them out into a foreign Jungle with snakes and wild animals is a whole other experience.
"Its good training with the Thai Soldiers, this is a beautiful country and the training has been good building relations between the Thai military and the U.S." -- Spc. James Gersler, Company C. 1-23 Infantry.
"It tastes like Freedom!" -- Pvt. Alexis Fiarito, Combat Engineer, Company A, 23rd Brigade Engineer Battalion, after killing the chicken and drinking its blood.
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No chicken shall go to waste |
You become better at developing models of the world and your environment when you explore other countries and their cultures. You better understand how they think and how you think. You begin to see more solutions to problems and you can teach those ideas to your junior Soldiers -- essentially affecting another generation of Soldiers with the training you experienced.
What do you think? Do you have any experiences related to the above topic? Let us know in the comment section.