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JTF - RED HILL
Activated Reserve Marines Conduct CBRN Response Training with U.S. Army during Korea Viper 25.4
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Flight Operations
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
Four Chaplains: Norwegian Foot March
U.S., Japan display interoperability during Friendship Jump 2025
FF25: Blaze of Friendship
Blue Ridge Arrives in Wellington, New Zealand for the First Time
Activated Reserve Marines Conduct MOUT Training during Korea Viper 25.4
U.S. Marines Execute Casualty Evacuation Training during Jungle Leaders Course
31st MEU Boat Company conducts Small Boat Skills during MEUEX
F-35B Lightning IIs fly over Wake Island
USS Minnesota (SSN 783) returns to Naval Base Guam
Balikatan 25: 3d LCT and 25th ID Conduct Counter Landing Live Fire Event with AFP
Respect the Past, Forge the Future: Air Power Days Returns to Osan
31st MEU conducts quick response force rehearsal for MEUEX
Nimitz Sailors Conduct a Refueling-at-Sea
BTF 25-2: Seventh Mission Operations
Balikatan 25: Counter Landing Live Fire Exercise
Balikatan 25: B Co. 3-25 exfils Gimlets
BH 25-2: Kadena demonstrates Indo-Pacific readiness with joint elephant walk
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
U.S. Air Force participates in Freedom Flag 25-1
Nimitz Conducts Search and Rescue Training
Staging
MQ-9 maintainers, planners integrate during Freedom Flag 25-1
MRF-D 25.3: Marines conduct on-off drills
Balikatan 25: 353rd SOW, Philippine Special Forces Regiment conduct static line jump training
Balikatan 25: MADIS initial live fire drill
MRF-D 25.3: Marines conduct on-off drills
Balikatan 25: Marines deploy NMESIS to Basco
Balikatan 25: JOTC Completes HELOCAST Insertion Training
Balikatan 25: MRF – D 25.3, ADF conduct air insert into Rizal
Night Shoot | Marines participate in a Combat Marksmanship Coaches Course
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
B-1B Lancers arrive at Japan for BTF 25-2 Deployment
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
ROK, US forces showcase airpower ahead of Freedom Flag 25-1
Balikatan 25: 317th AW delivers varsity airlift to the Indo-Pacific
31st MEU | Fast Rope Sustainment
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
31st MEU | Jungle Field Exercise
USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19) conducts flight operations in the Coral Sea
B-1s train with ROKAF, conduct flyover
Philippine and U.S. Soldiers Enhance Interoperability in Jungle Tracking Course
U.S., Indian joint forces conduct large-scale amphibious landing drill during Exercise Tiger Triumph 2025
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
Yokota in full bloom
CFAS Hosts Sasebo Fleet Friendship Day
U.S. and Indian Armies strengthen alliances during Tiger Triumph
U.S. and Indian Armies enhance combat readiness during Tiger Triumph
USCGC Oliver Henry returns to Guam after successful transit post drydock
Joint Engineer Response team assess damage after a 7.7 magnitude earthquake
Joint Engineer Response team assess damage after a 7.7 magnitude earthquake
Salaknib 2025 - 2-11 Joint Sling Load Training
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
U.S. humanitarian disaster response
Pacific Air Forces F-16 Demonstration Team performs at Avalon Australian International Airshow 2025
Pacific Air Forces F-16 Demonstration Team performs at Avalon Australian International Airshow 2025
Joint Sling Load Operation Training between Philippine and US Army Soldier
>>>
Marine Corps SWAT Prepares for Deadly Encounters
13 January 2015
From Lance Cpl. Royce Dorman
Download
The sky is overcast and a brisk wind sends a chill across flat, featureless terrain. Men dressed in flak jackets and Kevlar helmets ready themselves to engage targets downrange.
“Threat!” barked a tall, broad-shouldered man in green coveralls. His voice carried a thick southern accent that echoed through the air. The five men on the firing line ahead of him respond in turn, drawing their pistols and shooting at targets 50 yards away.
The man yelling was Staff Sgt. Brandon Price, commander of the Special Reaction Team with the Provost Marshal’s Office, Marine Corps Installations Pacific-Marine Corps Base Camp Butler, Japan. Their mission, like Special Weapons and Tactics teams for civilian law enforcement, is to respond to high-priority calls such as hostage situations, active shooters and drug raids.
“Today we went through the fundamentals,” said Price, an Alma, Georgia, native. “No matter how far along you are or how far along you think you are, it’s always good to go back to the basics.”
The team trains constantly to be ready at a moment’s notice. They participated in marksman/observer training with the M110 semi-automatic sniper system Jan. 6. They then trained on a static 100-yard range doing close-quarters shooting Jan. 8, and used the M1014 shotgun, the M4A1 service carbine, the M45A1 and the M9A1 pistols in multiple courses of weapons training that included both stationary and moving drills.
Training makes their responses second nature in difficult, high-pressure situations. The most important factor in their job is keeping a cool head and knowing the risk they take when they respond to a call according to Cpl. Michael Fuentez, a member of the SRT.
“When I step into a house I’m like, ‘if I die today I don’t care, as long as none of my teammates get hit, I’m good,’” said Fuentez, a Los Angeles, California, native.
A small group consisting of six members, the team has developed nicknames over their time working together.
“With our nicknames it’s kind of one of those ‘you had to be there’ things,” said Cpl. Tyler “Staples” Stampes, whose nickname comes from the fact that everyone seems to read his name tape as Staples rather than Stampes.
Cpl. Brett Roth, the team’s training noncommissioned officer, is always striving to make the team better.
“Don’t take the shot unless you have it,” Roth, a Vancouver, Washington, native, urged the team to consider throughout the day.
SRT trains monthly, focusing their skills on different scenarios and melding their individuality into one single cohesive unit.
“When you go into a house and there’s a guy who has a gun trying to kill you, you have to know exactly what your teammate will do when he goes around that corner,” said Stampes, a Bakersfield, California, native. “Being close with other members on the team really helps.”
As the team began to take their equipment off and clean up, they shared a few laughs and exchanged some jokes. The day was like any other on the range. Difficult and constant, their training keeps them keen and ready for the first step into the unknown.
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