An official website of the United States government
Here's how you know
Official websites use .mil
A
.mil
website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
Secure .mil websites use HTTPS
A
lock (
lock
)
or
https://
means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
Skip to main content (Press Enter).
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
Leadership
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
Area of Responsibility map
Organization Chart
Components
Previous Commanders
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
Indo-Pacific Health Security Alliance - IPhsa
Women, Peace and Security
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
About USINDOPACOM
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
Media
RESOURCES
Newcomers
Wellness Resources
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Quality of Life
Careers
Useful Links
Resources
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Industry Engagements
Contact
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia - News
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia YAP Infrastructure
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF-Micronesia
JTF - RED HILL
Search
Home
Media
NEWS
Home
Media
NEWS
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
Area of Responsibility map
Organization Chart
Components
Previous Commanders
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
Indo-Pacific Health Security Alliance - IPhsa
Women, Peace and Security
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
RESOURCES
Newcomers
Wellness Resources
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Quality of Life
Careers
Useful Links
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Industry Engagements
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia - News
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia YAP Infrastructure
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF - RED HILL
Freedom Edge 25
RD 25 | 12th LCT and 8th Division Execute a Bilateral Live-Fire Range
U.S. Marines, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force operate forward arming, refueling point
RD25 | 12th Littoral Combat Team Mortar Range
U.S., Japan, Republic of Korea navies sail during Exercise Freedom Edge in U.S. 7th Fleet
Every Jump Matters: 31st RQS enhances rescue readiness at Yokota
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Joint Army AH-64E Apache Helicopter Exercise
U.S., Japan forces fly together during Resolute Dragon 25
VMM-262 arrives at JMSDF Kanoya Air Base
Team Andersen honors 9/11’s 24th anniversary, remembers the fallen
Marines with MWSS-172, HMH-462 fly in formation
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Flight Operations
3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 3rd Marine Division conducts Combat Rubber Reconnaissance Craft training with USS Ohio (SSGN 726)
MRF-D 25.3: VMM-363’s MV-22B Ospreys arrive to USS Miguel Keith
III MEF Support Battalion executes live-fire machine gun range
Super Garuda Shield 25: U.S., Dutch, Japanese forces conduct close quarter battle drills
Super Garuda Shield 25- Airborne Jump into Baturaja, Indonesia
HSC-14 conducts flight ops in Dutch Harbor during Northern Edge 2025
Garuda Shield holds it's annual exercise between the Indonesian National Armed Forces and U.S. Military
2ID and ROK Army Conduct Combined Wet Gap Crossing Training for UFS25
Aurora Borealis appears over Abraham Lincoln during exercise Northern Edge 2025
Super Garuda Shield 25 Stinger live-fire exercise
Boxer Flight Operations
George Washington Conducts Flight Operations
Abraham Lincoln participates in exercise Northern Edge 2025
Boxer Conducts Flight Operations
Ulchi Freedom Shield 25: 2CAB Refueling Operations
Wolf Pack integrates with follow-on forces for UFS25
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
Artillerymen Fight Mother Nature to Qualify at Rodriguez Live Fire Complex
Abraham Lincoln conducts routine operations
USS Theodore Roosevelt Flight Operations
2/23 Marines conduct final field operation during KMEP 25.2
31st MEU Supports Anti-Submarine Warfare Operation in Indo-Pacific
Brutal Company 4-9IN Conducts Blank-Fire React-to-Contact and Squad Attack Training
USS Theodore Roosevelt Flight Operations
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
MRF-D 25.3: U.S. Marines and Airmen deliver critical supplies during foreign disaster relief in the Philippines
U.S. Marines Conduct a M240B Machine Gun Live-Fire Range
USS America, 31st MEU commemorate 250 years with formation in Coral Sea
12th LCT Executes an Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations FTX
III Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Company conducts 10k hike
2/23 Marines and ROK Marines Joint Obstacle Course Training at KMEP 25.2
Training for proficiency: C-17 crew practices cargo drops during TS25
NSW Conducts Multi-National VBSS Training during Talisman Sabre 2
USS Theodore Roosevelt Conducts Flight Operations
MDTF Projects Combined Joint Combat Power to Indian Ocean Territories During HIRAIN Demonstration
USS Milius (DDG 69) Conducts Live-Fire Weapons Shoot with Mark 45 5-Inch Light-Weight Gun and Close-In Weapon System
KC-46 integrates with RAAF for bilateral refueling during Talisman Sabre 25
Shore to Sea: Landing craft delivers cargo to Somerset
Talisman Sabre 25: U.S. Coast Guard Port Security Unit 307 boat crew conduct seaward security for the Royal Canadian Navy HMCS Ville de Québec
HMLA-169 projects light attack combat power
USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) Conducts Routine Flight Operations in the Philippine Sea
America Strike Group Conducts Formation Sail During Talisman Sabre 25
KC-135 refuels RC-135, Talisman Sabre 25
199th Air Expeditionary Squadron conducts operations during TS25
U.S. KC-135 and Australian F-35 refuel mission, Talisman Sabre 25
George Washington Conducts Flight Operations
Survival in the Tropics: Malaysian Army Shares Essential Jungle Training with U.S. and Australian Soldiers
TALISMAN SABRE 2025 Dual Carrier Operations
USINDOPACOM Stories
Revive, Rescue, Repeat: Marine Recon and Air Force Special Operations Hone Humanitarian Skills
15 July 2016
From Cpl. Natalie Dillon
Download
POHAKULOA TRAINING AREA, Hawaii -- When disaster strikes, most people observe from the outside. They cringe, they pity, they pray.
However, some brave men and women choose not to be casual observers. They are the volunteer force who respond to emergencies, like Force Reconnaissance Marines with III Marine Expeditionary Force and Special Tactics Airmen with 353rd Special Operations Group, Air Force Special Operations Command.
As part of Rim of the Pacific 2016, these specially trained Marines and Airmen teamed up during a humanitarian assistance and disaster response exercise, July 8-9, to ensure they are ready to respond when confronted with the next calamity.
The mission began after sunset, in the chilly hills of the Pohakuloa Training Area. Under the cover of darkness, a team of Reconnaissance Marines with full combat loads crammed themselves into sports utility vehicles. Load-bearing vests bristled with magazines of 5.56 mm rounds and packs bulged with supplies to sustain the Marines for multiple nights at altitudes of more than 6,000 feet above sea level. The vehicles sped along a lonesome dirt road, kicking up dust.
Finally, the tactical operations center radioed a two-minute warning to the team leader, indicating that they needed to be at their reconnaissance point, ready to debark the vehicles. When the vehicles ground to a halt, the Marines clambered out, lowering their night vision goggles to eye level and peering out at the eerie green landscape. They stealthily plodded a hilly course through gristly scrub brush, gathering information about the landscape throughout the night and passing it to the team of Special Tactics Airmen. In the morning, the Airmen would use this information to determine the best way of reaching those who required aid.
Marine Capt. Joshua Winters, platoon commander of 2nd Platoon, Force Reconnaissance Company, III MEF, said his Marines embedded 24 hours before the Airmen insertion to provide the Air Force Special Operations Forces with critical information to mitigate risk during the operation.
As part of the exercise, Marines from other units training at Pohakuloa Training Area role-played as victims.
Using the intelligence gathered by III MEF, the Air Force mission commander decided the best option of recovering the simulated victims would be to infiltrate by high-altitude, low-opening airborne jumps. Eighteen Special Tactics Airmen infiltrated the affected area and immediately moved to the disaster location. One team would travel 25 kilometers by all-terrain vehicles to take control of a remote airfield, while the other team concurrently patrolled by foot through rugged, rocky terrain to recover and provide emergency medical assistance to victims of the disaster. If medical assistance was not needed, the teams called for material aid to be brought to victims.
Once the team of Special Tactics Airmen took control of the airfield, they were able to provide quick recovery efforts of victims affected by the catastrophe by establishing an austere airfield, opening a forward area refueling point and providing critical air traffic control duties for aircraft in the area.
With the airfield open and secured, the air assets were able to safely begin evacuating critical patients and bringing aid to the victims. In addition, the rotary wing aircraft were then able to insert the Special Tactics Airmen into the most critically affected areas, providing an air-enabled line of supply to those in need.
Immediately after the Airmen exited their UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, they moved to triage their victims to treat them accordingly. They moved quickly and methodically, arms bowed out from the bulk of medical equipment tactically compartmentalized on their vests. The simulated injuries varied from lost and broken limbs to unconscious patients. The Airmen moved back-and-forth, collecting and treating patients, and controlling the air traffic to evacuate the patients to advanced medical care.
Within nine hours of taking control of the air assets at Bradshaw Army Airfield, the teams of Special Tactics Airmen had rescued and provided relief to 75 victims and delivered more than 1,500 pounds of aid.
As a role player, Marine Pfc. Jason Murillo, an intelligence specialist with 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 3, III MEF said the relief teams communicated well with each other and with the simulated victims.
“They came in, they knew what they were doing, and they treated and removed us from the situation pretty quickly,” Murillo said.
RIMPAC has provided III MEF and Special Tactics Airmen from the 353rd SOG an opportunity to showcase their partnership and the benefits of having an ongoing relationship between conventional forces and SOF.
“The relationship that we’ve built with Air Force Special Operations helps us carry out missions like this more effectively,” said Winters.
Few Marines and Airmen can say they’ve had the chance to work together extensively. Yet, when it comes to helping those who need the armed services the most, joint operations can be the difference between life and death.
"The speed in which our joint force can answer to the range of military operations is substantial," said U.S. Air Force Capt. John Rulien, mission commander for the task force. "We've been investing into this concept for some time aiming at creating increased contingency response value for our commanders and now we're using the RIMPAC exercise platform to capture that value and formalize it."
News Archive
2025 (633)
2024 (956)
2023 (806)
2022 (1167)
2021 (1044)
2020 (1072)
2019 (1152)
2018 (1102)
2017 (1338)
2016 (1447)
2015 (1383)
2014 (892)
2013 (32)
2012 (4)
Guidance-Card-Icon
Dept-Exclusive-Card-Icon