First FSS Airmen Complete Extreme Cold Weather Course
by U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Anthony Agosti March 19,
2021
The U.S. Army’s Cold Weather Operations Course (CWOC) is an
extreme cold weather survival and training course. It’s common to
see Army Rangers and Navy SEALs taking part in it.
However,
two Airmen from the 118th Wing achieved something no one else has up
to this point, becoming the first force support Airmen in the Air
Force’s history to complete the CWOC.
Members of class 21-04 of the U.S. Army’s Cold Weather Operations Course pull an ahkio sled
on Feb. 20, 2021 at Ft. McCoy Wisconsin. Two Airmen from the 118th FSS became the first force support Airmen in Air Force history to complete the CWOC. (U.S. Air National Guard courtesy photo provided by Staff Sgt. Rashad Wilson)
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Staff Sgt. Rashad Wilson, a services craftsman, and Airman 1st
Class Jalen Long, a personnelist, both from the 118th Force Support
Squadron (FSS), had very little time preparing themselves before
leaving for this course.
“I got a call [two days] before we
were supposed to leave,” said Long. “They were like ‘Hey Airman Long
do you want to go to Wisconsin?’ And I said absolutely.”
Wilson said they were given the opportunity after people from
another unit dropped out. However, neither of them had any idea as
to what this course entailed and what awaited them.
After
traveling to the course site at Ft. McCoy, Wisconsin, Wilson and
Long, along with five Airmen from the 118th Security Forces
Squadron, were thrust into extreme conditions almost immediately.
“I've never been up to the North like that, never seen snow like
that, never seen a negative temperature in my life,” said Long. “So,
going up there and it’s -24 degrees, and anything that touched your
skin felt like fire, it was so cold.”
From Feb. 14-28, 2021,
Wilson and Long went through a battery of extremely demanding
cold-weather exercises that included land navigation, skiing,
snowshoeing, shelter building, and cold weather emergency
recognition. They even endured training in frigid water.
“It's 33-degree water, we had to jump into a cut-out hole, and we
had to overcome cold water shock,” said Long. “[The cadre] was
asking us questions, and we had to respond clearly and coherently
before we could actually get out of the water.”
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Rashad Wilson, a services craftsman with the 118th Force Support Squadron, Tennessee Air National Guard, walks into a frozen lake
(left) and builds a fire (right) on Feb. 20, 2021 at Ft. McCoy, Wisconsin. Wilson and another Airman from the 118th FSS became the first force support Airmen in Air Force history to complete the U.S. Army’s Cold Weather Operations Course. (U.S. Air National Guard courtesy photo provided by Staff Sgt. Rashad Wilson)
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While every element of the course was challenging,
Wilson and Long said the most difficult part of the course was
pulling the ahkio sleds, a sled
with runners on the bottom designed to haul heavy loads across snowy
surfaces.
“We are connected to it like sled dogs. We're going
anywhere from about seven to nine miles a day, in at least
one-to-two feet of snow, wearing snowshoes,” said Wilson. “You have
to coordinate your movements with everybody. We are going up slopes
that are about 45 to 50-degree inclines, with at least 50 pounds on
your back while you're pulling.”
Wilson and Long said this
course was by far the most challenging thing they had done in their
military careers.
Wilson said he was very grateful to go
through the course with the five security forces members since he
and Long come from career fields that are less physical in nature.
He said they would often support and push each other mentally to get
through each task set before them.
“This experience really
encompassed one of our core values, excellence in all we do,” said
Wilson. “We're out there pumping out every single day, just trying
to excel and complete each day, one step at a time.”
With
their new cold-weather skills, Wilson and Long plan to train others
at the 118th Wing about cold weather gear and survival tactics. They
could also see themselves returning to Ft. McCoy in the future.
“I would definitely go back to the cadre, especially helping out
other people who want that opportunity to be able to challenge
themselves and experience something new,” said Long. “Coming from
a boy from the South, you'll never see that kind of snow in your
life, and I would recommend it.”
Even though they now have a
small piece of Air Force history tied to them, Wilson and Long are
modest about their accomplishment.
“It's kind of surreal
knowing that you're going to be the first person to break this
ground,” said Long. “I'm just humbled that my senior leadership was
willing to pick me.”
“It's just an honor and privilege to be
sought out by our leadership, having them recognize potential in
us,” said Wilson. “It's very humbling and ecstatic to be the first
FSS members to accomplish something to that nature.”
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