First Female Jungle Warfare Leaders Course Graduate
by U.S. Navy Candice Barber Commander, Fleet Activities, Okinawa
April 15, 2023
Deep in the jungle where venomous snakes
outnumber people, survival is not for the faint of heart ... it's a
matter of strength, skill, and mental fortitude. For decades,
American service members across the globe have attended the Jungle
Warfare Training Center (JWTC) in Okinawa, Japan, to hone their
survival skills and learn the craft of jungle warfare. But until
recently, no woman had ever completed the grueling Leaders Course
... until a female U.S. Navy Sailor broke the mold.
 March 31, 2023 - U.S.
Navy Information Systems Technician 1st Class Nicole Kazyak
reflects shortly after graduating (below) from the 2-23
Jungle Leaders Course at the Jungle Warfare Training Center
in Okinawa as shown by her rucksack (inset top left) ...
becoming the first-ever female to graduate from this course.
The Jungle Leaders Course teaches service members to
navigate and survive in the jungle over 30 training days. (Image
created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Navy photos by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jessica Ann Hattell.)
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JWTC’s Leaders Course is a rigorous
five-week program that tests service members’ physical and mental
endurance to the limit. Teams are given minimal supplies and must
rely on their training and resiliency to survive. Navigating 8,000
acres of dense, treacherous terrain is just one requirement for
participants to demonstrate they can survive in the harsh conditions
of the jungle.
The class endured 455 hours of instruction in
a fast-paced, compartmentalized jungle environment where they were
taught in a multitude of phases on everything from weapons and rope
suspension techniques to combat tactics. Participants received
intensive instruction on jungle mobility and Marine scouting and
patrolling skills. The capstone was a substantial 120 hours of
training on how to survive in the jungle.
Information Systems Technician 1st Class Nicole Kazyak
(pronounced KAY-ZACK) has always gravitated towards challenging
opportunities. A 28-year-old native of Midland, Michigan, she
graduated from Michigan State University, majoring in Communication
with a minor in Public Relations before joining the military in late
2017. After an initial assignment in Hawaii, she transferred to the
Joint Communications Support Element (JCSE) at MacDill Air Force
Base, Florida, a joint tactical Airborne communications unit
prepared to rapidly deploy at a moment’s notice.
JCSE serves
as the “Voice Heard ‘Round the World” and has opened the door to
incredible opportunities for Kazyak and others. In 2022, she earned
her jump wings from the U.S. Army’s Airborne School, despite a
tremendous fear of heights. “Every time I jump, I'm scared. But I
feel like that's not necessarily a bad thing. I feel like once you
stop being scared, you should probably stop jumping. Because jumping
out of a plane is not a normal thing to do in the first place.”
This experience came in handy at JWTC, which featured a
rappelling course with a heart-stopping 75’ drop. “I was scared on
that, too. But after a couple days of hooking yourself in and
rappelling down, after 10-15 times you get a lot more comfortable
with it, and it's not as scary. It becomes a little more fun.”
Kazyak survived the training, but not without a major challenge
from the outset. “For the first time in my life, I rolled my ankle
... and it just happened to be on my first day in the jungle.” She
pushed through her injury with the help of on-site medics,
ibuprofen, and the support of her teammates. Her desire to complete
the training overshadowed the pain of rucking a 30-pound pack, day
in and day out. And her discovery that she was the first female to
attempt the course motivated her even more.
“I didn’t know
until after I arrived that I was the first woman to go through the
course. There aren’t a lot of females doing infantry, so this was a
learning experience for all of us.” Early on, participants embarked
on a multi-mile ruck, up and down steep cliffs. “I ended up getting
a decent time and keeping up with a lot of the guys. I think after
that, we broke the ice. I felt like they could see I really wanted
to be there, and I wasn't going to ask for special treatment,” said
Kazyak.
JWTC Commander, Lt. Col. Nathaniel R. Jones, added,
“The survival phase these students went through was harder than
probably any survival phase I’ve seen in the Leaders Course due to
the weather and some of the terrain. The amount of growth that
happened with this group was inspiring.”
Describing the
team’s time in the jungle as “intense” would be an understatement.
For the majority of the course’s survival training, rain and
abnormally low temperatures were a constant battle. Okinawan jungles
are notoriously hot and humid, so participants were presented with
an unexpected hurdle. “I was born in Michigan, but for the past five
or six years, I’ve lived in hot climates like Hawaii and Florida. I
hate being cold, and I hate being wet. At one point, I was sitting
there thinking, ‘I am not going to be able to do this.’ I kept
asking myself, ‘Why did you volunteer to be here?’ We were all
freezing and absolutely miserable.”
Adding to the unforgiving
conditions, the team wasn’t allowed to have light at their campsite
for the bulk of their training. It was pitch black at night. “We’d
hear the wildest sounds creeping up to our camp. It was so dark you
couldn’t see anything. Then you’d hear guys sit up in their bivy
sacks, listening. Of course we were all thinking the same thing,
‘What the heck was that?’”
Kazyak was fortunate to avoid the
deadly habu snakes, which are more active in the summer, but she
encountered the largest spiders of her life. “One guy walked
straight into an orb spider’s web. I had heard about the size of
spiders on Okinawa, but I didn’t think they would be as big as they
were. That spider was massive, the size of my fist.”
That
same week, her team’s campsite washed out because of the constant
rain. She relied heavily on her teammates. “We realized we had to
take it day by day and that we were all in the suck together and had
to embrace it. Now that we’re done with it, I realize I can push
myself more than I ever thought I could.”
It was thoughts of
her mom, dad, and brother that got Kazyak through the tough moments.
“Growing up, my mom always told me, ‘Be comfortable being
uncomfortable.’ Because once you get comfortable, that means you're
not learning. And you learn the most out of those situations.”
Kazyak’s infantry training was definitely far outside her
comfort zone. Nevertheless, her expertise managing the Navy’s global
satellite telecommunications systems set her up for success during
the comms phase of the jungle warfare training. “I was able to teach
these Marines the ins and outs of telecommunications after they had
just shown me the ropes of their life in infantry. We all speak in
different languages based off our ratings in the military, so this
was a cool opportunity to coach one another on our specialties.”
Jungle warfare training is now more crucial than ever, and
thanks to this opportunity, she has a greater perspective on the
value of the region and the importance of training locally. “At the
end of the day, if a conflict does kick off, having a baseline
knowledge of this terrain is going to be super beneficial. We’re
going back and teaching the troops in our home units. There are so
many factors out here: the terrain, the cold, the heat, the
location. This is definitely the place to train. It's just a
completely different ballgame for sure.”
Despite the physical
and mental challenges, Kazyak and her teammates refused to give up.
They ate berries, ferns, and lots of ginger ... while staying
hydrated by filtering drinking water from ravines. They spent time
reminiscing on the comforts of home. “We were all so miserable, but
kept pushing through together. I remember at one point, we sat there
on the jungle floor, talking about foods we were craving. I couldn’t
stop thinking about a place back in Florida that serves pepperoni
pizza with hot honey on top. I lost about eight pounds while we were
in the jungle, but gained it back once we were finally able to visit
the chow hall.”
In reflecting on her time in the jungle,
Kazyak was reminded of her mom’s wise advice. “She always tells me,
‘The only thing constant in life is change.’” Kazyak garnered wisdom
of her own throughout the course. “You don't have to be at the peak
of everything; you just need to have the motivation and the
willingness to actually move forward and complete your goal. I'm not
the strongest or the fastest, but I know I can push myself enough to
get through those crappy times. I think too many people get
complacent and get so used to their day to day and they're scared of
change.”
Kazyak made history on March 31, 2023 ... the last
day of Women’s History Month ... when she became the first female
Leaders Course graduate of the U.S. military’s premiere training
center on jungle warfare. “This wasn't a comfortable scenario for me
at all. But I feel like those are the situations you learn the most
about yourself.”
In an era of change, the U.S. military has
come a long way in recognizing and appreciating the contributions of
women. Kazyak continues, “I just want to keep pushing and proving
women can do anything and everything. I feel like we always have to
work 10 times harder to prove ourselves. A lot of people don't get
the opportunities I’ve had, like becoming a jungle leader or going
to Airborne School. I like to hold on to that. I’m grateful for it.
It shows we can do the same things as the men.”
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