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Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape training starts at Joint Base San Antonio

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Chip Pons
  • Air Education and Training Command Public Affairs
Walking into the Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape specialist training building, motivational quotes speaking to accountability, persistence and commitment can be seen on every wall, serving as an encouraging reminder of the choice candidates have made in an attempt to become SERE specialists.

Animal pelts and antlers adorn the wall and an alligator named Thor, a gift from former students, sits protectively outside the main classroom. Everywhere you look around the building, a deep sense of pride is obvious and more importantly, felt by all who enter those doors.

Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, famously known as “The Gateway to the Air Force,” is also the gateway to the SERE career field through the SERE Specialist Training Orientation Course, a 15-day course held on Lackland’s Medina Training Annex. This is where potential SERE specialists begin a rigorous year-long training and are first immersed in the physically and mentally demanding career field.

Candidates are critiqued on physical training, backpacking, basic public speaking, outdoor living and survival skills as well as their ability to improvise, to assess their potential success as a future SERE specialist. Most importantly, these candidates are assessed on their ability to effectively pass on and translate their knowledge to others, the cornerstone of the SERE career field.

“Our job is really about the empowerment of others,” said Adam DeRycke, SST-OC instructor and training manager. “Our sole focus as a SERE specialist is to take someone and give them the skillsets to take care of themselves and empower them to survive the most austere or dangerous conditions we know as individuals - captivity, isolation and survival. The goal at SST-OC is to give candidates a very rudimentary set of skills and assess them on their ability to perform certain tasks that will be expected of them throughout training.”

Noting that being a SERE specialist is a great career but a well-kept secret of the Air Force, DeRycke said most people do not understand their purpose as SERE specialists.

“They know we exist, but not exactly what we do,” DeRycke said. “And I think that we need to work harder and try to break that down and to be in the forefront of people's minds instead of an afterthought.”

Finding interested individuals is an easy task, but finding those whose personal beliefs align with SERE priorities has proven to be a challenge. Out of the roughly 400 students who go through the schoolhouse annually, about 60 percent will not complete training. The majority of those candidates who don’t complete training will self-eliminate from the program.

“Accountability and responsibility are difficult things and big pills to swallow,” DeRycke explained. “These are things that some people shy away from. This is not the job for those kinds of people because we are put out in the middle of nowhere with six to eight people and we're responsible for their lives.”

The accountability and responsibility DeRycke refers to extends beyond the schoolhouse, as future recruits are drawn to the image of excellence and pride that active duty SERE specialist’s exhibit.

“Growing up in Washington, I was constantly surrounded by SERE specialists,” said Airman Basic Cole Kramm, a SST-OC candidate in his final days of training and Spokane, Washington, native. “I was drawn to their character and their upstanding image of integrity and after talking to them about what they did for the Air Force, I knew it was something I would enjoy being a part of.”

Kramm said seeing SERE specialists give 110 percent in everything they do was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity he wanted to be a part of.
“I have always been a guy that can’t quit, so the mental and physical demands on my body are nothing compared to the satisfaction of knowing that someday the skills that I have taught someone else could help them on the most challenging day of their life,” he said. “Even if you never see the fruits of your labor, just knowing that you’ve given all that you have to give is beyond worthwhile.”

With SST-OC serving as the introduction to the SERE career field, instructors recognize the important role they play in molding future specialists.

“JBSA is viewed as the heartbeat of the Air Force because we've touched the lives of every enlisted Airman from day one of their career; we’re doing the same thing here,” said Staff Sgt. Ryian Dawson, SST-OC instructor. “This is the place where candidates first learn what it is to be a specialist and what kind of mentality is needed to be successful. Our actions and the way that we handle ourselves is going to directly correlate to what they feel is acceptable throughout the rest of their careers. So to be able to mold, shape, and guide them from the beginning is extremely rewarding.”