Marines demonstrate combat lifesaving skills to Senegalese, Nigerian partners
4/5/2011
By
LCpl. Timothy Solano
,
Marine Forces Africa
TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal
In the moments that follow the initial receipt of a combat injury, escaping out of the fog of war is not dictated by the enemy, but rather by those fighting alongside the casualty, pulling the injured out of the fight. As those critical minutes dwindle into critical seconds, the gap between life and death closes and the fate of a fallen service member lies in the hands of his or her nearest ally.
The Marines of second platoon, Ground Combat Element, Security Cooperation Task Force, Africa Partnership Station 2011, and their Senegalese Commandos and Nigerian sailors counterpart are now trained for such an occasion, after recently engaging in a combat lifesaver class given by the hospital corpsmen attached to second platoon, SCTF.
Under a shady grove in attempt to beat the day’s peak heat, hospital corpsmen Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon Echols and Seaman Joseph Friend led the period of instruction and practical application, which provided demonstration of the basic lifesaving skills Marines and corpsmen use in a combat environment.
“This training is very important and will help me if I go to war,” said Mouhamed Fall, a Senegalese Marine Commando who sat in the class and conducted the following practical application portion. “I have been in combat before and I am glad that I learned this for the next time I may have to help my brothers.”
The instruction was demonstrated as a Marine Corps first aid standard and included response to injuries ranging from the treatment of a heat casualty to the application of a pressure dressing on a wound. Following injury treatment, the Commandos, as well as operators from the Nigerian Navy Special Boat Service, were shown the means of writing a casualty report, essentially a brief record of the injury and the treatment provided.
Though the splinting of broken bones, treatment of spinal injuries and proper means of casualty transport are all important, the underlying reason for providing the combat lifesaver course was to instill confidence in those who may one day find themselves in a dire combat situation.
“The main purpose of this session is to help build confidence and medical proficiency,” said Echols, a Memphis, Tenn., native.
Throughout, students asked ‘what if’ scenarios and questions about how to improvise with less material, a sure sign that the material was absorbed by all, said Echols. “With something as important as saving someone’s life, confidence is the key to proficiency,” he added.
Africa Partnership Station 2011 is a U.S. Africa Command maritime security engagement program that is designed to strengthen participating nations’ maritime security capacity through multilateral collaboration and cross-border cooperation. Marine Corps Forces, Africa is supporting APS-11 with a Security Cooperation Task Force assembled from 2nd Assault Amphibian Battalion, 2nd Marine Division and various other units based out of Camp Lejeune, N.C. The SCTF began its deployment in Ghana in March and is slated to continue its follow-on mission at Gabon in June.
|

TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon M. Echols, hospital corpsman, Security Cooperation Task Force, Africa Partnership Station 2011, applies bandage to a Marine during a combat lifesaver course. Echols demonstrated this standard to a group of Senegalese Marine and Air Force commandos, and Nigerian sailors. Echols is one of the 45 U.S. Marines and sailors with the SCTF who is participating in APS 11. Echols was temporarily assigned to the SCTF from 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division. As part of APS 11, he is contributing to an information exchange between the three partner nations while in Senegal.
, Master Sgt. Grady Fontana, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon M. Echols, hospital corpsman, Security Cooperation Task Force, Africa Partnership Station 2011, shows a an example of a report on a battlefield injured to a group of Senegalese Marine and Air Force commandos, and Nigerian sailors. Echols is one of the 45 U.S. Marines and sailors with the SCTF who is participating in APS 11. Echols was temporarily assigned to the SCTF from 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division. As part of APS 11, he is contributing to an information exchange between the three partner nations while in Senegal. Africa Partnership Station 2011 is a U.S. Africa Command maritime security engagement program that is designed to strengthen participating nations’ maritime security capacity through multilateral collaboration and cross-border cooperation. Marine Corps Forces, Africa is supporting APS 11 with a SCTF security assistance force based out of Camp Lejeune, N.C. The SCTF began its deployment in Ghana in March and is slated to continue its follow-on mission at Gabon in June.
, Master Sgt. Grady Fontana, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon M. Echols, hospital corpsman, Security Cooperation Task Force, Africa Partnership Station 2011, explains how to write a report on a battlefield injured to a group of Senegalese Marine and Air Force commandos, and Nigerian sailors. Echols is one of the 45 U.S. Marines and sailors with the SCTF who is participating in APS 11. Echols was temporarily assigned to the SCTF from 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division. As part of APS 11, he is contributing to an information exchange between the three partner nations while in Senegal. Africa Partnership Station 2011 is a U.S. Africa Command maritime security engagement program that is designed to strengthen participating nations’ maritime security capacity through multilateral collaboration and cross-border cooperation. Marine Corps Forces, Africa is supporting APS 11 with a SCTF security assistance force based out of Camp Lejeune, N.C. The SCTF began its deployment in Ghana in March and is slated to continue its follow-on mission at Gabon in June.
, Master Sgt. Grady Fontana, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-A Senegalese commando takes notes during a combat lifesaver class. The students were comprised of Senegalese Marine and Air Force commandos and Nigerian sailors. The course was part of Africa Partnership Station 2011, a U.S. Africa Command maritime security engagement program that is designed to strengthen participating nations’ maritime security capacity through multilateral collaboration and cross-border cooperation. Marine Corps Forces, Africa is supporting APS 11 with a security assistance force based out of Camp Lejeune, N.C.
, Master Sgt. Grady Fontana, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon M. Echols, hospital corpsman, Security Cooperation Task Force, Africa Partnership Station 2011, applies bandage to a Marine during a combat lifesaver class. Echols demonstrated this standard to a group of Senegalese Marine and Air Force commandos, and Nigerian sailors. Echols is one of the 45 U.S. Marines and silors with the SCTF who is participating in APS 11. Echols was temporarily assigned to the SCTF from 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division. As part of APS 11, he is contributing to an information exchange between the three partner nations while in Senegal.
, Master Sgt. Grady Fontana, 4/5/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-Michel Diouf and fellow Senegalese Marine commandos apply a pressure dressing to a fellow soldier during practical application that followed a combat lifesaver demonstration. Supervised by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon Echols, CLS is one of the shared facets of partnership that have so far occurred during the Africa Partnership Station 2011 military-to-military exchange in Senegal. , LCpl. Timothy L. Solano, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-U.S. Navy Seaman Joseph Friend, a Queens, N.Y., native and hospital corpsman with second platoon, supervises Senegalese Marine commandos as they treat a notional casualty during practical application after a combat lifesaver course here, recently. The demonstration and hands-on exercise were part of the Senegal chapter of Africa Partnership Station 2011, founded on a mission of military-to-military exchanges along the West Coast of Africa. , LCpl. Timothy L. Solano, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Joshua Groh, a certified combat lifesaver, supervises Mouhamad Thiam and Leopold Faye, Senegalese Marine commandos training with the Marines of Africa Partnership Station 2011. The APS-11’s mission of security assistance is accomplished through military-to-military exchanges, in which Marines partner and interact with the militaries of various West African nations. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Timothy L. Solano)
, LCpl. Timothy Solano, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM TOUBAKOUTA, Senegal-Petty Officer 3rd Class Brandon M. Echols, hospital corpsman, Security Cooperation Task Force, Africa Partnership Station 2011, explains basic first aid to a group of Senegalese Marine and Air Force commandos, and Nigerian sailors. Echols is one of the 45 U.S. Marines and sailors with the SCTF who is participating in APS 11. Echols was temporarily assigned to the SCTF from 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division. As part of APS 11, he is contributing to an information exchange between the three partner nations while in Senegal.
, Master Sgt. Grady Fontana, 4/4/2011 8:00 PM
|