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News > Evasion, conduct after capture training facility opens at Lackland
 
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New AF ECAC facility
The Air Force Evasion and Conduct After Capture Facility opened Oct. 3, 2011, at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. (U.S. Air Force illustration)
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Evasion, conduct after capture training facility opens at Lackland

Posted 10/11/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Mike Joseph
502nd Air Base Wing Operating Location-A Public Affairs


10/11/2011 - LACKLAND AIR FORCE BASE, Texas (AFNS) -- A one-of-a-kind facility, built specifically to accommodate all Air Force evasion and conduct after capture training, opened and training began Oct 3 here.

The program is for Airmen who will operate in high-risk environments that may place them at increased risk of isolation.

The new facility merges all Air Force ECAC training into one location under Det. 2, 22nd Training Squadron.

"This is absolutely top of the line, and the only facility in the Air Force built specifically for this course to enhance the students' training," said Tech. Sgt. James Davis, the Det. 2, 22nd TRS ECAC course manager. "The training is for Airmen deploying throughout the combatant commands who will be operating outside the wire.

"Students will either attend ECAC en route to their deployment, or they'll attend the training and return to their units before deploying. We expect 120 students a week or about 6,000 students a year," he said.

Students attending the Combat Skills Training course and the Basic Combat Convoy Course at nearby Camp Bullis, Texas, will also get mandatory ECAC training at the new $6 million-plus facility on Lackland, Davis said.

The facility has an urban evasion laboratory with more than 60 objectives to prepare Airmen for obstacles they may encounter while evading or moving in an urban environment.

The ECAC mission is to ensure students complete the course with the confidence and ability to employ evasion and resistance tactics, techniques and procedures necessary to survive and return with honor, regardless of the circumstances of isolation.

"The course provides personnel recovery procedures if they become isolated or separated from the unit," Davis said. "When they leave this course, if they become isolated in any environment in any part of the world, they'll have the skills necessary adapt and overcome."

In addition to ECAC training, the facility staff members also host the survival, evasion, resistance and escape specialist selection course.



tabComments
10/16/2011 4:30:04 PM ET
So let me get this right - if I have a guy that gets hit up for a 180 deployment he's got to go to CST and now this seems like a lot of time on the road and lots of travel costs. Seems a little too late since OIFOND is wrapping up.
BS, KS
 
10/14/2011 3:22:42 PM ET
I am all for the training of folks before they deploy but what happend to using facilities that are already in the DoD The Army Navy Air Force and Marines already have training areas that are better than this 6000000.00 project. Use what we already have instead of making more areas that will cost fortunes to maintain.
Junior, Edwards
 
10/13/2011 12:00:19 PM ET
One of a kind facility Sure looks a lot like the Urban Evasion Lab already in place at FAFB.
CJ, FAFB
 
10/12/2011 3:50:28 PM ET
accommodate all Air Force evasion and conduct after capture training So they won't do it at SERE training at Fairchild and the Academy anymore I guess it'll have to be called SRE. Also will I now have to go TDY to Lackland every three years to complete my SERE refresher training that I used to do in one day on every base I've ever been assigned Please check your facts before you write an article.
Maj, SWA
 
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