US Air Force Conducts Large-Scale Urban Eviction Training in San Francisco
In a bizarre exercise, the US Air Force transformed San Francisco into a mock battleground, pitting its personnel against a range of law enforcement agencies and military units playing the role of enemy forces. The event, dubbed "Exercise Sourdough," brought together over 150 personnel from the Department of War to sharpen their Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) skills in an urban environment.
The operation, which took place from December 8 to 11, involved 40 airmen inserted into downtown San Francisco for a grueling 72-hour period. Their mission was to evade capture while being hunted by teams of opposition forces, including the city's Sheriff's Office, the US Coast Guard, SWAT officers, and other military squads.
The airmen were tasked with using limited resources to survive in the urban jungle, with instructions modeled after real-life communications used in actual evasion scenarios. For example, one instruction advised them to approach a black vehicle with a specific license plate, flash headlights once, and then open the trunk to extract an overnight bag and depart without talking to anyone.
The results were impressive, with only five of the 11 teams being caught by law enforcement agencies. The success rate was attributed to the realism of the exercise, which provided valuable training for both the airmen and the participating law enforcement agencies.
"The training value cannot be understated," said Master Sgt. Jeremy Campbell. "There are few frameworks of this magnitude within the Department of War."
The event marked an important milestone in the development of SERE skills among US Air Force personnel, who will now face increasingly complex urban evasion scenarios in the future. As one participant noted, the exercise provided a unique opportunity for both the airmen and law enforcement agencies to train together, sharing best practices and gaining valuable insight into each other's tactics.
With its high-stakes scenario and impressive participation from multiple law enforcement agencies, "Exercise Sourdough" demonstrated the commitment of the US Air Force to developing effective Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) skills in an urban environment. The results will undoubtedly have a lasting impact on the future of military training.
In a bizarre exercise, the US Air Force transformed San Francisco into a mock battleground, pitting its personnel against a range of law enforcement agencies and military units playing the role of enemy forces. The event, dubbed "Exercise Sourdough," brought together over 150 personnel from the Department of War to sharpen their Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) skills in an urban environment.
The operation, which took place from December 8 to 11, involved 40 airmen inserted into downtown San Francisco for a grueling 72-hour period. Their mission was to evade capture while being hunted by teams of opposition forces, including the city's Sheriff's Office, the US Coast Guard, SWAT officers, and other military squads.
The airmen were tasked with using limited resources to survive in the urban jungle, with instructions modeled after real-life communications used in actual evasion scenarios. For example, one instruction advised them to approach a black vehicle with a specific license plate, flash headlights once, and then open the trunk to extract an overnight bag and depart without talking to anyone.
The results were impressive, with only five of the 11 teams being caught by law enforcement agencies. The success rate was attributed to the realism of the exercise, which provided valuable training for both the airmen and the participating law enforcement agencies.
"The training value cannot be understated," said Master Sgt. Jeremy Campbell. "There are few frameworks of this magnitude within the Department of War."
The event marked an important milestone in the development of SERE skills among US Air Force personnel, who will now face increasingly complex urban evasion scenarios in the future. As one participant noted, the exercise provided a unique opportunity for both the airmen and law enforcement agencies to train together, sharing best practices and gaining valuable insight into each other's tactics.
With its high-stakes scenario and impressive participation from multiple law enforcement agencies, "Exercise Sourdough" demonstrated the commitment of the US Air Force to developing effective Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) skills in an urban environment. The results will undoubtedly have a lasting impact on the future of military training.