5 minute read

Clemson ROTC Cadets Sink and Swim in Water Survival Test

By Ken Scar

108th Training Command (IET) Public Affairs

Advertisement

CLEMSON, S.C. — More than sixty future Army Reserve, Guard and active duty officers in the Clemson University Reserve Officer Training Corps “Fighting Tigers Battalion” were tested on their stamina and personal courage with the Combat Water Survival Test (CWST) in the Fike Recreation Center pool Jan. 29.

“This is my favorite exercise that we do,” said cadet Sara Fedyschyn, a senior from Kings Mountain, North Carolina who is enrolled in the Simultaneous Membership Program, in which she participates in both Army Reserve training and ROTC at the same time. Fedyschyn and her fellow seniors were conducting the drills as a part of their leadership training.

“This is good stuff! This kind of training teaches me a lot,” said Dwaney Mills, an Army Reserve cadet from Rock Hill, South Carolina studying criminal justice, adding that he fully expects to apply the lessons learned during these ROTC training exercises to his Army Reserve unit once he graduates.

Mills spent the afternoon alongside a few dozen of his fellow cadets being submerged, dunked, blindfolded and generally

tormented by Fedyschyn and the seniors – but all for a good reason.

The CWST is designed to

A Clemson University Reserve Officers Training Corps cadet steps off a five-meter diving board, blindfolded, during the Combat Water Survival Test in the Fike Recreation Center Jan. 29, 2015. The CWST evaluates each cadet’s stamina in water and their ability to complete three stations while wearing a uniform. Passing the events helps ensure they have the fundamental water survival skills necessary to lead Soldiers in a hostile environment where there’s water. Photo by Sgt. Ken Scar, 108th Training Command (IET), Public Affairs

see CLEMSON ROTC page 42

evaluate each cadet’s stamina in water and their ability to complete three stations while wearing a uniform. Passing the events helps ensure cadets have the fundamental water survival skills necessary to lead Soldiers in a hostile environment where there’s water.

First, the cadets had to swim laps for 10 minutes without touching the sides or bottom of the pool. After a five-minute break, they must tread water for five minutes under the same rules. The pool’s lap lanes looked like glass pans full of tadpoles as the cadets bobbed and swam laps en masse, keeping themselves afloat and away from the sides by any means possible.

Next came the three events with full gear on:

In the “equipment ditch,” cadets had to wear a tactical vest and hold an M-16 rifle while stepping backward into the water. They are required to submerge completely and remove the vest and weapon before resurfacing. This was Fedychyn’s station, where she would calmly brief each cadet while holding a line attached to their M-16, which made it easy to retrieve from the bottom of the pool. She looked like a fisherman using the strangest bait ever as each cadet launched backwards into the water.

The next event was a 15-meter swim carrying an M-16 without touching the sides or bottom of the pool. The senior graders would walk alongside the swimmers as they kicked sideways through the water, holding the weapon up with one arm.

The last event was the five-meter drop, widely considered the most nerve-wracking. For this part of the CWST, cadets are blindfolded and guided off a five-meter diving board carrying an M-16. In order to pass, the cadet must keep hold of the weapon upon hitting the water, take off the blindfold, and return to the side of the pool with the weapon still in hand.

Some of the cadets were more gung-ho about this exercise than others, but they all hit the water like a depth charge, some of them plunging deep enough to touch the Clemson Tiger paw painted on the bottom of the pool. Completing each of the tasks in the CWST is a matter of handling anxiety without panicking; testing each cadet’s ability to stay controlled and complete each task despite their fears. On this day, they were all successful.

The Clemson ROTC program was established as an integral part of the academic curriculum in 1893. It offers a general military subject curriculum, producing officers for a wide variety of assignments.

At present, both the two-year and four-year programs are offered as a part of the Army ROTC curriculum. This curriculum is a viable academic career program for both men and women students who desire entry into the Army Reserve, Army National Guard or active Army as a Commissioned Officer.

A Clemson University Reserve Officers Training Corps cadet hits the water after stepping off a five-meter diving board blindfolded during the Combat Water Survival Test in the Fike Athletic Center Jan. 29, 2015. The CWST evaluates each cadet’s stamina in water and their ability to complete three stations while wearing a uniform. Passing the events helps ensure they have the fundamental water survival skills necessary to lead Soldiers in a hostile environment where there’s water. Photo by Sgt. Ken Scar, 108th Training Command (IET), Public Affairs

A Clemson University Reserve Officers Training Corps cadet prepares to do the “equipment ditch” portion of the Combat Water Survival Test in the Fike Recreation Center Jan. 29, 2015. The CWST evaluates each cadet’s stamina in water and their ability to complete three stations while wearing a uniform. Passing the events helps ensure they have the fundamental water survival skills necessary to lead Soldiers in a hostile environment where there’s water. Photo by Sgt. Ken Scar, 108th Training Command (IET), Public Affairs

This article is from: