Back to Focus

SF Soldiers lend expertise to drug task force

Guard Soldiers, local law enforcement team up for training

Pierce County Sheriff’s Deputy Mike Cooke, who works in Gig Harbor, takes a knee during land navigation training conducted in heavy underbrush on Joint Base Lewis-McChord. /J.M. Simpson

Email Article Print Article Share on Facebook Share on Reddit Share on StumbleUpon

Standing in a patch of tall grass and brush, Mike Cooke looked at his compass, checked his map and headed off in a northwesterly direction.

His objective - which was a red topped, white post - was more than 1,300 meters away.

Lucky us, I thought, this was no walk in the park.  

Luck, though, had nothing to do with our task. Cooke had first used a small map, a smaller protractor and a plastic, pink-tipped pencil to decipher the map coordinates.

With that done, he used his lensactic compass to take an azimuth reading, found true north and then figured out the direction we needed to move to find the post.

Our heading: 343 degrees.  

All we had to do to reach the objective was navigate over hilly and bramble clogged terrain while keeping an eye on the compass heading. A degree or two off, and we could spend the better part of the day finding our objective. In other words, we could get lost.

"I'm pretty sure we're moving in the right direction," Cooke said as we half walked, half slid down the steep and frost-covered side of a hill on a training range located in the middle of nowhere at Joint Base Lewis-McChord. "The instruction we've received in land navigation has been great, and I'm confident we're headed in the right direction."

As a deputy with the Pierce County Sheriff's Department working in the Gig Harbor/Key Peninsula area, Cooke is also part of the department's Metro Lab Team.

The lab team's purpose is to respond to, process and obtain evidence from all actual and suspected clandestine laboratories within their jurisdiction.

That's easier said than done.

"Much of the territory we work in my area is remote.  It is heavily wooded, sparsely populated and easy to hide in," Cooke explained.

In other words, it sounds like a great place to set up a drug operation.

"It is," Cooke said.  "Finding these places can be a bit challenging."

That challenge, however, is getting easier - much easier - to meet.

"These 15 law enforcement officials from a number of localities came to us and asked to take the three-day course we offer in land navigation," Sergeant Bob explained.

Bob (whose last name is not being used due to operational security) is an Army Special Forces Soldier attached to the Washington National Guard's Counter Drug Task Force.

Established by Congressional order in 1988 and headquartered at Camp Murray, the task force provides training to law enforcement and community based counter drug operations at the local, state and federal levels.

An integral component of the training involves Special Forces Soldiers and the advanced skill sets they possess.  

"Building rapport with outside agencies through teaching is big with Special Forces," the sergeant added with a smile. "We bring value added to the Counter Drug Task Force and the local agencies involved."

During the course, U.S. Marshalls, deputy sheriffs, Department of Corrections officers and local police officers took advantage of the task force's offer to learn and practice land navigation.They learned how to read a map, use a protractor, take a compass reading, develop a pace count and then navigate to an objective during the day and at night.

"These guys came in motivated," Bob continued.  "They haven't let down once, and yesterday was a 13-hour day for them."

Four hours and a handful of minutes later, Cooke and I found ourselves back at the start point. He had successfully navigated the course without getting lost.

"I can see the practicality of the course the Guard offers," he said. "It sharpens my skills as a patrol officer and as a member of the lab team."

Read next close

Veterans

Vietnamese, U.S. veterans celebrate Tet

comments powered by Disqus