Marines at MWTC — founded in 1951, near the height of the Korean War — learn skills like mountain survival, assault climbing, and scout skiing to name just a few.
The MWTC is just to the north of Yosemite National Park, high in the Sierra Nevada ...
Here's an overhead view of the Center ...
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad“The Turkey, Iraq, Iran borders look exactly like this place. The same stuff. It has real-world application for training,” said academics director Steve Gardner.
Conducting military operations in this environment presents a host of unique challenges.
The insignia for the MWTC's range control personnel — call sign "White Peak" — shows some of the most basic tools a Marine needs to fight on an alpine battlefield.
At the MWTC, Marines learn how to fight in deep snow ...
... and operate weaponry under intense conditions.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdSome trainees go on long winter treks in the high Sierra with weapons in tow.
Marines also learn how to get around on snow mobiles, as well as a squat-looking all-terrain tracked vehicle called the Bandvagn 206.
The military nomenclature for this vehicle is small unit support vehicle.
The Marines who use it to scramble over the hardscrabble landscape simply call it Big Foot.
There are lower-tech and more time-honored ways of getting around a mountain battlefield — pack animals are a big part of the MWTC's program as well.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMWTC is one of the only facilities in the US Department of Defense that teaches extensive horsemanship ...
It's a time-tested skill essential to moving people and goods around mountain ranges.
Even today, Marines could still face situations where there's just no replacement for a strong pack animal.
A look at some Marine-level horsemanship equipment.
Some of the Marine Corps' most legendary campaigns, like the Korean War's battle of the Chosin Reservoir, were fought in alpine conditions. The MWTC's Legacy Hut showcases the history and the equipment of the Marine Corps' modern-era mountain fighters.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdTroops still have to negotiate the mountains with tools like snow shoes, ice picks, and ropes. Any Marine who wants to specialize in mountain warfare has to master all of this equipment.
They have to know how to evacuate injured soldiers by sleigh ...
... and negotiate alpine battlefields by ski.
Here's what modern-day trainees at the MWTC look like in full alpine gear.
The MWTC was founded in 1951, not long after the US entered the war in the mountainous Korean Peninsula. The Chosin Reservoir campaign of 1950, in which a vastly outnumbered detachment of Marines survived an enemy encirclement in alpine terrain and rescued a stranded UN force, is now the stuff of Marine Corps legend.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdToday, the Center prepares Marines for deployment to places like Norway, where the Corps has a large pre-positioned weapons stock. It also helped train Marines for the mountain battlefields in Afghanistan. Here's the MWTC's entirely appropriate insignia, depicting a Marine on skis.
The MWTC teaches skills unique to a mountain environment — like repelling down steep cliff faces ...
... pulling heavy loads by sleigh ...
... and engaging in high-altitude assaults.
Some skills remain consistent regardless of the terrain — like marksmanship.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMarines receive thorough firearms training ...
... and learn how to maintain and operate their weaponry in a punishing cold-weather environment.
Another shot from the range ...
... where Marines work towards total accuracy, regardless of the rigors of battlefield conditions.
Here's a row of barracks at the Center.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad... and the inside of the Center's non-denominational chapel.
Here's a solar power array near the barracks. The MWTC is one of the Corps' most isolated posts, forcing it to be as off-grid and self-sustaining as possible.
The training at the MWTC is difficult, and includes mountain climbing and skiing exercises, and study in mountain warfare doctrine and theory. But at least the Marines get some of the most spectacular views in the entire US military.
Through all the rigorous cold-weather training, the views of the Sierra Nevada are jaw-dropping.
Executive Officer Lieutenant Colonel Juan J. Moreno sums up his program in no uncertain terms. “There’s a baseline that’s required to survive in this harsh environment. But we have to take it beyond survival. We have to achieve military objectives. We have to thrive. That’s what we do with every unit. This place has definitely affected my life and changed the way I think about the world.”
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdYou've seen the Mountain Warfare Training Center ...