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Training U.S. Embassy Troops in Djibouti

Photo, caption below.
United States Marine Corps Sgt. Jeremy Gutierrez directs students from the special brigade of the Djiboutian national police during training on a range of topics from basic weapons procedures to room clearing at Camp Lemonier, Djibouti. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer Eric A. Clement
A Marine reservist uses his civilian job skills to train Djiboutian soldiers.
By Senior Airman Sarah Stegman
CJTF-HOA Public Affairs
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CAMP LEMONIER, Djibouti, Jan. 19, 2007
— A group of Djiboutian soldiers wearing worn green camouflage and blue berets emblazed with their country’s emblem reflecting the sunlight burst through a door carrying AK-47s while U.S. Marine Sgt. Jeremy Gutierrez looks on like a proud father watching his son take his first steps.

Members of the Djiboutian Special Brigade are proving to Gutierrez, a reservist from Amarillo, Texas, and currently assigned to the 5th Provisional Security Company, and two of his fellow Marines they understand the techniques they’ve been taught during basic urban and close quarter combat skills.

Twenty soldiers, who are part of the security team for the U.S. Embassy in Djibouti City, went through a three-day, rigorous, down-and-dirty training on topics ranging from basic weapon techniques to room clearing.

“The Embassy found out that I work on the special response team at a nuclear weapons facility in my civilian job and asked if I’d be willing to train the security team,” Gutierrez said. “I jumped at the chance.”

The security team learned basic stances, weapons carries, magazine changes and reloads, transitions from rifle to pistol, and rules of room clearing on the first day alone.

Other topics included open and closed door entries, grenade deployment and team leadership.

Source: CJTF, Jan 19, 2007