Space Industry and Business News  
New Strategy Means New Training Plan

Soldiers from B Co., 4-9 Infantry train in Leschi Town during "Cascadian Commitment" in December. Scheduled to deploy to Iraq in May, the unit will now leave one month earlier. Photo by Jason Kaye.
by Don Kramer
Fort Lewis "Northwest Guardian"
Fort Lewis, WA (AFNS) Jan 23, 2007
The new strategy announced last week by President Bush forces a minor adjustment that will have a major impact on the next Fort Lewis Stryker brigade scheduled to deploy to Iraq. But the change will have no effect on the readiness of the Soldiers or their ability to perform their new missions, according to a spokesman for the brigade speaking at a press conference Jan. 11 at I Corps Headquarters.

"We were previously planning to go in May 2007," said 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, executive officer, Maj. Jim Brown. "Now we're going in April. That's not a significant change."

Neither has the primary mission changed - secure the cities to foster political and economic progress in Iraq. However, the slight adjustment in the timetable drives a significant change in the training plan.

The Dragoon Raider Brigade will now conduct its predeployment certification exercise, originally programmed for next month at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif., on Fort Lewis instead. Brown acknowledged the "great benefit (NTC) adds to a unit ... with the world-class opposing forces, the observer/controllers and the knowledge and experience they bring, and the facilities they have. It's one-stop shopping."

Without the benefit of a trip to NTC, the brigade will work to recreate the same training intensity in familiar surroundings, drawing on fresh lessons of a field exercise called "Cascadian Commitment."

The brigade on Dec. 13 completed the 10-day FTX that used Fort Lewis as a surrogate Iraqi city.

Brigade public affairs officer, Capt. Mike Garcia, said the exercise used the intrinsic "frictions" of moving among the daily activities of a large installation to produce logistical stresses to inform the tactical scenarios. Performing missions around daily traffic and a host of civilian workers and family members helped to create the kinds of realistic challenges Dragoon Soldiers will face in Iraq's urban settings.

As with that exercise, the next one will again be heavily supported by the community, Brown said, but augmented by outside agencies to evaluate performance.

"We're in discussions with the Joint Readiness Center at Fort Polk to bring their observer/controllers up here and assist us," said the executive officer. "So, it will not be exactly the same (as NTC), but we'll try as closely as possible to replicate those conditions."

Brown said the staff has already started communicating its last-minute training and equipment needs to higher headquarters.

When pressed about whether the so-called "surge" might be pushing the unit into theater before it was ready, Brown was adamant about the brigade's collective preparedness.

"It's always something we've known was going to happen. We knew we were going to deploy, so we've had a long time to prepare for it, both physically through our training, but more important mentally - yourself, your unit, your family members. I feel very confident we've done everything we could possibly do to prepare ourselves and our Soldiers for deployment."

Meanwhile, the brigade commander, Col. Jon Lehr, left with key senior leaders the same morning for a previously scheduled in-theater reconnaissance trip. When they return, the training staff will integrate their observations into the final exercise.

The 4,000 Soldiers of 4th Bde., 2nd Inf. Div., make up the fifth and best-outfitted Stryker brigade to deploy to Iraq. They will be the first to employ in a combat zone all 10 variants of Stryker vehicles, including the two newest - the mobile gun system and the nuclear, biological, chemical reconnaissance vehicle. They will also take the Land Warrior System that Brown said "provides a level of situational awareness to the individual Soldier at the fire team level that has been dreamed of for years but is finally coming true."

Despite the shortened lead time, Brown said the Soldiers, NCOs and officers are ready.

"The Dragoon Raider Brigade is fully manned, equipped and ready for deployment," Brown said. "The senior officers and noncommissioned officers in the brigade, who have served the Army for many years, including multiple combat tours, agree this is the best-trained unit they've ever led. Our Soldiers have extensive training in maneuver, live-fire, Arabic language and culture."

The brigade has invested considerable time and money to train Soldiers in basic Arabic as well as customs and courtesies. "Language-enabled Soldiers" are scattered throughout the brigade to assist 4th Bde., 2nd Inf. Div., leaders down to the small-unit level.

Related Links
The latest in Military Technology for the 21st century at SpaceWar.com
The latest in Military Technology for the 21st century at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


New Details Of First Major Urban Battle Emerge
Chicago IL (SPX) Jan 18, 2007
New details in the tragic end of one of the world's earliest cities as well as clues about how urban life may have begun there were revealed in a recent excavation in northeastern Syria that was conducted by the University of Chicago and the Syrian Department of Antiquities.







  • New Damage And Bad Weather Delay Asian Internet Repairs
  • Asia Turns To Time-Tested Solution For Damaged Internet Cables
  • Chinese Web Could Remain Slow Until Late January
  • 10000 Chinese Domain Names Vanish Amid Web Chaos

  • Russia To Stop Spacecraft Launches From Far East In 2007
  • SpaceX Delays Launch, Faces New Problems With Static Fire Test
  • Sea Launch Prepares For NSS-8 Mission
  • Launch Window To Open At Poker Flat Research Range

  • Lockheed Martin And Boeing Form Strategic Alliance To Promote Next-Gen Air Transportation System
  • Time to test the Guardian Missile Defense System For Commercial Aircraft
  • Operational Testing And Evaluation Of Guardian Commercial Airline Anti-Missile System Begins
  • USGS Examines Environmental Impacts Of Aircraft De-Icers

  • Boeing And US Air Force Demonstrate Advanced Airborne Networking First
  • Raytheon To Be Prime Contractor On Radar Common Data Link Program
  • Northrop Grumman Awarded Contract To Implement More Efficient Way to Support B-2 Bomber
  • New Land Warrior And Mounted Warrior Systems Digitize The Battlefield

  • New Approaches For Producing Large Composite Structures
  • Raytheon Awarded Contract for Early Warning Radars Sustainment
  • Northrop Grumman Supplies TouchTable Technology to CNN's 'The Situation Room'
  • LISA Pathfinder Spacecraft Test Phase About To Start

  • Northrop Grumman Appoints Joseph Ensor Vice President Of Surveillance And Remote Sensing
  • Swedish Space Corporation Appoints New CEO
  • Solar Night Industries Announces Expansion into Colorado
  • Ascent Solar Hires Vice President of Business Development

  • Chairman Reacts to National Academies' Earth Science and Applications Assessment
  • Egypt Plans First Remote Sensing Satellite
  • Japanese Government Initiates Space-Borne Hyperspectral Payload Program
  • US Climate Satellites Imperiled By Low Federal Funding Say EO Scientists

  • Russian Glonass Navigation System Available To India
  • Stolen GPS Lead Police To Thieves
  • NATO Awards GIS Data Preparation Contract To TENET With Support From Galdos And IIC
  • ESA Chief Says Galileo Test Problems Are Being Fixed

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement