Training ARNG FA units for full-spectrum operations.The Marcalastan commander never had led his battery through an urban environment before. Intelligence estimates assured him the town was not a threat and the local MP [military police] battalion had secured the host nation's refueling point in the area. He still felt uneasy as he began to lead the battery convoy through the relatively quiet streets of Marcalan in the fictional country of Marcalastan. He reflected on how his artillery mission had changed. Suddenly, he heard an explosion to the rear of the column, and his SINCGARS SINCGARS Single Channel Ground to Air Radio System (US DoD) SINCGARS Single Channel Ground and Airborne Radio System [single-channel ground and airborne radio system] chirped to life. "Easy 06, IED Noun 1. IED - an explosive device that is improvised I.E.D., improvised explosive device explosive device - device that bursts with sudden violence from internal energy [improvised explosive device Noun 1. improvised explosive device - an explosive device that is improvised I.E.D., IED explosive device - device that bursts with sudden violence from internal energy ] exploded near the XO's [executive officer's] vehicle, and we are being engaged to the rear of the column by small arms fire ... we need to get out of here!" The Field Artillery mission truly is changing. Army National Guard (ARNG) artillery units countrywide are training not only for traditional fire support roles but also to operate as combat support (CS) and combat service support (CSS (1) See Cascading Style Sheets. (2) (Content Scrambling System) The copy protection system applied to DVDs, which uses a 40-bit key to encrypt the movie. ) elements. In addition, they are training in infantry tasks like their active brethren, such as conducting patrols, clearing buildings, conducting vehicle checkpoints and working with the media. This article discusses training the 29th Infantry Division (Light) Artillery (Div Arty) conducted in June 2005 to meet the demands of the contemporary operational environment (COE See common operating environment. ). It provides a framework for other ARNG FA commanders and staffs to develop training for the full-spectrum environment while simultaneously preparing FA units to execute their mission-essential task lists (METLs). Commander's Vision. The division commander established training guidance focused on developing enhanced sections to deploy rapidly. He directed that all subordinate elements develop multifunctional squads and sections. Multifunctional squad training is based on the division's Warrior Task List, a set of individual and collective tasks aimed at preparing a multi-skilled, highly adaptive force. (See Figure 1.) Division units that mobilize must have the skills to adapt to the COE. Road to War. The Div Arty staff developed a Warrior Task evaluation lane training exercise for the 2005 annual training (AT) cycle. The exercise was to include many of the problems deployed units are facing in Southwest Asia. Initial planning began during AT in June 2004. The S2 developed a scenario based on events and operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Div Arty staff planned the scenario while allowing subordinate batteries to continue training on standard METL METL Metal METL Mission Essential Task List METL Molecular Epidemiology and Toxicology Laboratory METL Metals Data Base tasks throughout the balance of that year and AT. The scenario had the batteries taking part in coalition stability and support operations Stability and support operations involve military forces providing safety and support to friendly noncombatants while suppressing and threatening forces. SASO operations can occur in everything from natural disaster areas (earthquakes, storms and flooding) to insurgencies (SASO SASO Saudi Arabian Standards Organization SASO Stability and Support Operations SASO South African Students' Organisation SASO Security And Stability Operations SASO System Approach for Safety Oversight SASO Security and Support Operations SASO Save and Save Often ) in the fictional country of Marcalastan (Virginia ARNG Maneuver Training Center at Fort Pickett). Marcalastan was a fledgling transitional Islamic state in the Persian Gulf region. The country was emerging from a long civil war that saw the rise of a dictator who bankrupted the country and turned on his neighbors. A US-led coalition sanctioned by the UN was sent to intervene and restore democracy and ensure stability in the oil-rich region. An insurgency of Islamic fundamentalists surfaced, bent on destabilizing the new government and installing a Mullah-based theocracy theocracy Government by divine guidance or by officials who are regarded as divinely guided. In many theocracies, government leaders are members of the clergy, and the state's legal system is based on religious law. Theocratic rule was typical of early civilizations. . The Div Arty units' mission was to deploy in support of the Marcalastan Defense Force (MDF (1) (Main Distribution Frame) A wiring rack that connects outside lines with internal lines. It is used to connect public or private lines coming into the building to internal networks. ) in SASO operations and provide the independent peoples of Marcalastan the ability to hold free and fair elections. This scenario forced units that spent most of their time in field environments to train in urban terrain while resolving complex issues, such as civilians on the battlefield, embedded reporters, IEDs, snipers and hostage situations. The training consisted of three lanes with individual and collective tasks evaluated in each lane. (See Figure 2 on Page 36.) The plan was for each firing battery to enter the first lane of the exercise during the AT cycle on its way to conduct firing operations. This allowed better command and control ([C.sup.2]) of the exercise and the availability of headquarters and headquarters battery (HHB HHB Headquarters Battery HHb Deoxyhemoglobin HHB Headquarters & Headquarters Battery HHB Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion HHB Half Human Band (band) HHB Hello Honey Bear ) personnel to support the resource-intensive military operations in urban terrain (MOUT MOUT military operations on urban terrain (US DoD) MOUT Managed Object Under Test ) part of the exercise. Operation Marcalastan Freedom. The exercise was developed in three phases. This development process provided opportunities to train the Div Arty staff, observer/controllers (O/Cs) and the opposing force (OPFOR OPFOR Opposing Force OPFOR Operating Force (US DoD) ). In Phase I, the staff developed the operations order (OPORD OPORD Operation/Operational Order ) in the fall of 2004 and briefed it to the division commander, battalion commanders and their key staff members in January 2005. Attendees were limited to ensure that the plan would maintain some element of surprise and maximize training effectiveness when the training was executed. The briefing included a comprehensive intelligence update by an enthusiastic S2 dressed as an insurgent INSURGENT. One who is concerned in an insurrection. He differs from a rebel in this, that rebel is always understood in a bad sense, or one who unjustly opposes the constituted authorities; insurgent may be one who justly opposes the tyranny of constituted authorities. leader. Attendees received copies of the order and several intelligence summaries and graphics products, such as overlays and satellite images of the area of operations An operational area defined by the joint force commander for land and naval forces. Areas of operation do not typically encompass the entire operational area of the joint force commander, but should be large enough for component commanders to accomplish their missions and protect their (AO) and the MOUT site. This allowed the fairly new Div Arty staff to train on and use the military decision-making process (MDMP MDMP Military Decision-Making Process MDMP Million Dollar Mouthpiece MDMP Mediterranean Dialogue Military Program ). Phase II focused on reconnoitering the training sites at Fort Pickett, selecting and training the OPFOR and the O/Cs, and developing an evaluation checklist and O/C certification. During February and March inactive duty training Authorized training performed by a member of a Reserve Component not on active duty or active duty for training and consisting of regularly scheduled unit training assemblies, additional training assemblies, periods of appropriate duty or equivalent training, and any special additional (IDT IDT Integrated Device Technology, Inc. (Santa Clara, CA, USA) IDT I Don't Think IDT Identity Theft IDT Interrupt Descriptor Table IDT Integrated DNA Technologies IDT Inactive Duty Training IDT Instructional Design & Technology ) weekend drills, the staff established the evaluation criteria the O/Cs were to use during the exercise. The O/Cs selected training sites and visited them to validate the sites' feasibility for the training. These included not only the MOUT site, but also a tactical assembly area An area that is generally out of the reach of light artillery and the location where units make final preparations (pre-combat checks and inspections) and rest, prior to moving to the line of departure. See also assembly area; line of departure. (TAA TAA - Track Average Amplitude ) for combat preparation and a main supply route (MSR MSR Microsoft Research MSR Montserrat (ISO Country code) MSR Mountain Safety Research (outdoor goods manufacturer) MSR Magnetic Stripe Reader MSR Egyptair (ICAO code) ) where units could conduct convoy operations and react to an ambush while mounted. During this phase, the Div Arty tactical operations center A physical groupment of those elements of a general and special staff concerned with the current tactical operations and the tactical support thereof. Also called TOC. See also command post. (TOC) selected and occupied an urban TOC site. This was the first time this group had undertaken this task. Also, the O/Cs and the OPFOR received advanced training in tasks that they would have to observe. O/Cs took classes on reacting to a sniper, convoy operations, room-clearing procedures and IED identification. They then conducted their own rehearsals through each of the lane training sites. Phase II closed with a briefing for the Div Arty commander on the progress of the OPFOR and O/C training as well as revisions to the operations concept based on lessons learned during the rehearsals. In May, the staff executed Phase III, a dress rehearsal to certify the O/Cs and refine the MOUT site operation. Test convoys consisting of O/Cs and senior leaders rode through each lane, allowing the OPFOR and O/Cs to rehearse their assignments. The O/Cs and OPFOR used multiple-integrated laser engagement system (MILES) gear and blank ammunition. During this phase, the TAA NCO-in-charge (NCOIC NCOIC Non-Commissioned Officer in Charge (military) NCOIC Network Centric Operations Industry Consortium ) established his TAA position and the test convoy entered the TAA. The convoy then moved to the MOUT site and rehearsed the MOUT lane. The OPFOR attacked, and the unit practiced battle drills. Then the convoy assembled and conducted a tactical march to the MSR lane. The MSR officer-in-charge (OIC "Oh, I see." See digispeak. (chat) OIC - oh, I see. ) prepared the lane and executed the OPFOR's attack on the convoy. The participants conducted an after-action review (AAR Aar, river: see Aare. ) for each training site and identified improvements. The test convoy then moved back to the MOUT site and rehearsed the lane a final time, incorporating lessons learned in the AAR. The Div Arty Commander then certified the O/Cs. Full-Spectrum Operations. During AT05, the Div Arty task organized into three FA battalions and an attached Air Defense Artillery Weapons and equipment for actively combating air targets from the ground. Also called ADA. (ADA Ada, city, United States Ada (ā`ə), city (1990 pop. 15,820), seat of Pontotoc co., S central Okla.; inc. 1904. It is a large cattle market and the center of a rich oil and ranch area. ) battalion. These units came from Massachusetts, Maryland and Virginia. The four-day exercise began on the third day of AT. A battalion (less its headquarters battery) cycled through the three evaluated lanes each day--taking about six hours for each battery to complete the entire course. Units arrived at the TAA at a prescribed time based on a movement order the Div Arty TOC issued. The TAA NCOIC and the two designated ride-along O/Cs met the unit. In addition, an embedded reporter and cameraman played by Soldiers from the division's public affairs office (PAO PAO Peak acid output, see there ) were assigned to the batteries. These Soldiers replicated 24-hour media coverage. The reporters also were integral in causing stress on the leaders and testing their abilities to maintain control of the situations. Once the commander and his staff settled the battery into the TAA and the section chiefs began their pre-combat routine, the NCOIC briefed them on the enemy situation. He then issued an OPORD directing the battery to convoy in an administrative column to a firing point to support the upcoming elections. According to the scenario, the battery was to use the firing point as a center from which to project force against the insurgency while reassuring the population that it was safe. To get to the firing point, the unit went to a fueling point operated by a host nation contractor in the town of Hafira al-Batina. The unit's headquarters issued the movement order that would take them to the MOUT site. The O/Cs called pause of exercise (PAUSEX PAUSEX Pause of Exercise ) and conducted an AAR on observations of the unit's preparations in the TAA. For command and control purposes, the Div Arty established its TOC in the MOUT site's central building, which also was the tallest facility. During intelligence briefings, units were advised that this was a mosque and off limits as well as a no-fire area (NFA NFA - Finite State Machine ). From the mosque, the TOC managed the flow of the scenario and developed the situation to maximize the exercise's training potential. The S2 directed the OPFOR cell from atop the mosque. The batteries were told that he was the insurgent leader, distinguished by his traditional headdress headdress, head covering or decoration, protective or ceremonial, which has been an important part of costume since ancient times. Its style is governed in general by climate, available materials, religion or superstition, and the dictates of fashion. . Being in the mosque, he was protected from direct fire. From this vantage point, he directed the friendly and hostile civilian population in the town and maneuvered his OPFOR cells to engage the battery at key points, attempting to exploit the battery's weaknesses. Civilians moved throughout the town and interacted with the Soldiers. Some were hostile, while others offered key information when approached by the troops. Roaming civilians met the battery in the streets as it entered the town and attempted to navigate the main road. The key to operations at the MOUT site was realism. This meant that there was trash in the streets, rusted vehicle hulks on the roadside and Islamic chants and music playing over loud speakers in the MOUT village. This raised the Soldiers' awareness and stress levels. As the convoy approached the town, an MP met the battery commander and advised him the town was safe and they should proceed to the fueling point. The trigger for the OPFOR to engage the entire column was the first vehicle's reaching the fueling point. At the head of the convoy, a simple toy rocket engine on a fishing line running across the street was followed by a series of pyrotechnic blasts to signify a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG (Report Program Generator) One of the first program generators designed for business reports, introduced in 1964 by IBM. In 1970, RPG II added enhancements that made it a mainstay programming language for business applications on IBM's System/3x midrange computers. ) attack on one of the vehicles. The O/Cs immediately rendered the vehicle inoperable and designated casualties. From the mosque, the insurgent leader initiated IED blasts to the center of the column while snipers from the surrounding buildings engaged Soldiers. A small roving OPFOR team attacked the rear of the column while the O/Cs evaluated the commander's ability to gain situational awareness, report to his higher headquarters and develop the situation on the ground. The culminating point of the lane was clearing a building occupied by a sniper and rescuing an American hostage. PAUSEX was called when the unit had established a security perimeter and was beginning to call in reinforcements and evacuate casualties. An AAR was conducted over a sand table where battery commanders and key leaders walked through and discussed their actions at the MOUT site. The batteries then were issued a movement order to take them along an MSR to their final destination. Units reached the last lane along a route of march through an unblocked ambush. The OPFOR used pyrotechnics, smoke, flares and M249 squad automatic weapons (SAWs) to engage the moving column. The O/Cs evaluated the battery on its ability to return fire, send a situation report (SITREP SITREP Situation Report ) to the battalion, treat casualties and quickly clear the kill zone. The O/Cs again conducted an AAR after the exercise. Lessons Learned. The tasks of full-spectrum operations are inherently difficult to perform, especially for a unit whose primary task has been delivering indirect fires and has had relatively limited training opportunities. ARNG units preparing to deploy to Southwest Asia must focus on the skills necessary to increase survivability sur·viv·a·ble adj. 1. Capable of surviving: survivable organisms in a hostile environment. 2. That can be survived: a survivable, but very serious, illness. and combat effectiveness in the COE. This means there must be a balance between METL tasks and critical individual and collective tasks, such as those on the 29th Division's Warrior Task List. We learned several lessons during this exercise that could help other units with their training. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] * Close quarters operations, such as those conducted in urban settings, require an enhanced ability to maintain situational awareness and open communications between all elements of an organization. Key leaders must develop the capacity to remain calm in the heat of combat, accept and process information as it is made available and learn to make lifesaving decisions quickly. These skills can be honed only through repetition. A leader must develop the ability to react intuitively to the situation and apply the measured response. He only can develop this capacity when exposed to several training events that stress the senses and test decisiveness. * Batteries must rely on junior leaders. A battery scattered throughout a city might need to conduct multiple levels of operations simultaneously. While the front of the column is conducting refueling operations, the center could be involved in a fire fight as the rear conducts building clearing operations. The battery commander must be able to establish an operations center on the fly from which he can orchestrate the response, but he also must rely on his junior leaders to develop the situation. Successful batteries relied heavily on motivated junior officers and NCOs who demonstrated their initiatives to solve problems. Strategically placed throughout the convoy, these individuals returned fire, established a perimeter, consolidated forces and executed an immediate plan to repel hostile forces. The key to any ambush scenario is to return fire immediately and clear the kill zone. It is the junior NCO NCO abbr. noncommissioned officer NCO noncommissioned officer NCO n abbr (Mil) (= noncommissioned officer) → Uffz. or lieutenant who gets his Soldiers up and moving toward hostile fire, movement that is counterintuitive coun·ter·in·tu·i·tive adj. Contrary to what intuition or common sense would indicate: "Scientists made clear what may at first seem counterintuitive, that the capacity to be pleasant toward a fellow creature is ... to human survival instinct. * The most junior Soldier must understand the operation. It is key that every Soldier in the battery understand the operation and actions on the objective and be able to conduct the mission if he is the last Soldier standing. Often the private pulling security in the TAA is overlooked and not briefed on the operation or the area in which he is being deployed. Thus he does not fully understand what he is to face or what the rules of engagement (ROE) are. Without this understanding, he might fire on the mosque or be inhospitable to the locals or inconsiderate in·con·sid·er·ate adj. 1. Thoughtless of others; displaying a lack of consideration. 2. Not well considered or carefully thought out; ill-advised. of the embedded reporter. Units operating in foreign areas must be sensitive to the people's culture and traditions. A Soldier's misjudgment mis·judge v. mis·judged, mis·judg·ing, mis·judg·es v.tr. To judge wrongly. v.intr. To be wrong in judging. can have far-reaching political consequences and severely hamper the battery's mission and the world's perception of the United States' efforts. The training event was a huge success overall and inspired battery commanders to find alternate methods to train their units on key individual and collective Warrior Tasks. Increasingly, ARNG FA units find themselves parking most (or all) of their howitzers and picking up their rifles to support humanitarian operations or non-governmental organization (NGO NGO abbr. nongovernmental organization Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government nongovernmental organization ) missions. They must prepare now to conduct full-spectrum operations in the COE. Lieutenant Colonel Steven T. Scott is the Executive Officer (XO) of the 29th Infantry Division (Light) Artillery in the Virginia Army National Guard Major Scott F. Bartlett is the S4 for the 29th Division Artillery in the Virginia ARNG in Sandston. He also has served as the Plans and Operations Officer for 1-246 FA and commanded B/1-246 FA. He has held several fire support positions with the 2-110 FA in the Maryland ARNG. He is a Technical Director for ManTech International Corporation in Chantilly, supporting voice and data networks for the US Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM USSOUTHCOM United States Southern Command ). By Lieutenant Colonel Steven T. Scott and Major Scott F. Bartlett Urban Movement * React to a sniper. * Conduct tactical movement in urban terrain. * Breach obstacle. * Prepare for combat. * React to ambush. Conduct Casualty Evacuation (CASEVAC) * Treat casualties. * Evacuate a casualty. * Request medical evacuation. Nuclear, Biological and Chemical (NBC) Survival * Decontaminate self and individual equipment. * Protect self from a chemical/biological agent with mask. * React to a chemical/biological hazard. * Protect self from NBC injury with mission-oriented protective posture (MOPP) gear. Traffic Control Operations * Operate a checkpoint. * Conduct patrols and squad movements. * Conduct a tactical movement. * Navigate point to point dismounted. Convoy Operations * Defend convoy elements. * Plan convoy security operations. * Navigate point to point mounted. Figure 1: 29th Infantry Division Warrior Task List. This list is the basis for training multifunctional squads. Lane I: Tactical Assembly Area (TAA) ** Occupy an assembly area.* ** Establish a TAA. ** Prepare for combat.* ** Issue an operations order (OPORD). ** Work with an embedded reporter. ** Conduct tactical movement.* Lane II: Military Operations in Urban Terrain (MOUT) ** Conduct tactical movement in urban terrain.* ** React to an improvised explosive device (IED).* ** React to sniper.* ** Conduct CASEVAC. (Treat casualties.*) ** Clear a building.* Lane III: Main Supply Route (MSR) Operations ** Establish and protect an MSR. ** React to an unblocked ambush.* ** Fire from a moving vehicle.* Figure 2: Individual and Collective Tasks Performed During Warrior Task Lane Training. Tasks with an asterisk were evaluated. |
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