Courage
Ready
by U.S. Army Capt. Richard Packer
July 10, 2018
The execution phases of America’s First Corps’ exercise Courage
Ready 18-01 began with an emergency deployment readiness exercise
for Soldiers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington.
The
Soldiers traveled here to participate in realistic combat training
intentionally complicated by distance from home station and
unfamiliar terrain.
The Courage Ready training series’
inaugural exercise focused on 7th Infantry Division Soldiers
assigned to 2nd Battalion, 1st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Stryker
Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division who were hosted by U.S.
Army Alaska and our 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry Regiment, 1st
Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division while training
in Interior Alaska.
“This readiness exercise strengthened
America’s First Corps' readiness by deploying a company into an
unfamiliar environment and integrating them rapidly in support of
another battalion's operations,” said Maj. Cheyne Parham, the
America’s First Corps future operations planner. “This was an
opportunity for units from JBLM and Alaska to reinforce our
capabilities and also improve from the individual to the company and
battalion through a challenging mission set.”
The most
planning intensive and physically demanding quality repetitions of
Courage Ready 18-01 were two company-sized night air assault
missions within a four-day period. The first attack included a
seven-kilometer dismounted movement through wild Alaska; the second
attack’s dismounted movement was about two kilometers through
hillier terrain.
For each, CH-47 Chinook helicopters piloted
by 7th ID aviators stationed at Fort Wainwright with 1st Battalion,
52nd Aviation Regiment, 16th Combat Aviation Brigade transported the
2-1 IN Legionnaires.
Attack Company, 2-1 IN’s Spc. Javier
Torres participated in the exercise and described an experience
where he had to look out for an injured fellow team leader.
“After the enemy hit us with chemical weapons, we put on our pro[tective]
masks and got back in the fight,” said Torres. “That’s when Sergeant
Toves was shot.”
Two 7th Infantry Division NCOs assigned to 2nd Battalion, 1st
Infantry Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry
Division, Staff Sgt. Brady Spencer, flanked by Sgt. Andrew Phillips,
fire on enemy positions while wearing protective masks after a
simulated chemical attack as part of the inaugural America's First
Corps exercise Courage Ready 18-01 hosted by U.S. Army Alaska on
U.S. Army Garrison-Alaska training lands near Fort Greely, Alaska,
April 22, 2018. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Richard Packer)
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Sgt. Antonio Toves became a notional casualty after an
observer/controller, Soldiers who provide administrative control,
evaluate task performance and provide constructive feedback, gave
him a card assigning a head wound requiring at least initial combat
lifesaver-level treatment and evacuation.
“We were still in
the middle of a fight. Me and another guy got Sergeant Toves behind
cover and bandaged his head,” continued Torres. “I knew the rest of
the platoon needed to know the status of our teams, so I used
Sergeant Toves’ radio to call up a [situation report], left him with
a battle buddy, and continued mission.”
According to Maj.
Josh Daily, 7th Infantry Division future operations and training
officer, the challenges presented by the environment at U.S. Army
Garrison-Alaska’s Donnelly Training Area cannot be replicated
anywhere in the state of Washington and very few places worldwide.
“The effects of the terrain on dismounted and mounted movement,
the difference in hours of darkness and daylight, and the
environmental effects on communication, just to name a few of the
myriad factors unique to this area,” said Daily, “all combine to
pose a serious test that stresses all members of the unit from the
commander down to the most junior rifleman.”
“To deploy here
rapidly and plan and execute a company-level offensive operation is
to experience a blunt reiteration of the importance of discipline in
planning and execution.”
Donnelly Training Area, part of the
1.5 million acres of maneuver land in the Joint Pacific Alaska Range
Complex, includes an intermediate staging base, artillery and
weapons ranges, a combined arms combat training facility, simulated
villages, etc., all spread across 567,734 acres of light maneuver
and 87,457 acres of heavy maneuver training areas.
“JPARC
integrates all domains: land, air, sea, space and cyber. That
coupled with the extreme environments in Alaska afford us truly
unique training opportunities that simply can’t be replicated
anywhere else in the Department of Defense,” said Col. Mark Colbrook,
USARAK’s deputy commander - sustainment. “During the winter we train
in the dark and extreme cold when we have to slow down, be extremely
methodical in our execution and really focus on learning to not only
survive, but to thrive, fight and win at 20, 30, even 50 degrees
below zero.”
“Summer is the just opposite. We have moderate
temperatures and 20+ hours of daylight, we can get rep after quality
rep in all day long to ensure we absolutely master the fundamentals
of warfighting.”
Speaking of future Courage Ready rotations,
Parham sees America’s First Corps units with 25th Infantry Division
in Hawaii participating in the no notice/limited notice emergency
deployment training as well.
“While this exercise involved
Soldiers from JBLM and Alaska, future iterations will include
Soldiers from Hawaii into the rotation.”
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