Military
Police Train During Operation Blue Shield
by U.S. Army Reserve Sgt. Jameson
Crabtree November 5, 2018
After several days of training, U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers were
tested on battle drills as part of Operation Blue Shield at Fort
McCoy, Wisconsin in August 2018.
Each year, Operation Blue
Shield trains between 1,000 and 1,500 U.S. Army Reserve police
Soldiers.
The preparation leading up to the final test
consisted of four lanes that challenged and improved their primary
skill sets and core military competencies. Soldiers trained on
moving techniques, map reading skills, camouflaging self and
individual equipment, basic radio operation, medical evacuation
report, casualty care and more.
The test combined all the
training into one fluid battle drill in which units were judged on
how proficiently they reacted to an ambush, established security at
the halt and performed tactical combat care.
The final lane
took Soldiers on a patrol through the woods. Laying wait for them
were military police instructors acting as opposing forces armed
with an M2 .50-caliber and M240B machine gun hidden in the brush.
How they performed on the patrol was based on how well they
implement the lethal warrior tasks they learned during the previous
few days.
A group of U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers participate in lethal warrior
tasks as part of Operation Blue Shield at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin on
August 8, 2018. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Jameson Crabtree)
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The crew of three Soldiers manning the ambush point paid close
attention to how the advancing patrol reacted to their fire. They
had the best vantage point and reported what they saw to instructors
walking with the patrolling unit via radio. One of the instructors,
an M240 Bravo gunner, Sgt. Zachary Grabau, of the 384th Military
Police Company, was jokingly called a “new buck sergeant” by his
fellow MPs.
"It’s always good to shoot even if it’s blanks. I
like the smell,” said Grabau. “Going through it, everyone should
know this stuff because these are basic warrior task. It’s a
refresher course for what we learned in basic training."
Communication is vital to ensure mission success with no casualties
and that often starts with unit camaraderie.
Grabau and Sgt.
Watson Bradley, of the 384th MP Battalion, left their positions
during breaks in the action and approached Soldiers with advice
about how they could have improved movement when approaching a
machine gun position. The 384th MP Battalion is based out of Fort
Wayne, Indiana.
U.S. Army Reserve Sgt. Zachary Grabau of the 384th Military Police
Battalion serves as a lethal warrior battle drill noncommissioned
officer in charge during Operation Blue Shield at Fort McCoy
Wisconsin on August 7, 2018. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Jameson
Crabtree)
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There was downtime in between patrols and the MP’s had time to joke
with each other about using bullet casings as ear protection.
"Just put the spent rounds in your ears," said Bradley.“That’s
tactic-cool right there.”
While waiting they debated the best
war movies of all-time.
“When I was, 8, or 9, I watched
‘Saving Private Ryan.’ That’s what kind of inspired me to join,”
said Grabau. “‘Fury,’ might be a better movie because it shows more
grit. You can tell that their uniforms are more worn.”
Grabau
is used to the field environment.
"I was a 13 Bravo before
this. I was field artillery,” said Grabau. “I’m definitely
accustomed to field life. When I was artillery, we slept in our gun
and maybe took a water can shower off the grill once in a while, so
this is a lot better to me."
Grabau and the Soldiers he
trained are learning valuable lessons in the field.
"For
instructors, it’s great because you get to show off your
leadership," said Grabau. "For Soldiers, they get to show off what
they know, and it builds a good cohesion throughout the squad. They
need to take that back, and they need to keep doing it repetitively
until they are so cohesive that they don’t even have to talk while
they’re moving."
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