Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

US, Canadian Soldiers Train In Interior Alaska

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Aug, 2016 01:30 PM
    ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Soldiers from U.S. and Canada have spent much of the last few weeks engaging in war games in expansive interior Alaska, with Iowa National Guard personnel playing the role of the enemy.
     
    Arctic Anvil, which ended this week for about 5,000 soldiers and support personnel, was the largest training held in Alaska in the last 15 or so years, said Brig. Gen. Martin Frank, a member of the Canadian Army and the deputy commanding general for U.S. Army Alaska. He is the first foreign officer to serve on the U.S. Army Alaska staff.
     
    Among those training were 140 soldiers from the Third Canadian Division, a light armoured vehicle company, Frank said.
     
    "We've also got about 800 folks from the Iowa National Guard that are participating in the exercise who are playing the role of opposing forces," he said.
     
    Also on hand were observers from partner nations Japan and Singapore.
     
    The exercise tested the soldiers against two kinds of opponents, insurgents similar to what the forces faced in Iraq and Afghanistan and more traditional foes.
     
     
    Frank said the troops have to maintain their skills with fighting insurgent forces.
     
    "But we also have to be capable of defeating a near-peer enemy who might be equipped with tanks, with unmanned aerial vehicles, with aircraft, with all the things that we have so that we are ready to fight and ready to win regardless of what kind of opposing force or kind of adversary we come against," Frank said.
     
    The exercise was intended to prepare the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division at Fort Wainwright, near Fairbanks, for an upcoming rotation at the National Training Center at Fort Lewis, California. The training also included soldiers from the 52nd Aviation Regiment.
     
    Frank called the exercise a success. "I've seen an exponential increase in the capability and the readiness of the 1st Stryker Brigade, and in large part this is due to the command climate, the perspective of the commanders on the ground, and the soldiers on the ground, wanting to learn, wanting to become better," he said.
     
    The training scenario, equipment and technical expertise were provided by the 196th Infantry Brigade's Joint Pacific Multinational Readiness Capability, and this was the first time they have provided the training outside its home base in Hawaii.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Media Groups Look To Intervene In Vice Appeal Of Order To Give RCMP Records

    Media Groups Look To Intervene In Vice Appeal Of Order To Give RCMP Records
    The application to intervene, which requires court approval to proceed, will likely be filed in the summer once Vice Media has filed its appeal documents, Andrea Gonsalves said.

    Media Groups Look To Intervene In Vice Appeal Of Order To Give RCMP Records

    New Brunswick Man, 60, Pleads Guilty To Child Porn Charges Involving Two Victims

    New Brunswick Man, 60, Pleads Guilty To Child Porn Charges Involving Two Victims
    RCMP say the 60-year-old man entered the pleas in Bathurst provincial court on Wednesday.

    New Brunswick Man, 60, Pleads Guilty To Child Porn Charges Involving Two Victims

    WestJet Planes Used To Fly Fort Mcmurray Hospital Patients To Edmonton

    Nurse Sherrie Whiffen says staff at the Northern Lights Regional Health Centre in Fort McMurray practice evacuating the hospital every year, but she never had to do the real thing until Tuesday night.

    WestJet Planes Used To Fly Fort Mcmurray Hospital Patients To Edmonton

    Door-to-Door Delivery Up For Debate As Liberals Order Review Of Canada Post

    Door-to-Door Delivery Up For Debate As Liberals Order Review Of Canada Post
    Privatization of Canada Post — in whole or in part — is not on the table, Public Services Minister Judy Foote said.

    Door-to-Door Delivery Up For Debate As Liberals Order Review Of Canada Post

    Nova Scotia's $700 Jaywalking Fine Could Be Part Of Wider Review: Minister

    The Nova Scotia government is pondering a delay in implementing a controversial pedestrian fine for jaywalking included in legislation passed last fall.

    Nova Scotia's $700 Jaywalking Fine Could Be Part Of Wider Review: Minister

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict
    Democracy Watch co-founder Duff Conacher says he does not understand how conflict commissioner Paul Fraser can conclude that money paid to the premier is only a political benefit, not a private financial perk.

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict