Posted on 07/22/2004 3:06:46 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4
RODRIGUEZ RANGE, South Korea 2nd Infantry Division combat arms units are training to go on the offensive if their convoys are attacked in Iraq, says Col. Gary S. Patton, commander of the divisions Iraq-bound 2nd Brigade Combat Team.
Patton and others were at Rodriguez Range Friday to observe platoons doing combat convoy live-fire exercises that train soldiers to use aggressive tactics in response to any challenge from the enemy.
It is all about developing an offensive mind-set. We are treating every mission as a combat operation and every threat along the road as a threat we are going to attack by fire or by maneuver to kill the enemy, Patton said.
As part of the convoy training, over the next two weeks, every combat arms platoon in the 2nd Brigade Combat Team will train in tactical movement, reacting to contact and assaulting enemy positions.
The monsoon rains pummeling 2nd ID soldiers at the range have little in common with the stifling heat they can expect in Iraq. But Patton who recently returned from a fact-finding mission in the desert in preparation for the mission said the terrain at Rodriguez Range used for the convoy training is similar to some of the areas in which his men will operate.
Rodriguez is a large valley full of long grass and dirt tracks.
We give them as realistic conditions as we can portray from our future fight in Iraq terrain that replicates pretty closely the type of terrain we are going to be fighting on there. You think of Iraq as a big open desert but there are areas that have irrigation ditches and broken terrain that closely resembles what we have in South Korea, he said.
During the combat convoy live fire exercise, units are attacked with an improvised explosive device (IED) and snipers.
Observer controllers look for well-executed drills from small units during the attacks, Patton said.
React to contact hasty attack fire control of our weapons well-aimed fire with our weapons and well-drilled specialty teams for casualty evacuation and enemy searches, he said. Because of the decentralized nature of the threat over there, making platoons lethal in this type of training here is what will make us successful as a combat team in Iraq.
A motorized rifle platoon 1st platoon, Company B, 1st Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment did the combat convoy training under Pattons watchful eye.
Six Humvees carrying 43 soldiers moved slowly through the valley while their passengers, carrying loaded weapons, kept a lookout for trouble. Then the action started. A smoke canister exploded ahead of the convoy, signaling an attack by an IED. Large yellow targets appeared, representing enemy vehicles; man-sized targets popped up representing insurgents who were on foot.
Machine-gunners on the Humvees pumped live rounds into the targets, taking care to avoid friendly vehicles on the range (large blue targets) and innocent bystanders (white pop-up targets).
When truck gunners had suppressed the enemy, the platoon dismounted and went to a rally point, where they learned that the potential trigger-man for the IED had escaped to the west. The platoon launched a hasty attack to pursue the insurgent, setting up a support-by-fire position that sent a hail of bullets into a cluster of man-sized targets down-range while an assault squad moved off to the west after the bad guy, who was holed up next to a small shed.
Spc. Ryan Nordbrock was laying down support by fire and shot two 30-round magazines down range.
We try to make training as realistic as possible, but it will be a whole new level when bullets are going both ways in Iraq, he said.
The assault team moved in close under cover of smoke and the support fire. They fired on a pair of pop-up targets representing the insurgents, then stormed the shed.
Assault team member Pvt. Edward Garcia said the mission was exciting.
Shooting the insurgents was easy because they were pretty close targets, he added.
Another member of the assault team was shot by the enemy while clearing the building and had to be evacuated with a simulated sucking chest wound and a splinter in his eye.
Platoon leader 1st Lt. Tony Doan had a lot to think about during the exercise, controlling his men and vehicles and responding to the attacks. Doan said the nine months he has spent as platoon leader in South Korea have given him time to get used to the job.
He credited great NCOs, non-commissioned officers, who take initiative and are proactive. It makes things go pretty easy. The more time we have to work together the better we get.
The combat convoy training is giving soldiers confidence in their buddies, their teams and their equipment, Patton said.
Now when we do this for real, this is going to be a lethal platoon reacting to that contact, he said. I am confident they will do the right thing: Pursue the enemy and kill him."
Iraq-bound 2nd Infantry Division soldiers prepare for combat convoy live-fire training at Rodriguez Range, South Korea.
Rodriguez Range is a good place for combat convoy live fire. There was a tank trail running north-south along the east side of the range that would be perfect for that.
ping
Talked with my son the other day. They are getting training that they havent seen in a long time, long hours and hard work. God Bless these brave men some have been away from their families for a long time and it will be even longer before they see them again.
Should work okay, if the insurgents in Iraq pop up wearing only yellow and the civilians wear only white...
Imagine that. A man with the last name Patton advocating an offensive-attack mindset to dealing with the enemy. As far as I'm concerned it's the ONLY mindset we should have for the entire War on Terror.
To quote General George S. Patton -
"There is only one tactical principle which is not subject to change. It is to use the means at hand to inflict the maximum amount of wound, death, and destruction on the enemy in the minimum amount of time."
"Our basic plan of operation is to advance and to keep on advancing regardless of whether we have to go over, under, or through the enemy. We are going to go through him like cr@p through a goose; like s**t through a tin horn!"
I wonder if Col. Patton is related to the Ol' Blood n' Guts?
HT
I like this offensive mindset. But I think they should take it a step further and think in terms of using the convoys as bait not only to attrit the enemy's numbers but for prisoner snatches as well.
Perhaps some vehicle modifications should be in order, extra armor to make them less vulnerable to RPG's and IPE's, but not visible so they look like helpless ol' trucks. The canvas(?) topped trucks could conceal the equivalent of rolling pillboxes -- armor plates with holes just big enough for machine guns (240 Bravos) and a decent view for the gunners.
The land equivalent of a Q-ship...
More thoughts -- the 240 Bravo for those who don't know is the Army's new light machine gun, having replaced the M60. Infinitely more reliable and an incredible rate of fire, you can run the ammo belt through mud on its way into the chamber and it will fire like the rounds were perfectly clean.
It's light enough that it could be physically swung up into position by the gunner -- or perhaps the armor "wall" of the truck could be modified with a recess so that the 240 could be pointing down and thus completely hidden by the canvas. The canvas drops and BRRRRRRRTTTTT!!!!!
If there's room, the trucks could be carrying the assault troops ready and waiting.
Again, if they're going to constantly attack the convoys, THE CONVOYS SHOULD BE USED AS BAIT...
The 1st Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, will become a motorized infantry battalion when it deploys to Iraq with the 2nd Infantry Divisions 2nd Brigade Combat Team later this summer.
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