Rugged Alaska terrain sees Field
Artillery Soldiers test new laser targeting system
by Chief Warrant Officer 4 Robert J. Stoll,
Fires Test Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command
Spec. Dallas
A. Mason (left) and Spec. Israel C.
Wallace, Soldiers from Battery D, 2nd
Battalion, 8th Field Artillery Regiment,
set up the Joint Effects Targeting
System Target Laser Designation System
(JETS-TLDS) at the Cold Regions Test
Center, Fort Greely, Alaska, to conduct
a self-location check.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army file photo)
Sgt. Richard
Martinez (left) and Spec. Nicholas A.
Whelan, Soldiers from Battery D, 2nd
Battalion, 8th Field Artillery Regiment,
detect, recognize, and identify a target
using the Joint Effects Targeting System
Target Laser Designation System
(JETS-TLDS) while wearing chemical,
biological, radiological, nuclear, and
enhanced conventional weapons (CBRNE)
equipment.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army file photo)
Sgt. Gregory
W. Caplan (left) and Spec. Joel C.
Lemmon, Soldiers from Battery D, 2nd
Battalion, 8th Field Artillery Regiment,
get ready to transmit a call for fire
using a Joint Effects Targeting System
Target Laser Designation System
(JETS-TLDS) on the top of Donnelly Dome
at the Cold Regions Test Center, Fort
Greely, Alaska.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army file photo)
FORT GREELY,
Alaska -- Ten Field Artillery Soldiers tested the Joint
Effects Targeting System Target Laser Designation System
(JETS-TLDS) at the Cold Regions Test Center here
recently.
The JETS-TLDS is a modular
advanced sensor suite of three components, the hand-held
target location module (HTLM), precision azimuth and
vertical angle module (PAVAM), and laser marker module
(LMM).
According to Staff Sgt. Timothy S.
Phillips, a Research, Development, Test & Evaluation NCO
from the U.S. Army Operational Test Command's (USAOTC)
Fires Test Directorate (FTD), forward observers are an
essential part of the modern battlefield.
"FOs have a critical role as a key
element of a Fire Support Team, providing indirect fire
support at the company/troop level," said Phillips.
"JETS-TLDS allows the FOs to
quickly acquire and locate targets for any given fire
mission," he added.
Additionally, the system provides
24/7 all-weather precision targeting and
target-acquisition to support dismounted operations.
Phillips explained that Soldiers
from Battery D, 2nd Battalion, 8th Field Artillery
Regiment with military occupational specialty (MOS) 13F
(Fire Support Specialist), were selected for the test to
gather operational data because of their experience and
knowledge detecting targets for fires.
After spending several weeks
training and testing, the Soldiers seemed confident in
their ability to employ the JETS-TLDS system.
"I was excited about the amount of
missions we processed each day with the JETS-TLDS," said
Spec. Dallas A. Mason, of Battery D. "I was proud to be
able to participate in the testing of this system."
Each test day involved 10 hours of
operational use and averaged 40 target acquisitions per
FO team.
The test provided the FO teams an
operationally realistic approach to detect, recognize,
and identify targets in a tactical environment. Soldiers
were dropped off at a release point where they began a
tactical foot movement over the mountainous Alaskan
terrain at elevations between 1,000-2,500 meters at
several different observation posts (OP).
Upon arriving at their OP, they
set up the system and established their location by
using system self-location methods.
JETS-TLDS also assists in
determining the category of accuracy for each target
location acquired by the FO.
The current legacy system issued
to FOs is the Vector 21 Laser Target Locator, Mark VII,
and the Target Reconnaissance Infrared Geolocating Range
Finder (TRIGR).
JETS-TLDS provides a designator
and marking device in a system that has a total weight
of approximately 20 pounds which includes a tripod and
batteries.
Several test unit Soldiers agreed
that the JETS-TLDS is a hybrid of the two current
systems -- Vector 21 and LLDR -- all in one module.
"On today's battlefield," said
Sgt. Gregory W. Caplan, another Battery D Field
Artilleryman, "it is imperative to ensure our Fire
Support Teams have the newest most current digital
systems available due to the continuous transformation
of the battlefield."
Operational testing of equipment
systems allow senior Army leaders to have the Soldier's
opinion and recommendations to make an educated decision
on full rate production, according to Lt. Col. Michael
P. Frank, project manager at Soldier Sensors and Lasers
(PM SSL) out of Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
"Putting this system into the
hands of Soldiers in a realistic operational environment
is critical to the operational testing process," said
Frank. "Senior Leaders require a Soldier's opinion."
At the Soldier level, Field
Artillery troops understand their input is valuable to
the Army.
"I was surprised that as a
specialist in the Army, I would be able to provide
feedback that could eventually impact the decision the
Army would make concerning the future of our MOS and the
JETS-TLDS," said Spec. Israel C. Wallace of Battery D.
Besides offering readiness through
training, Phillips said that testing JETS-TLDS in the
environment Alaska provided was crucial to the test, to
make sure it will be effective in a Soldier's hands and
suitable for the environments Soldiers train and fight
in.
"Often, FOs encounter extremely
rough terrain that must be crossed with the threat of
enemy combatants being near," Phillips said.
"Moving with full combat load not
only stresses the system but also provides realistic
training for the FO and ensures they are able to put the
system into action under realistic operational
scenarios."
~~
As the Army's only independent
operational tester, USAOTC tests and assesses Army,
joint, and multi-service warfighting systems in
realistic operational environments, using representative
Soldiers to determine whether a system is effective,
suitable, and survivable. Public law requires OTC to
test major systems before they are fielded to its
ultimate customer, the American Soldier.