ROK army equipment testing chief
gets taste of NIE 17.2
by Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Dave Wellons,
Operational Test Command's deputy
director of the Integrated Test and
Evaluation Directorate (ITED) at Fort
Bliss, Texas, provides a briefing July
26 on Network Evaluation Integration
17.2 to Brig. Gen. In Hwang, Test and
Evaluation chief for the Republic of
Korea Army.
(Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M Novogradac
(Hood))
Dave Wellons,
Operational Test Command's deputy
director of the Integrated Test and
Evaluation Directorate (ITED) at Fort
Bliss, Texas, provides a briefing July
26 on Network Evaluation Integration
17.2 to Brig. Gen. In Hwang, Test and
Evaluation chief for the Republic of
Korea Army.
(Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M Novogradac
(Hood))
FORT BLISS, Texas -- The
equipment testing and evaluating chief of the Republic
of Korea army caught a glimpse of how U.S. Army
operational testing adds up to increased readiness
through modernization.
Brig. Gen. In Hwang became
acquainted with Network Evaluation Integration 17.2, the
Soldier-led evaluation exercise designed to integrate
and rapidly progress the Army's battlefield
communications network.
"We are assessing network
connectivity from the Soldier on the ground to their
higher headquarters in a couple of ways," Dave Wellons
told Hwang, of the evaluation that involves over 2,000
Soldiers of the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne
(Air Assault), from Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
Wellons, the deputy director for
the Integrated Test and Evaluation Directorate (ITED), a
subordinate element of the U.S. Army Operational Test
Command at West Fort Hood, Texas, led Hwang through a
graphic of NIE 17.2's geographical size.
"The training area is immense,"
explained Wellons. "The combined training area is 183
miles deep, all the way into New Mexico, where the White
Sands Missile Range training area is 40 miles wide.
Added to Fort Bliss, it becomes 70 miles wide."
In perspective, the NIE 17.2
training area is so big, it could contain the combined
areas the most prominent Army installations, to include
the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California;
Forts Bragg in North Carolina; Stewart in Georgia; and
Fort Hood in Texas, to name a few -- totaling more than
2,295,000 acres that can fit inside NIE 17.2's 3.3
million acres.
Through a translator, Hwang also
learned about two systems OTC has under test at NIE
17.2: the high-capacity Terrestrial Transmission Line Of
Sight (TRILOS) Radio; and the Warfighter Information
Network-Tactical (WIN-T) Increment 2.
TRILOS is an easy-to-transport
radio that will improve the expeditious nature of Army
units by being smaller, lighter.
It can be synchronized with
Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T)
Increment 2, allowing point-to-multipoint
communications.
The WIN-T Increment 2 is a
lighter-weight version of its predecessor, mounted to a
HMMWV that can be sling-loaded by helicopter to be
rapidly mobile when needed when a unit jumps locations
on the battlefield, offering better command
communications while on the move.
After seeing operational testing
in action, Hwang said he was impressed with the U.S.
Army using an opposing force as a capable threat to test
its equipment, while also noting how the OPFOR provides
a realistic training environment for the test unit.
"This is what the ROK Army is
trying to do; combine testing and training," he said.
~~
Operational Test Command's mission
is about making sure that systems developed are
effective in a Soldier's hands and suitable for the
environments in which Soldiers train and fight. Test
units and their Soldiers offer their feedback, which
influences the future by offering input to improve upon
existing and future systems that Soldiers will
ultimately use to train and fight with.