Germany-based Stryker Infantry units train on upgrades
during operational test
by Mr. Cliff Kummer, Mounted Test Division, Maneuver
Test Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs
A
dismounted team from Ghost Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd Cavalry
Regiment, maneuvering on an enemy position as part of an attack
on Kittensee Urban complex during the Infantry Carrier Vehicle
Dragoon (ICVD)/Common Remote Weapons Station mounting a Javelin
missile (CROWS-J) Operational Test at the Joint Maneuver
Readiness Center (JMRC), Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo Credit: Mr.
Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test
Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs)
A Common Remote Weapons Station mounting a Javelin missile
(CROWS-J) from Palehorse Troop, 4th Squadron, 2nd Cavalry Regiment,
repositioning to engage an enemy T-72 tank as part of the defense during
the Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD)/Common Remote Weapons
Station mounting a Javelin missile (CROWS-J) Operational Test at the
Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC), Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo
Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test
Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs)
An Infantry
Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD) from Ghost Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd
Cavalry Regiment, provides over watch for a dismounted squad's maneuver
as part of a Movement to Contact during the ICVD/Common Remote Weapons
Station mounting a Javelin missile (CROWS-J) Operational Test at the
Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC), Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo
Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test
Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs)
A Stryker Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD) from
Ghost Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, maneuvers past a
defeated Opposing Forces during the ICVD/Common Remote Weapons
Station mounting a Javelin missile (CROWS-J) Operational Test at the
Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC), Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo
Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist,
Test Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs)
An Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD) from Ghost
Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, over watches the
engagement area from its battle position during the ICVD/Common
Remote Weapons Station mounting a Javelin missile (CROWS-J)
Operational Test at the Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC),
Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead
Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test Documentation Team, U.S.
Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs)
An Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD) from
Palehorse Troop, 4th Squadron, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, over watching a
Named Area of Interest as part of a Screen Mission during the
Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD)/Common Remote Weapons
Station mounting a Javelin missile (CROWS-J) Operational Test at the
Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC), Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo
Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production Specialist,
Test Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs)
The Scout Platoon from Palehorse Troop, 4th Squadron,
2nd Cavalry Regiment, conducts an After Action review after a
mission during the Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD)/Common
Remote Weapons Station mounting a Javelin missile (CROWS-J)
Operational Test at the Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC),
Hohenfels, Germany. (Photo Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead
Audiovisual Production Specialist, Test Documentation Team, U.S.
Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs)
A Common Remote Weapons Station mounting a Javelin
missile (CROWS-J) from Palehorse Troop, 4th Squadron, 2nd Cavalry
Regiment, performs bore sighting prior to the first mission during
the Infantry Carrier Vehicle Dragoon (ICVD)/CROWS-J Operational Test
at the Joint Maneuver Readiness Center (JMRC), Hohenfels, Germany.
(Photo Credit: Mr. Tad Browning, Lead Audiovisual Production
Specialist, Test Documentation Team, U.S. Army Operational Test
Command Public Affairs)
JOINT MANEUVER READINESS CENTER, 7th
ARMY TRAINING COMMAND, HOHENFELS, Germany -- In the
morning dawn, 2nd Cavalry Regiment (2CR) Scouts
surprise-ambushed a world-class opposing force from an
unheard of 1,600 meters with their Stryker vehicles
poised widely across a valley.
Over a hill, Infantry from 2nd Squadron, 2CR engaged the
enemy's main body at extended ranges, providing
supporting fire for their dismounted Infantry.
New firepower upgrades to 2CR's Strykers were making an
impact on their ability to detect and lethally engage
targets at longer ranges during the operational test.
These Soldiers from the 2-2CR and 4th Squadron, 2CR
trained with the new Stryker upgrades at the JMRC.
Two upgrades to the Stryker platform being operationally
tested over 10 days were the Infantry Carrier Vehicle-Dragoon (ICVD) equipped with an unmanned turret
housing a 30mm cannon with enhanced optics and the
Common Remotely Operated Weapon System-Javelin
(CROWS-J), Infantry and Recon Stryker variants with a
mounted Javelin capability.
The U.S. Army Operational Test Command (USAOTC) based at
Fort Hood, Texas, created a unique opportunity for the
Army to learn about the new capabilities being fielded
to the 2CR while providing an opportunity for the unit
to train in a realistic environment while enhancing
their readiness.
USAOTC's Maneuver Test Directorate prepared for a year
to execute the test and provide data to support the
Rapid Acquisition and fielding to 2CR -- based off a
request 2CR made to increase and modernize their unit's
war fighting capabilities.
Specifically citing the ICVD impacts, Capt. Brandon J.
Shorter, commander of the OPFOR's Blackfoot Company,
said, "The ICVD provides an all-weather, limited
visibility, long range target acquisition with long
range fires capability that is challenging and changing
the way we fight; we are maneuvering to avoid them."
While each system was intensely evaluated through
developmental testing, the operational test was the
first opportunity Soldiers had to employ the systems in
an operationally realistic environment and in the way
they will use them in combat.
"Getting the systems into the hands of the Soldiers who
will use them and letting them employ them in an
environment closely replicating combat against a
free-thinking OPFOR -- that's the only way to truly
understand whether or not the systems are effective,"
said Col. Brian McHugh, MTD director.
"That is the uniqueness and importance of operational
testing, and we are the folks who do this," he added.
"The operational test provides us an opportunity to take
a new system, ring it out for the Army, and gain actual
feedback in a real world environment," said Maj. Jared
D. Coil, Officer-in-Charge of the 2CR higher
headquarters element during the test.
During the past 18 months, MTD worked with the 7th Army
Training Command and 2CR to create the test.
Additionally, Blackfoot Company from 1st Battalion, 4th
Infantry Regiment at the 7th Army Training Command
provided a hybrid threat of a Motorized Rifle Company
and a squad of irregular forces as the OPFOR.
Test missions were built around Decisive Action
scenarios, specifically offensive and defensive
operations, as a foundation. With this base, the team
worked closely with 2CR to identify and incorporate
their essential tasks to build an operational test that
addressed all data requirements while integrating unit
training objectives.
"Our ultimate goal at MTD and USAOTC is to build tests
that address the Army Chief of Staff's priorities of
modernization and readiness," said Lt. Col. Jason Davis,
MTD's test operations officer.
"Testing and training don't have to be mutually
exclusive -- the Army gets more bang for the buck if we
combine the two."
Davis explained how part of the test's overall purpose
was to provide information contributing to a
Capabilities and Limitations Report (CLR) of the two new
Stryker variants.
"The CLR is important because it lets the commander know
what the vehicles can and can't do and will influence
how he employs the systems," said Ron Thomas, the MTD
test officer.
To achieve this, 2CR units conducted eight missions --
four days and four nights -- enabling them to operate their
new systems in different conditions against a myriad of
OPFOR formation threats.
"This Stryker test event provides us an opportunity to
experiment in the development and execution of Tactics,
Techniques, and Procedures," said Capt. Craig Hymel, the
Commander of Ghost Troop.
One Scout Section Sergeant in the 2CR said the
operational test provided Soldiers with the opportunity
to become familiar with the new ICVD and CROWS-J system
capabilities.
"We gained knowledge of the new systems during the New
Equipment Training, but we are gaining experience through
employing them during the operational test," said Staff
Sgt. Nathan F. Dragovich.
To capture this Soldier test feedback on what works and
what does not, the MTD test team created a data harvest
method which administered surveys and After Action
Reviews (AAR) after each mission.
Data harvests immediately following a mission is crucial
to the operational test, Thomas added.
"It allows us to get the data while the fight is still
fresh in Soldiers' minds," he said.
After completing an AAR for drivers and gunners
following a limited visibility deliberate attack, Sgt.
Kelton J. Snyder and Sgt. Noblay J. Deus, both gunners
on the new Stryker systems, said it was great to be able
to provide input and felt their statements counted.
One key question at each AAR was how the platforms
impacted the mission.
When discussing the CROWS-J, section sergeants and other
junior leaders agreed the capability allowed them to
fight the armor fight much more dynamically, allowing
for the repositioning of anti-armor capabilities quickly
across the battlespace.
"This kind of insight is what we need to ensure we are
informing the Army on what the Soldier on the ground has
to say about the platforms," said McHugh.
"Sometimes things look good on paper but don't work out
in the real world."
Praising test unit Soldiers, McHugh said, "The Soldiers
have stayed engaged and motivated throughout the event,
and I am thoroughly impressed with their articulate and
insightful feedback.
"The Army will clearly benefit from the professionalism
of Ghost Troop and the Soldiers from the Blackfoot
Company's OPFOR."
An Infantry officer himself, McHugh explained how
increasing demands on the nation's military forces makes
it more important than ever to ensure Soldiers have the
right equipment for current and future threats they may
face.
"Getting systems into the hands of Soldiers in a
rigorous and realistic event is a critical component to
ensuring they have the right equipment that works for
them to fight with," he said.
He said USAOTC's charter is to create the opportunity
where fully stressing the systems and Soldiers to gain
feedback on equipment system effectiveness, suitability,
and survivability is the goal.
"Clearly, the ICVD/CROWS-J test at JMRC accomplished
this with the added benefit of increasing training
readiness for 2CR," he said.
"It is ultimately the number one mission of all of our
tests -- to inform the Army while assisting in building
trained and ready forces," McHugh said. "When we do
this, it is 'Mission Accomplished.'"
~~
About the U.S. Army Operational Test Command:
As the Army's only independent operational tester,
USAOTC tests Army, joint, and multi-service warfighting
systems in realistic operational environments, using
typical users to provide data on whether the systems are
effective, suitable, and survivable. USAOTC is required
by public law to test major systems before they are
fielded to its ultimate customer -- the American
Soldier.