During the previous day’s 12-mile ruck march, Spc. Jackson Roberts wore new boots and finished the march with severely blistered feet. During the next day’s land navigation exercise, Roberts hiked painfully through the brush and sage, stepping into badger holes, tripping over rocks, and navigating roughly three miles over hills of harsh desert terrain. Roberts and his partner Spc.Timothy Martin were the first team to finish the day land navigation exercise.
The job of a Cavalry Scout is to operate as one of the first personnel in an area. These soldiers are quite literally the first line of defense for Army units. Cavalry Scouts engage the enemy with anti-armor weapons and scout vehicles in the field, track and report enemy movement and activities, and will direct the employment of various weapon systems onto the enemy.
U.S. Army Cavalry Scouts act as the eyes and ears on the field, gathering information about enemy positions, vehicles, weapons, and activity. With the information they gather, commanders can make informed decisions about how to move troops and where and when to attack. Their scouting duties include conducting mounted and dismounted navigation, collecting data about tunnels and bridges, and serving as members of observation and listening posts. In addition to basic soldiering skills, cavalry scouts learn to secure and prepare ammunition on scout vehicles, load, clear and fire individual and crew-served weapons, perform navigation during combat, and how to collect data to classify routes, tunnels and bridges. And they train and supervise scout vehicle crew members.
Date Taken: | 11.03.2020 |
Date Posted: | 12.29.2020 10:18 |
Photo ID: | 6469500 |
VIRIN: | 201210-Z-XK920-0035 |
Resolution: | 2700x1800 |
Size: | 2.47 MB |
Location: | BOISE, IDAHO, US |
Web Views: | 32 |
Downloads: | 7 |
This work, Scout Training - Week 1: part 2 [Image 21 of 21], by Thomas Alvarez, identified by DVIDS, must comply with the restrictions shown on https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright.