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    Air Weapons Team conducts joint call-for-fire training

    Air Weapons Team conducts joint call-for-fire training

    Photo By Spc. Maurice Galloway | 1st Lt. Mike S. Robinsion, 177th Armored Cavalry, Bravo Company, infantry officer,...... read more read more

    BASRA, IRAQ

    12.03.2009

    Story by Spc. Maurice Galloway 

    17th Field Artillery Brigade

    CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE BASRA, Iraq — The old adage "Send in the cavalry" once referred to Soldiers on horseback, riding to the aid of embattled comrades.

    Today, that same call for backup can be made a lot quicker and with much more devastating effect through the Army's joint operations

    Twelve Soldiers from 1st Battalion (Air Assault), 377th Field Artillery Regiment and 1st Battalion (Reconnaissance), 130th Aviation Regiment, Task Force Panther, teamed-up to conduct an air support live-fire exercise at a detonation range outside of Contingency Operating Base Basra.

    The training provided leaders with the opportunity to gain valuable experience and increase their proficiency in calling for fire during close-combat scenarios.

    After days of orchestrating the layout, boundaries and procedures of the exercise, the two taskforces conducted training sessions to familiarize the Soldiers with the different steps involved in the call-for-fire process.

    "The hardest part of the training for me was being able to determine the distance of each of our projected targets from such a long distance away," said 1st Lt. Mike S. Robinson, Bravo Co. 177th Armored Cavalry, infantry officer and native of Spokane, Wash. "You have to take into account that there are two perspectives: what we see from the ground and what the air support team sees."

    From their positions on the ground, Soldiers used their choice of techniques taught during the training to direct two AH-64D Apache Longbow helicopters to hostile ground targets and have them deliver an airstrike.

    Some Soldiers used the compass method, shooting an azimuth to gain the distance and direction of their target, while others tackled the difficult task of navigating the airstrike verbally without any target marking.

    "This event gave our platoon leaders an opportunity to see what the Apache is capable of doing for us if we ever need more firepower," said Lt. Col. James W. MacGregor, commander, 1st Battalion (Air Assault), 377th FAR. "They are routinely coordinating operations with the Air Weapons Team during their patrols, not only as a secondary source of firepower, but also to expand their field of view."

    A lot of different factors come in to play when trying to acquire a target, and it is because of this that communication is so important.

    "The two teams have to constantly talk," said MacGregor. "The platoon leader has to identify his target and help the pilot see what he is looking at. Both may be looking at the same thing, but from a much different perspective."

    When multiple targets are in close proximity of each other it makes target identification all the more difficult. One strategy is to have troops on the ground use small arms fire to mark their target.

    "My objective was to identify the target for air support, using the 240 Bravo Light Machine Gun," said Pfc. Ian D. Favro, gunner, 1st Battalion (Air Assault), 377th FAR, and native of Phoenix, Ariz. "I basically shot rounds in short, controlled increments just short of their intended target to knock dust into the air so that the AWT could properly identify their objective and destroy it."

    With all of the objectives destroyed and each of the platoon leaders getting the opportunity to become more familiar with calling for fire, the event was definitely a success, MacGregor said.

    "This experience offered our platoon leaders a chance to talk to the pilots and gain insight on their perspective from both a fixed and rotary-wing standpoint," he said.

    "All in all this was a great professional development experience for these young leaders," said MacGregor.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.03.2009
    Date Posted: 12.03.2009 01:26
    Story ID: 42274
    Location: BASRA, IQ

    Web Views: 501
    Downloads: 212

    PUBLIC DOMAIN