U.S. Soldiers assigned to the 172nd IBCT Indiana National Guard conducted active shooter and mass casualty training during Exercise Kosovo Forces 31 (KFOR 31) at Hohenfels, Germany, Oct. 12. 2022. KFOR is a multinational training event conducted to prepare units for their deployments to the Kosovo Regional Command East. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Donovon Lynch)
Afghan National Army field artillery lit the night sky for the first time ever in eastern Paktika province last week, as a newly emplaced howitzer battery became tactically operational.
From the steaming jungles of the Iron Triangle in Vietnam to the remote mountain outposts of eastern Afghanistan, the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 28th Infantry Regiment have not served side-by-side in more than four decades.
The D30 artillery battery of 4/2/203 ANA was certified for real-world operations in Paktika province by the MOD following a successful battery-level live fire here yesterday.
With a thunderous roar of "Air Assault!", Soldiers from around U.S. Army Europe charged to the start point of the obstacle course, here, March 27, marking day one of the Air Assault course.
When learning to hunt, there are always tell tale signals left behind to guide the hunter to his prey; a broken twig here, matted down grass where the prey spent the night, a puff of smoke from just inside the wood line.