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Top Indiana Guardsmen selected for sensitive Afghanistan mission
By John Crosby, Camp Atterbury Public Affairs
Jan 18, 2010 - 6:30:33 PM
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A woman, role playing an Afghan native, warms her bones next to a burn barrel on a brisk, 18-degree, January morning during a counter improvised explosive device training lane held at Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center. Civilian role-players assist mobilizing Soldiers to help better prepare them for what they will soon face during deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan. (U.S. Army photo by John Crosby)
CAMP ATTERBURY JOINT MANEUVER TRAINING CENTER, Ind. - Top Indiana military officials at Joint Forces Headquarters have selected 18 of some of Indiana's most experienced and proficient Army National Guard Soldiers to deploy to Afghanistan and embed themselves with high-level commanders of the Afghan Army.

The unit, the Indiana Regional Corps Training Team 2, is currently training for deployment at the Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center in Edinburgh, Ind.

"All the guys on the team were handpicked," said the team's Commander Col. Kenneth Ring. "Lucky for us [Indiana is] the fourth largest Guard state so we have a lot of talent to choose from."

The mission requires a variety of military expertise with representatives in several areas including logistics, operations, administrative and intelligence personnel.

"We worked very hard to get the right guy for each position," Ring said.  "We couldn't be more proud of who we have on the team, the attitudes they have and the progress we've made."

Essentially, they are an embedded training team. Their mission is to join forces with the Afghan Army corps commander of Regional Command East. The region under their command accounts for approximately 25 percent of Afghan terrain and is home to between 11 and 12 thousand Afghan Soldiers. The small Indiana unit will partner with the commander and act as a working staff as the Afghan National Army continues its transition to a self-sustained and independent force.

"The goal is that in a year or two that whole force won't need the United States Armed Forces to be embedded with them," said the training team's top non-commissioned officer, Command Sgt. Maj. Jim Brown. "They will be conducting reliable and consistent operations on their own."

Brown, previously the Indiana State command sergeant major, left his position to join Regional Corps Training Team 2 and deploy.

There have been advisors, mentors and partners assisting the Afghan people in Operation Enduring Freedom since 2002 so the concept is nothing new. However, over the past seven years, U.S. forces have become thoroughly integrated into the ANA. Small training teams attached to the ANA have now become a partnership at the foot soldier level.

"They're living, eating and patrolling beside each other," said Brown. "They're co-locating and orchestrating operations together."

This full-time bond allows the training team to focus higher up the chain of command; the corps level.

Brown said their focus will be aimed at several pronounced areas of improvement; personnel management, including recruiting and securing a more stable salary system, logistical planning and achieving the ability to function in sustained combat operations.
   
"Units may engage the enemy and be successful but due to logistical needs they need to fall back to resupply," said Brown. "In the meantime the enemy takes back the same ground and again becomes abusive to the people of that area for, say, giving up information on the Taliban." By working together to create a better flow of supply, Brown said this problem can be eliminated.

Additionally, they will work to improve Afghan military schools and academies in order to promote professional development. With a more professionally, logistically and tactically proficient army and police force, stability will be easier to sustain.

Historically, the mission of training, mentoring and partnering with foreign armies was a task that fell upon Special Forces units. As combat evolves and the way wars are fought changes, the Army National Guard has stepped up to fill this role.

"This allows the states to select high-ranking teams for the job," said Brown. "It provides flexibility for the Army to stay on their missions and relieves the Special Forces to go do what they need to do in their current relevancies."

Ring and Brown believe that success in operating in this role will come from the nature of the National Guard.

"After all these years of war we are all tactically proficient," said Ring. "We know our military jobs. We are confident in our military skills. The other thing we bring is our skills from outside the military."

"It's well suited for the National Guard," agreed Brown. "National Guard men and women are usually older and have more life experience. They are citizen-Soldiers which means they have a skill or a profession that can be used over there whether it be a doctor, an electrician, a mechanic, a plumber or a farmer. You're not gonna get that out of a platoon of 21-year-olds in the active Army because they just haven't had that life experience yet."
   
Ring said that in order to accomplish their mission his Soldiers need to be tactically proficient, culturally sensitive and have an understanding of the different culture. Ring said they also need to focus largely on understanding the language, despite having interpreters.
   
"We're not only working with the Afghans," said Ring. "We will be living with them on their base. We won't be living on a large American base. We will be living with them. We all understand that and are looking forward to that challenge."
   
Even though the training team will be working at a corps level with Afghan commanders, Brown states that it is every Soldier's job to be culturally aware of the Afghan National Army. He believes that everyone there makes a difference from the top, down to every new private.

"Each Soldier has his or her own role in making and molding the new Afghanistan in their actions," said Brown. "What every Soldier does and says affects the outcome of success in Afghanistan, not just the ETTs. Everyone over there has an influence on the growing sense of nationalism."

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:

 
A suicide bomber wearing a vest of explosives plays dead after a mock attack on U.S. Soldiers during a counter improvised explosives device training course held at Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center Jan. 5. The course is aimed at better preparing mobilizing troops to be aware and vigilant against the possible threats that face them while deployed. (U.S. Army photo by John Crosby)
Staff Sgt. Jennifer Mclaughlin (left) gives a lessons learned brief to several mobilized Indiana National Guard Soldiers after they completed a counter improvised explosive device training course at Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center Jan 5. The Soldiers, part of the Indiana Regional Embedded Training Team II, are preparing to deploy to Afghanistan to advise and assist the Afghanistan National Army to help provide stability and security to the country. (U.S. Army photo by John Crosby)


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