Military combat engineers and civilian
technical experts gathered recently to conduct a series of experiments aimed at
providing soldiers with new technology in the counter-improvised explosive
device fight.
A diverse group of scientists, trainers
and soldiers from across the country — including soldiers of 3rd Battalion
(Engineer), 364th Regiment, 5th Armored Brigade,”Task Force Rampant,” Division
West — spent five days testing and evaluating the HUSKY Vehicle Mounted Mine
Detection Cause and Effect System trainer, known as the HMDS-CES.
The HMDS-CES was designed to replicate a
critical detection capability currently used in the route clearance mission in
Afghanistan.
Prior to the HMDS-CES, soldiers had to
wait until they arrived in Afghanistan to train on this critical route
clearance system. With the HMDS-CES, soldiers will be able to conduct highly
realistic training before deploying overseas.
Once fielded, this advanced
counter-improvised explosive device, or C-IED, trainer will be used by the 5th
Armored Brigade to train Army Reserve and Army National Guard route clearance
units.
“This new system will enhance the
training we provide to soldiers as they train for deployment to Afghanistan,”
said Master Sgt. Warner Stadler, a senior route clearance trainer in the 3rd
Battalion (Engineer), 364th Regiment. “When they arrive in country and fall in
on the live system, they will become ready to conduct the critically important
route clearance mission in a short period of time with minimal additional
training.”
With the trainer’s high-tech
“cause-and-effect” system that simulates improvised explosive device, or IED,
warnings, soldiers will be able to train in conditions that replicate the
Afghanistan theater of operations without fear of damaging an expensive live
system.
“The CES system has many of the same
features as the live system,” said Staff Sgt. Johnathan Jacoba, an observer
controller/trainer with 3rd Battalion (Engineer), 364th Regiment, and an
experienced Sapper with recent combat experience in Afghanistan. “This system
improves the operator’s field of vision and also aids in detecting threats near
the vehicle.”
The new trainer also simulates
explosions when operators fail to respond to critical warnings or indicators.
“This greatly enhances training and will
save soldiers’ lives,” said Staff Sgt. Jeremiah Lindquist, a Task Force Rampant
HUSKY operator and trainer. “The Cause and Effect trainer is a great
improvement to the current surrogate trainer because it provides feedback
similar to the live system.”
At the conclusion of the week-long
experiment, Alfred Myers, the organizer and member of the Joint IED Test Board,
thanked the scientists, engineers and soldiers who made the testing successful.
“The support provided by Task Force Rampant and the soldiers at Fort Bliss
(Texas) was outstanding,” he said.
Participants in the HMDS-CES evaluation
also came from the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization, the
Maneuver Support Center of Excellence, the Research and Development Command, Program
Manager Explosive Ordnance Development and Counter-Mine, White Sands Missile
Range, N.M., Program Executive Office — Simulations Training and
Instrumentation, Army Test and Evaluation Command, and the United States Army
Evaluation Center.
“This experiment was a great opportunity
to bring all of the key stakeholders together to test and evaluate an important
system,” Stadler said. “Developing training systems with soldier input is
critical to getting first-hand experience into the hands of the developers.”
By Lt. Col. Aaron Dorf and Maj. Steve
Bruner, 5th Armored Brigade, Division West
From www.army.mil
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