1st Battalion 22nd Infantry
Indirect Fire Drill
June 2013
CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait
Soldiers assigned to 1st Battalion, 22nd Infantry
Regiment, 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team,
4th Infantry Division, take cover in a bunker during an indirect
fire drill at Camp Buehring, Kuwait, June 5, 2013.
Incoming! 'Raiders' take cover
during indirect fire drill
Published June 8, 2013 by Spc. Andrew Ingram
1st Armored Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office
CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait When a blaring siren pierced the
Kuwaiti air, "Raider" Brigade Soldiers donned
their M40 Protective Masks and filled the bunkers scattered
across Camp Buehring's sandy surface.
"Incoming, incoming, incoming," a disembodied voice
bellowed, as the 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team,
4th Infantry Division, Soldiers packed into the shelters, testing
the seals of their masks.
Raiders reaffirmed their chemical, biological, radiological,
nuclear, and explosives attack response skills,
and practiced the proper procedures for finding cover during an
artillery mortar or rocket attack, during an indirect fire drill,
June 5.
"As soon as we heard the siren, we hit the bunkers,"
said Sgt. Brandon Sweetman, armor crewman,
Company D, 1st Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment,
1st ABCT. "It is very important to have systems in place
for situations like this."
In the days leading up to the event leaders throughout the
brigade drilled their Soldiers on proper pro-mask
and bunker procedures. "Soldiers who have never come under
fire before cannot understand what it is like,"
said Sweetman, who experienced indirect-fire attacks during
previous deployments. "If we keep training
over and over, muscle memory and instinct will kick in, and could
save their lives during a real world situation."
Capt. Andrew Lowe, air defense officer, 1st ABCT, and brigade
leaders observed the exercise, and disseminated
casualty cards that directed Soldiers to assume the role of
wounded in need of aid from their comrades.
"We conduct these battle drills to ensure the Soldiers of
the "Raider" Brigade are ready for anything," said
Lowe.
"Drills like this refresh our basic skills. Whether we are
here in Kuwait, or back at Fort Carson, or deployed to
Afghanistan,
we need to continually train to maintain these skills."
At the announcement of "All clear, all clear, all
clear," most Soldiers exited the bunkers to resume their
daily tasks,
but for the medical Soldiers of Company C, 4th Brigade Support
Battalion, 1st ABCT, the exercise had only just begun.
Within minutes of the "all clear," simulated casualties
began to arrive at the brigade aid station, suffering from
fictitious trauma,
ranging from chest wounds to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
"Our expectations were to effectively treat patients as they
came in, and we accomplished that very well," said Spc.
Nicklaus Lego,
healthcare specialist, Company C, 4th Brigade Support Battalion,
1st ABCT. "The whole medical side of the operation went
smoothly."
Lego said incorporating the "Charlie Med" Soldiers into
the exercise lent the operation an air of realism,
and helped the medical troops maintain their perishable skills.
"Medical skills have a tendency to be lost if they are not
used continually," he said.
"Even stepping out of the right mindset for a few minutes
can cost a patient's life."
Soldiers of the Raider brigade will continue training and
enhancing their warrior skills throughout their deployment to
Kuwait.
"I think the event was a success," Lowe said.
"Soldiers knew and followed the proper procedures for an
indirect fire attack
in a possible NBC environment. The lessons we learned during this
exercise will help us make our next training event even
better."
CAMP BUEHRING, Kuwait
Pfc. Ronald Campos, healthcare specialist, Company B, 1st
Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment,
1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, carries
simulated casualty, Sgt. Christopher Clover,
wheeled vehicle mechanic, Company B, to the brigade aid station
after an indirect fire drill, at Camp Buehring, Kuwait, June 5,
2013.
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