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Home Front: WoT
Army Makes Training Base Feel Like Iraq
2004-12-03
With faux insurgents, fake bombs, real concrete barriers and a little city of tents, training to prepare Reservists and National Guard members for Iraq is becoming more realistic. Over the past few months, one 40-acre section of Fort Dix has been transformed into "Forward Operating Base," a camp with new gravel roads and 100 tents that replicates an Army base in Iraq. Similar training bases are going up at installations across the country. On Thursday, the Army offered civilian base employees and the media a relatively rare glimpse at how the Army trains soldiers to fight in an Iraq where insurgent fighting continues to add to the American death toll. Fort Dix has trained more mobilizing part-time soldiers than any other base since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Before the camp was built, soldiers training at Dix stayed in barracks and rode uneventfully on buses to each day's drill. Now, the drills, like the war, are nonstop.

Simulated mortar fire interrupts moments that are quiet aside from the loud drone of electrical generators. The convoys to drill sessions are sometimes broken up by roadside ambushes. When soldiers sleep, it's in tents packed with a score of their colleagues. Meals for the more than 1,300 soldiers staying at the base are taken in a small dining tent without chairs. Within the next six months, officials plan to have showers, pool tables and facilities to repair military vehicles on the base - all features of bases in Iraq. Late Thursday morning, a contractor acting the part of an Iraqi insurgent hurled a box containing a firecracker into a checkpoint manned by members of the Virginia National Guard. In a hectic and smoky battlefield scene, one soldier acted out having a leg struck with shrapnel and a pretend insurgent was "shot" in the chest when a soldier fired a blank at him. Medics had to sort out the situation time and get the "injured" onto stretchers while other soldiers - whose sleeplessness was no act - stood guard. The medics treated the faux Iraqi with the chest wound before the GI with a leg wound.
Posted by:Steve

#5  Hmmmm. They could also try to import some authentico Iraqi water for the trainees. I hear those runs are pretty nasty and take some getting used to. Especially when all you have is that military issued sandpaper to wipe with.
Posted by: beer_me   2004-12-03 3:23:53 PM  

#4  We still need to rebuild the Army with two extra divisions, the Marines with a pair of Brigade Combat Teams, and the Navy with some more assault vessels. The Air Force/ANG/AF Reserve may require some additional building, as well. We also need a new conventional bomber capable of carrying huge loads of conventional munitions to replace the ancient B-52. Nuclear capability is ok for deterrence, but we need a real nutcruncher to use on islamofruitcakes and the Sudanese.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2004-12-03 1:17:11 PM  

#3  2 months training then combat! I don't know if this is good or bad news. During GWI the roundout mechanized brigades spend the entire war getting ready to get started, of course there was plenty of force available without them.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-12-03 11:12:54 AM  

#2  RE #1:

Yeah, but this is New Jersey so they've got the smell.
Posted by: AlanC   2004-12-03 10:57:00 AM  

#1  Very interesting--only thing missing is the heat and sand!
Posted by: Dar   2004-12-03 9:41:34 AM  

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