CAMP ADDER, Iraq – All Soldiers are trained on various convoy operations before they deploy, even if they never step into an armored vehicle on their deployment.
Here at camp Adder though, some soldiers continue to hone their skills because it can save their lives.
“We’re doing convoy lanes training,” said Sgt 1st Class Robert Moore, from Buffalo, Mo., platoon leader, “G” Platoon, 121st Brigade support Battalion. “It involves everything we would do in a convoy.” The battle drills include calling for medical evacuations, reacting to improvised explosive devices and vehicle recovery.
“We have to make sure we can get from point ‘A’ to point ‘B,’” said 1st Lt. Jennifer Beatty from Crestview, Fla., the convoy commander of “G” Platoon.
Beatty’s job is twofold. Not only must she take command of a convoy of armored vehicles crossing Iraq, but she also has to make sure her Soldiers are up to speed on their weapons and equipment, she said.
While everyone has a job to perform, Beatty gets all of her Soldiers trained in every job they may encounter during the convoy.
“I make sure the Soldiers are cross trained in special tasks and teams,” she said. If one person goes down, someone else might need to take charge, whether it is as a gunner, driver or medic.
Currently, “G” Platoon is practicing IED defeat, in which the Soldiers must react to roadside bombs.
As they drove through, their eyes watched for any signs of possible explosives. Spotting a fluttering bag on the side of the road weighted down, with wires sticking out, the convoy stopped and called up a “nine-line” for a possible unexploded ordinance. Unfortunately for them, just because they saw it did not mean they would get out of the training to react to a disabled vehicle. As they passed by, a small explosion went off near one of the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles.
Air Force Staff Sgt. Tor Hvidsten from Virginia Beach, Va., an Explosive Ordinance Disposal specialist with the 407th Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron, and his team set up the explosives, placing a primary and secondary explosive to best mimic the attacks from insurgents.
“This way, they can feel the blast and react properly,” Hvidsten said. While not large enough to injure the Soldiers in the vehicles, it can be felt and heard by everyone.
“The (explosives) simulates the real thing,” Moore said. “It gives off smoke and light and can disorientate you.”
After the explosion, the convoy found Moore to be “wounded” and the MRAP disabled. Moving quickly, the various teams set to work, some pulling security around the convoy, others pulling Moore out of the vehicle and strapping him down to a stretcher for transportation to their medical vehicle.
Once the wounded were secured, the tow bar was connected to the “damaged” vehicle and the platoon was ready to move again.
“I love this training,” Beatty said. “It gives us an idea what to work on and what to sustain.”
Though there were a few minor hiccups, the Soldiers moved quickly and without panic, showing that the training was second nature to them.
“We had great communication throughout,” said Spc. Michael Morlan, a fuel specialist from Paoli, Ind.
The platoon conducts missions every other week from here to Forward Operating Bases Hunter and Garryowen, Moore said. Missions generally last three-to-four days.