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    KNDU hosts first combined training course in Korea

    KNDU hosts first combined training course in Korea

    Photo By Walter Ham | American and South Korean students in the first Korean National Defense University...... read more read more

    11, SOUTH KOREA

    10.15.2013

    Story by Walter Ham  

    8th Army

    SEOUL - The Korean National Defense University welcomed American military officers to its first combined training course here in September.

    The weeklong Combined Operations Training Course brought together officers from the Republic of Korea and U.S. Armed Forces to address security issues and learn more about the ROK-U.S. alliance.

    "We all began to better understand and respect the variety of perspectives in our group," said Maj. Lisa Livingood, an 8th Army planner who attended the inaugural combined course. "It is the only course in my career where I have studied in equal numbers with allies."

    Livingood said the combined course covered a wide variety of topics, including Korean history, the history of the ROK-U.S. alliance and ROK military command structures.

    According to Livingood, the combined course students visited the world's most heavily armed border.

    "We traveled into the [Korean] Demilitarized Zone to learn about its structure, the role of the United Nations Military Armistice Commission and the functioning of a front fenceline ROK guard post," said Livingood, who grew up in Frankfurt, Germany.

    The course is one of many initiatives designed to strengthen the alliance that has defended South Korea for more than 60 years. ROK Army noncommissioned officers also train together with U.S. Army noncommissioned officers at the Wightman Noncommissioned Officer Academy on Camp Jackson, South Korea.

    Livingood said she would recommend the course to anyone interested in learning more about the alliance and the role it plays in deterring aggression on the Korean Peninsula and maintaining stability in the Asia Pacific region.

    The 8th Army planner added that the course enabled the U.S. military officers to bond with their host nation allies.

    "The course promoted camaraderie between the U.S. students, the ROK students and across national lines," said Livingood.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.15.2013
    Date Posted: 10.15.2013 04:02
    Story ID: 115140
    Location: 11, KR
    Hometown: FRANKFURT, BR, DE

    Web Views: 46
    Downloads: 0

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